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Eva Klesse, the drummer from Germany (originating from Westphalia) came up with a new trio of New York pianist Ethan Iverson and Berlin bassist of Danish origin Andreas Lang that immediately and completely hit home: light, with wide space and rushing and rustling dynamics. The cymbals were swishing and hissing, the toms got hit briefly and the snare with care and a now and then wink of the bass drum. A highly dynamic and relaxed whirl spread out irresistibly and enthrallingly driven by pure joy of playing. Iverson acted admirably economically, accurately setting the atmosphere with just a few pointed moves. It created both great clarity and deep mood carried confidently buzzing by Lang. It kept everything in airy state and gave the music wings for far stretching flight. It was so refreshing different from a lot of current trios trying to max out the piano. Iverson brought in understatement to beauty. 

 

Seen at International Jazz Festival Münster, January 7, 2023

 

Sich gegenseitig ausschliessende Gegensätze wie die von frei/ungestüm/multiphonisch/verzerrt und leise/lyrisch/schwebend/ verfeinert/temperiert gehören bei jüngeren, aber auch bei nicht wenigen älteren Musikern im Bereich kreativer Musik schon länger der Vergangenheit an. Das gehört wohl zur Entwicklungsdialektik und zum Drang der Kunst, Grenzen/Schranken kreativ zu überwinden. Neue Ausdrucksweisen, die von einer Generation erobert und kultiviert wurden, sind für nachfolgende Generationen ‚leicht‘ übersehbar und beherrschbar und können dann unvoreingenommen(er) (in neuen Kontexten) eingesetzt werden. Weiters sind Musiker jüngerer Generationen auch in der Lage, in verschiedenen Domänen zu agieren, die sich früher weitgehend ausschlossen.

 

Sogenannte extended techniques im instrumentalen wie im vokalen Bereich finden nach ihrer Eroberung und Etablierung zusehends Verwendung als funktionale Expressionsmittel, d.h. nicht die tonale Zuspitzung oder Überspitzung und Entgrenzung an sich ist der Ausdruck, sondern ihr Einsatz zum Ausdruck eines Gefühls, einer Stimmung, eines inneren Konflikts etc.in einem Narrativ. Der Einsatz von Elektronik hat dazu geführt, dass akustische Instrumente heute anders gespielt werden (können) und andere tonale Bereiche erobert haben. Mitunter können akustische Instrumente heute elektronischer klingen als elektronische Devices usw.. Auch der Gegensatz zwischen Kompositionen und Improvisation wandelt sich im produktiven Wechselspiel zwischen beiden.

 

Eine ganze Reihe von Extended Techniques wie Live-Elektronik, die im Jazzbereich üblich sind, sind von Komponisten wie Luigi Nono und Karlheinz S entwickelt worden. Naja, und die Geschichte der Musiker von Can, die den Schlüssel zur elektronischen Wunderkammer beim WDR hatten und nachts dort rumwerkeln durften, dürfte bekannt sein. Auch die Geschichte, dass Karlheinz S nicht so auf Rockmusik zu sprechen war, aber im Blindfold-Test umstandslos Stücke von Can ausmachte und guthieß. Das sind dann Gegensätze, die produktive, fruchtbare Übergänge zeitigen können. 

 

2023 15 Jan

Frydays

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2023 4 Jan

WHAT IF

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Russia has destroyed in one year more than 500 Ukrainian art and cultural buildings, from concert halls to museums. This is not accidental but a continuation of a quite old conscious aggressive „tradition“.

 

WHAT IF your own culture, language and art becomes existential?

 

2023 4 Jan

GaMaLa TaKi

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2023 2 Jan

DON’s TUNES

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FB is awful yes, often a cumulation of blown-up vanities, quite human but utterly distorted. It is overloading and underloading, overwhelming and underwhelming at the same time. Its dynamics devalue the contributions and it  is often a fire that has to be rekindled again and again. Ein Feuer, das immer und nie ausgeht. FB could be much nicer if its construction would be different but with some patience and discipline it is possible to gain some coherent and valuable things from the communication with FB friends. I appreciate very much the posts of DON’s TUNES. The way DON’s TUNES gathers historical background information and composes concise insightful narratives from it, is a blessing.

Here are three examples from his postings on FB, one on Bob Dylan, one on Paul Butterfield and one on Fats Waller.

 
 


 
 
Bob Dylan

 

„While Bob Dylan hadn’t come to Newport planning to go electric, the sudden buzz over Paul Butterfield, and his increasing disdain for folk orthodoxy, inspired him to amp up.  “He knew electricity was definitely the direction and he was going with that flow,” wrote Jim Rooney and Eric Von Schmidt in Baby Let Me Follow You Down: The Cambridge Folk Years.  “When he heard the Butterfield Band the day before and saw the reaction of the crowd, it seemed that the time might be right to work up two or three songs to play on the evening concert.”

Dylan recruited Mike Bloomfield to hastily assemble an ad hoc outfit which rehearsed overnight on Saturday at a Newport mansion leased by George Wein.  The group coalesced around Butterfield’s ace rhythm section, bassist Jerome Arnold and drummer Sam Lay, players who’d honed their chops with Little Walter and Howlin’ Wolf, and organist Barry Goldberg, who’d traveled from Chicago with Butter.  Al Kooper had also come to Newport, but on his own as a paying customer.   Shortly after his arrival, he was handed backstage passes, and was later deputized to play organ on “Maggie’s Farm” and bass on “Like a Rolling Stone.”

When Bloomfield first met Dylan in Chicago in 1963, he approached him like a headhunter. “I had heard his first album, and I went down [to Grossman’s club, the Bear] to cut Bob, to take my guitar and cut him, burn him, but he was a great guy.  I mean we spent all day talking and jamming and hanging out…and any instinct I may have had to try and cut him, which is very common in Chicago…was immediately stopped, and I was just charmed by the man…I realized he was way more than a player and singer.  He was a magician.”

-New England Public Radio

Photo: Bob Dylan, Recording Session. New York City, 1965. by W. Eugene Smith 
 
 


 
 
 
Paul Butterfield
 

Remembering the harmonica legend Paul Butterfield (December 17, 1942 – May 4, 1987) 

Paul Butterfield is an archetypal figure in American music, a young white man who played the blues with startling authenticity and projected through black music a figure both daring and romantic, an iconic blend of dedicated virtuoso and pugnacious street tough. B.B. King’s biographer Charles Sawyer saw him as a figure who went directly from boyhood to middle age, skipping adolescence altogether.  Butter was only 22 when he cut his debut recordings, but he came across as startlingly mature, and his no-nonsense approach raised the stakes for everyone else.  Barry Goldberg, the keyboard player who worked with Bob Dylan and was a founding member of the Electric Flag, says, “Paul’s whole vibe, his whole persona, was of greatness.”  Songwriter Joel Zoss, who first met him in Chicago around 1963, told me, “To know Paul was to touch real greatness.  You knew you were walking with a master.”

In a 1971 interview, Butterfield allowed that when Muddy Waters first invited him onto the bandstand, he wasn’t yet a master of much. “But everybody there was saying, ‘Yeah, go ahead man, out of sight!’ They were humoring me, but that was okay because if they had said, ‘Please, man, come on, stop,’ I might never have gone on.”  In a joint interview with Waters and Butterfield that Downbeat featured as a cover story in 1969, Muddy remembered his young charge. “He wasn’t too good when I first noticed him, but he got good…And you always had this particular thing, this something that everybody don’t have, this thing you’re born with, this touch. ‘Cause you used to sing this little song and have the joint going pretty good.  As soon as you’d walk in, I’d say ‘You’re on next, man’.”

Tom Reney – No Depression 

Photo: Kathy Butterfield
 
 


 
 
 
Fats Waller
 

Remembering Fats Waller (May 21, 1904 – December 15, 1943)

One of jazz’s most irrepressible and influential figures, Thomas “Fats” Waller was a larger-than-life character who exuded elegance and wit in his piano and organ playing and who made jazz fun and accessible through his vocals and his comedic talents.

Waller was also a prolific songwriter, with many of his compositions becoming huge commercial successes. His technique and attention to decorative detail influenced countless jazz pianists including Art Tatum, Count Basie, and Thelonious Monk.

“Concentrate on the melody,” he advised. “If it’s good, you don’t have to shoot it out of a cannon. Jimmie Johnson taught me that. You got to hang onto the melody and never let it get boresome.”

 

Photo: Jazz Magazine  Archives

2023 2 Jan

Constants: PAUL BUTTERFIELD

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There is music that left a permanent mark in my body and soul. One is the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. And still every time I listen to it, I get electrified. In Dutch we say „het raakt blijkbaar een snaar“, it touches a string or it strikes a chord. And then there is a regular return to listening. Here’s to share a piece that immediately fires with its strong form. Humans have two legs from which a basic rhythm emerges.

 

Paul Butterfield NEW WALKING BLUES

 

It is new and old, a constant, giving sound to the

 

original WALKING BLUES of the legendary Robert Johnson

 

Glorious past lends itself to nostalgia but is a challenge urging original creation at the same time.

 

2023 2 Jan

Komпoussulā 2023

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Navigation possibilities in this young year …

 
 


 
 

 

2023 1 Jan

Apropos Anders Jormin

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Apropos Anders Jormin, der neben Claude Tchamitchian zu den europäischen Kontrabass-gröBen gehört: 

 

HIER Spuren von Anders Jormin in meinem RADIOARCHIV, die sich seit 2008 durch mehrere Sendungen ziehen (in den Programmen gibt es nur kurze Ankündigungen, 95% ist Musik). 

 

2008

Portrait Anders Jormin in Gruppen von Charles Lloyd, Bobo Stenson, Kenny Wheeler, Sinikka Langeland und seinen Solo-Alben   HIER

 

2015

Neben Anders Jormin mit Lena Willemark und Karin Nakagawa gibt es Stücke von Michael Galasso, Kim Kashkashian, Sinikka Langeland und Nils Økland HIER

 

2019

Solo-Bass Stücke von Roberto Bonati und Anders Jormin HIER

 
 

Eintreten ins RADIOARCHIV zu weiterer Erkundung

H I E R 


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