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Archives: Juni 2023

 

 

Diese Schallplatte ist heute so essentiell wie damals, 1979. Die vier Musiker schlagen in einer tollkühnen, melodietrunkenen, überschäumenden (und sehr formbewussten) Klangreise einen Bogen von den frühen Jahren mit Ornette Coleman zu einer mutigen Erweiterung der geographischen Räume. Dieses Album aus der neuen ECM-Vinyl-Reissue-Serie „Luminessence“ überragt, vom Gatefold-Cover über die Pressqualität bis hin zu den neuen Liner Notes von Steve Lake. Letztere öffnen den Kontext dieser Manfred Eicher-Produktion, in jeder erdenklichen Weise: andere wichtige Werke kommen ins Spiel, unter anderem das live eingespielte und nicht minder fesselnde Nachfolgealbum „Playing“, sowie die vielen aufregenden Projekte, in welche diese vier Ausnahmekünstler verwickelt waren. Das ganze wird mit jeder Menge Hintergrundwissen und Anekdoten garniert, auf eine Weise, die akademische Trockenheit lässig aushebelt – der Begleitessay rundet dieses Gesamtkunstwerk auf perfekte Weise ab. Über alles Design und Wort hinaus, sind es die Klänge, die vom ersten bis zum letzten Ton fesseln, und manchem Neuankömming in dieser alten ECM-Welt jede Menge weiterer „Reiseangebote“ machen! Ich sage nur: „El Corazon“, „Codona I – III“, „The Survivors Suite“. „Saudades“. Das zuletzt genannte Opus von Nana Vasconcelos liegt ebenfalls in der „Luminessence-Reihe vor.

 

(Die manafonistischen Juli-Empfehlungen sind nun abgeschlossen und allesamt getextet. Wer den August kuratorisch gestalten oder mitgestalten möchte, melde sich via Email bei mir. Brian Whistlers „review“ of Richie Beirach‘s solo piano album would have surely made it to the columns, but the album is already out for some time. Der TIME TRAVEL-Beitrag enthält nicht nur einen nahezu surrealen Lesetrip in das Wendejahr 1989, sondern auch eine „Radiogeschichte“ aus den frühen  Mana-Jahren – und noch viel älteren Zeiten.)

 
 

 
 

 

Richie Beirach — Leaving

Jazzlines, 2023

 

 

Richie Beirach has been recording solo piano albums throughout his 50-year career. During the pandemic, he stated in a video blog post that he missed performing and, at times, didn’t much feel like being at the piano. Certainly for any musician, especially an improvising musician, live performance is the lifeblood of the art.

So it was with great anticipation that I awaited this new live solo piano album, Leaving. With the exception of the last track, a medley of two of Beirach’s most well-known compositions, the concert is entirely made up of standards.

In an email exchange with Beirach, I asked him why he made this choice for this live concert/recording:

 

“It took me years to develop my own concepts and apply them to these simple standards. I didn’t want to play too many of my originals…I feel that, if I can use well-known standards as a basis for my concerts, I already have a frame of reference there for the audience. And then I can really take advantage of that familiarity of the standard and actually go even further out in my interpretations.”

 

In this live concert, recorded in July 2022 in in front of a relatively small audience at the Château Fleur Cardinale in Saint-Etienne-de-Lisse, near Bordeaux, France, it is clear that 75-year-old Beirach is very much still at the peak of his powers, both technically and creatively.

Anyone familiar with Beirach’s recorded output will instantly recognize these tunes as core pieces in his standards repertoire. That being said, Beirach is totally committed to reinventing these tunes.

The opener, “Nardis,” is explored from several angles. At times it is reduced to barebones homophony, drawing from chorale-like neoclassical harmonies. Other times, it’s stretched to the edge of the harmonic nether regions. It is alternately swinging, contemplative, ebullient, and brooding.

There are several medleys presented. The first begins with a deep exploration of one of Beirach’s staple tunes, “What Is This Thing Called Love.” Under his able fingers, this tune offers a seemingly infinite vehicle for reinterpretation. He uses his signature pedal tones to construct an energetic modal tapestry that builds to a climax and fades away, eventually morphing into a spirited “Alone Together,” and then coming to rest with a wholly original take on “Blue in Green.” At first, the latter is the recognizable classic ballad, but then Beirach re-harmonizes it in a style that hints at classical romanticism. It then organically evolves into a couple of chords that he freely plays over before he finally returns to the familiar melody, which resolves to an unexpected major chord. It’s stunningly beautiful.

“Round Midnight” is played as a ballad, then goes uptempo for a short yet intense improvisation before relaxing back to ballad-land. This is a great example of Beirach’s technical ability to pull colors out of the piano that few jazz pianists can. The tune ends with a characteristically ambiguous chord, the kind of voicing that has earned Beirach his nickname, The Code.

Beirach has been playing “Green Dolphin Street” for a very long time. When I compare this version to the solo version on the Live at Maybeck album, I am struck by how much it has grown in concept over the years. While it’s structurally similar with its optimistic pedal tone intro/outro, there’s a fresh immediacy and precision here, a melodic surety that never falters. Faster than the Maybeck version, it’s swinging and propulsive, until surprisingly, halfway through, it goes up a notch into double time, before falling back to the original groove. There’s an upbeat good-heartedness that pervades the entire performance.

The Bernstein ballad “Some Other Time,” another chestnut Beirach has been mining for decades, is lovingly stated here with a nod to classical romanticism, especially on the lush bridge. He then segues into the two chords that comprise Bill Evans’s “Peace Piece,” freely quoting from standards such as  “Maria,” “I Loves You, Porgy,” “When I Fall in Love,” “In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning,” “Lush Life,” and perhaps hinting at “If I Only Had a Heart. “Then, before diving back into the bridge, he re-harmonizes the opening section and extends the coda, throwing in a bit of  “It Might as Well Be Spring” and fading back into “Peace Piece.”

From the very outset, Beirach’s take on the Miles Davis classic “Solar” is relentlessly swinging. At one point his left hand swoops down into the lower registers and becomes a focus of  the melodic action. He proceeds to explosively dive into a wildly inventive, powerful two-handed rhythmic section. Beirach daringly drops out the left hand completely and lets the right hand drift off on its own, to near silence, before bringing both hands back in for the last statement of the tune. It’s a bravura performance.

The beautiful arrangement of “Spring Is Here” owes a great deal to the version on the album Elegy, Beirach’s brilliant homage to Bill Evans. However, this version is a medley that moves into a dynamic reading of “Maiden Voyage.” He amps it up into double-time with a Latin feel, before abruptly veering off into a slyly Monkish rendering of “Monk’s Dream.” Beirach cycles back to a return of  “You Don’t Know What Love Is.” At first haunted and dreamy, it soon ramps up into a full-tilt swing, ending on an introverted rubato coda.

On “Footprints,” Beirach dispenses with the usual 6/4 feel and instead plays it right out of the gate in a fast 4/4, the left hand anchoring the groove with a nod to the original bass line. It’s an uptempo burner with a rhythmic intensity that never lets up.

Beirach ends the set with perhaps his most well-known original piece, “Leaving.” He plays the tune through and then meanders into a free improvisation. Eventually he makes his way back to the familiar melody, which transitions into a sublimely beautiful extended improvisation before heading back to a rubato rendition of the source material. He then goes out with a very tender reading of his beloved “Sunday Song.” First recorded on the ECM album Hubris, this soft, understated version possesses the simplicity and elegance of a lullaby.

Musicians are storytellers. Richie Beirach has always intuitively understood the art of  good storytelling. He knows how to set the stage for the tale, employing the musical equivalent of  foreshadowing, when to deploy the element of surprise, how to build tensions, and when to release them in order to keep the listener engaged. On every tune one can hear the spontaneous, yet intentional shaping of story elements designed to sweep the listener into the musical narrative and keep them engaged.

Throughout this audiophile-quality recording, one can hear Beirach’s elegant, passionate, yet disciplined pianism. Over the course of his career, Richie Beirach has continually honed his concepts and his chops, clarifying and evolving his musical vision, always moving his art towards an ever more refined artistic sensibility and greater freedom of expression.

I enthusiastically give Leaving five well-deserved stars.

2023 3 Juni

Fiction of Fiction

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Once more on the recording/live topic. Here’s something by guitarist Aram Bajakian (he worked with Lou Reed and John Zorn) on SHADOW KINGDOM

 

Been listening to Shadow Kingdom all day. Streamed the video during covid lockdown and it was perplexing, like when I realized the musicians were not really playing, old school TV-broadcast style: musical instrument lip syncing. But the singing stuck with me. I wondered how he managed to lip sync so perfectly with the vocal track, due to the ever changing phrasing of his songs. Did he maybe record the vocals during the video session? But how’d they prevent bleed, given how dry and isolated the vocals are and his lack of headphones? Technicalities aside, the music stayed with me, and I loved that there was no way to listen to it after those few days of streaming. What I love about the record that was released yesterday is how simple it is, especially given how so much music is over produced today. Sounds like a bunch of great musicians in a room playing the songs with simple arrangements and playing them masterfully, like a band that’s been on the road on tour for a few years. I feel like I walked into a random bar in the middle of nowhere, and there’s a house band playing, but they’re the best band in the world, playing songs that people will be singing a few centuries from now. The singer may not belt it out like they used to, but you know they’ve seen some things and that you can learn something by listening to them tell their story, all conveyed with their voice. Give it a good listen.

 

2023 3 Juni

17 Beats, Mai 23

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Anbei die Musikstücke, die bei mir im Mai geklickt haben, die mich überrascht haben, die mich berührt haben, die ich in Dauerschleife gehört habe. Da sind einige Bekannte dabei, die ich hier entdeckt habe. Danke nochmal dafür. 17 Beats deswegen, weil es zu jedem Track von mir 17 Silben gibt in der bekannten Haikustruktur 5-7-5. Die Einträge sind chronologisch geordnet. Los gehts!


Eine Injektion
mitten rein in die Seele
Warmer Liebesstrom

[Ben Watt – That’s the Way Love Is]


An die Synapsen
andockende Gitarren
Cover me, Babe!

[William Tyler & The Impossible Truth – Highway Anxiety / Radioactivity (Live)]


Die Tür öffnet sich,
hinter ihr ein alter Freund,
„Lass uns was trinken.“

[Califone – ox-eye]


Gib mir Quecksilber!
Es geht immer nach vorne!
Lass das Gold im Fluss!

[David Byrne – Black Flag]


Eins mit dem Kosmos
Auch auf den Antipoden
Pharoah’s Geist lebt!

[The Circling Sun – Kohan]


Aus den Favelas
Eine Stimme wie ein Bär
Lang lebe der Dub!

[Seu Jorge & Almaz – Cala Boca, Menino]


Morgens der Himmel
Tief ins Plumeau einsinken
Der Grat des Halbschlafs

[Alva Noto – Kinder der Sonne (Intro)]


Die heilende Kraft
einer Frauenstimme, die
pure Musik ist

[Esperanza Spalding – Formwela 4]


Bass und Piano
auf gleicher Wellenlänge
Herzschmelzmelodie

[Charlie Haden & Keith Jarrett – Ellen David]


Schnipps! Stelle dir vor,
die Welt wär exakt so wie
vor vierzig Jahren

[David Sylvian – Nostalgia]


Liebesballade
Ein Tenorsaxophonton
rein wie der Neuschnee

[John Coltrane – Naima]


Mit Polyrhythmen
hochsteigend zum Himmelszelt
auf Eschers Treppe

[Gong – Ard Na Greine]


Das Eis schmilzt langsam
Die ersten Sonnenstrahlen
Kein Grund zum Jubel

[Franz Schubert – Impromptu No. 3 in Ges-Dur (Brendel)]

 

P.S. Für die, die es interessiert, zum Schluss noch meine Deezer-Playliste mit fast allen Musikstücken, die ich seit Juni 2020 in meinem Blog mit Haikus versehen habe.

2023 3 Juni

Kate Gentile

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und ein Video zum Wachwerden und Augenohrenreiben. Zu einem neuen Album von drummer Kate Gentile.

 

V  I  D  E  O

 

2023 3 Juni

Spät Dran

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In diesem Jahr haben wir die Chili Samen leider viel zu spät ausgesät, um diese Zeit waren die Pflanzen nie so klein und mickrig. Mal sehen, was der Sommer so bringt.

 

2023 2 Juni

Punkt 2023

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Click on the poster to see the artists’ names in full glory. Then think about sailing north. One gig will present the infamous duo Jan Bang  / Eivind Aarset with special guest Nona Hendryx (the name rings a bell?) a.o. A track of their forthcoming album „Last Two Inches Of Sky“ (Punkt Editions) will get its first airplay worldwide on  July 20 being part of an irresistible sequence of musics in Michael Engelbrecht‘s edition of „Klanghorizonte“ feat. Matthew Herbert, Craven Faults, the fractured magic of Califone, and other time travellers. Interviews with Jan Bang, Matthew Herbert, CF, and Rickie Lee Jones are either in preparation, already done, or difficult to make.

2023 1 Juni

„11 Freunde“

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Michael Blake fokussiert in dem folgenden Gespräch mit Morgan Enos scharf Aspekte des Aufnehmens und Mixens von Musik:
 

I did this record [on co-founded label P&M Records] with my brother [Paul], and he and I have shared similar musical tastes for years. And also, argued and completely disagreed about music at times. But we were listening to a bunch of records – some by my friends, some just other things he was interested in – and there was this one album he chose. It doesn’t matter what it is, but it had this very generic jazz production. The way the drums were recorded – it was just flat. He was like, “I don’t like this; turn this off!” I was like, “OK, settle down. It’s not bad; you’re just responding to the presentation – the aural experience.”

 

I think in the case of jazz, technology has evolved: there are certain ways people record now, and they get really good, clean records. But how do you explain the rawness of a Mingus recording? That’s also recorded beautifully. It’s not just the mic placement or anything. There’s something else happening that’s fearless. Ellington stuff – a lot of that as well. In the music that I like, anyway, there’s a certain mystery. Music itself is more powerful than the technology documenting it. The music, as an aggregate, is so good and so strong and so powerful that no matter how you capture it, it’s going to be what it is.

 

LJN: How would you connect that to „Dance of the Mystic Bliss“?

 

MB: The mixes are done by Scott Harding, a.k.a. Scotty Hard, who just produced this new Sexmob record [2023’s The Hard Way] that’s completely his thing. It’s like they went into the studio and [trumpeter and bandleader Steven] Bernstein was like, “Just do whatever you want with this.” They call it The Hard Way because it really is his interpretation. When he did my album, Champa, in ‘95, he had been working with Teo Macero. When Teo did my record, he asked for Scott, which is funny, because Scott and I were college buddies in Canada. He came to New York after me and became this hip-hop engineer, doing Wu-Tang Clan and Prince Paul’s stuff.

 

So, when I asked him to do my record, I was like, I hope he knows how to record jazz instruments, because we hadn’t really worked together since we were in Vancouver. And oh my god, he got great sounds, but when he started mixing it, he created this whole other aural experience. Sort of a three-dimensional concept.

 

LJN: From a mixing standpoint, this album sounds different from other stuff I hear.

 

MB: Scotty Hard has a sound, and that’s part of the sound of this, too. It’s produced by Scott in the sense that the mixes are the final say. I produced it in the sense that I arranged it and organised it and made all the musical decisions.

 

On the intro of this tune, “Sagra,” you hear a lot of reverb. But when we all play this last phrase together, he takes the violin and the sax and the guitar and creates one blend. And then you can hear that he’s tweaking it, so when it fades, that’s an engineering fade; it’s not natural, musicians all ending at slightly different times, where someone drops the pitch a bit.

 

veröffentlicht auf LONDON JAZZ NEWS


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