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Europe Jazz Media Chart desember

Desember er måneden både for avslapping, samtidig som det er årets stress-måned nummer en, i alle fall for alle de som satser både lommebok og tid på å feire julen i full bredde. For andre av oss, lar vi høgtiden gli stille og fredelig forbi, og bruker heller høgtiden på å lytte til mye musikk, samtidig som vi gjør noen solide dypdykk inn i vinbeholdningen. Og for den som vil følge vårt eksempel, så har Europe Media Group satt sammen den perfekte spilleliste for høgtiden.

Cim Meyer, All That …:
PABLO HELD Adventures (Hopalit Records)

Matthieu Jouan, citizenjazz.com:
AVA MENDOZA The Circular Train (Palilalia Records)

Axel Stinshoff, Jazz thing:
SIMON OSLENDER All That Matters (Leopard)

Luca Vitali, Giornale della Musica:
ORCHESTRE TOUT PUISSANT MARCEL DUCHAMP Ventre unique (Les Disques Bongo Joe)

Yves Tassin, JazzMania:
MANUEL HERMIA & CHRISTINE OTT The Lotus Path (Igloo Records)

Jos Demol, jazzhalo.be:
ALEXANDRE FRAZÃO Quintessência (self produced)

Kaspars Zavileiskis, jazzin.lv:
KRISTAPS VANADZINSH TRIO Latviskā elegance (self-released)

Christof Thurnherr, Jazz’n’More:
ROB MAZUREK EXPLODING STAR ORCHESTRA Live At The Alder Planetarium (International Anthem)

Jacek Brun, www.jazz-fun.de:
MAIK KRAHL The Magic of Consistency (Challeng Records)

Madli-Liis Parts, Muusika:
TÕNU NAISSOO Naissoo Freeform Quintet (NooPop Records)

Bega Villalobos, In&OutJazz:
CAMILA NEBBIA, LEO GENOVESE & ALFRED VOGEL Eyes to the Sun (Boomslang Records, 2024)

Mike Flynn, Jazzwise:
DANIEL SOMMER / ARVE HENRIKSEN / JOHANNES LUNDBERG Sounds & Sequences (April Records)

Paweł Brodowski, Jazz Forum:
MOŻDŻER / DANIELSSON / FRESCO Beamo (TT)

Krzysztof Komorek, Donos kulturalny:
MIKOŁAJ TRZASKA Eternity For A While (Instant Classic)

Jan Granlie, salt-peanuts.eu:
LARS-GÖRAN ULANDER Öppet 02 | Två (Caprice)

Christine Stephan, JAZZTHETIK:
PETER SOMUAH Highlife (ACT)

Dick Hovenga, Written in Music:
DONDER De Wonderen (W.E.R.F Records)

Viktor Bensusan, jazzdergisi.com:
UNLEASHED COOPERATION Trust (Multikulti Project)

Nuno Catarino, jazz.pt:
ZÉ ALMEIDA ANALOGIK Sístole (Robalo)

Peter Slavid, UK Jazz News:
MIKE CHILLINGWORTH Friday the Thirteenth (Ubuntu Music)

Lars Mossefinn, Dag og tid:
SIGURD HOLE ENSEMBLE Extinction Sounds (Elvesang)

Patrik Sandberg, Orkesterjournalen:
UNIONEN Unionen (WeJazz)

Why did I choose –

Patrik Sandberg:
New formation Unionen includes topnames from Sweden and Norway, Ståle Storløkken (Supersilent, Motorpsycho) on grand piano, Fender Rhodes and synth, Gard Nilssen (Supersonic Orchestra, Bushman’s Revenge) on drums, Petter Eldh (Koma Saxo) on bass and the innumerable Per «Texas»Johansson on tenor sax, clarinets, English horn and flute.
The music consists of eight original compositions with a huge range in terms of mood and expression, and runs relatively seamlessly from the introverted searching to the extrovert energetic.

Cim Meyer:
The German 37-year-old pianist and composer has several times throughout his career drawn on references to written classical music (i.e. Maurice Ravel). On ADVENTURES, he takes the plunge with an improvising quartet/quintet together with 22 chamber musicians.
The task is difficult, and there are a few blemishes from the chamber orchestra, but it is nevertheless generally excitingly solved. It is relatively easy for Niels Klein to arrange four chords for strings over which Held can improvise, as he does in Bernstein Fantasie – the first of the CD’s four sequences. But after a few minutes, Held increases the complexity considerably with Nelson Veras (ac-g), Robert Landfermann (b), Jonas Burgwinkel (d) – and the chamber orchestra comments in between. And this alternation between combo and orchestra takes place continuously, smoothly and organically throughout all the sequences. It’s not sweetish stuff but sometimes scratchy and demanding music.
Ascent is wild and dynamic. How Veronika Morscher manages to sing the intricate themes and the large intervals completely in unison and synchronously with Held’s piano is a mystery. But it sounds good!
Veras’ dreamy run on the acoustic nylon-stringed guitar ushers in Nocturne, the release’s tranquil breathing space.
The last piece, Meta, seems to be both the most compositionally well-worked and the most improvisationally liberated from the combo.

Viktor Bensusan:
Reminding the combos of George Russell in the Sixties, Unleashed Cooperation provides a fresh breath out of the vibrant Polish jazz scene.

Nuno Catarino:
Led by the bassist Zé Almeida, Analogik is an unconventional quartet that features a lineup of bass, voice (Mariana Dionísio), cello (Adèle Viret), and drums (Samuel Ber). Their debut album showcases the leader’s distinct compositions, blending structured forms with expansive improvisation. Dionísio’s remarkable vocal range stands out, Viret’s cello adds a chamber-like, dramatic dimension, while Ber’s dynamic drumming provides a provocative rhythmic foundation. Almeida’s bass anchors the compositions, adding depth and structure.

Dick Hovenga:
Musicians who are constantly searching for new sounds, atmospheres and musical colors are without a doubt the most interesting. Music that is as boundless as it is challenging is how the trio Thunder has been doing it for years. It produces, as it does again with their new album The Wonders, extremely surprising and intriguing music. Pianist Harrison Steingueldoir, bassist Stan Callewaert and drummer Casper Van De Velde have an exciting chemistry that has impressed them right since they entered the music landscape in 2015. With by now four albums to their credit, surprising collaborations (Lars Greve (Girls in Airports/Bon Iver) and harmonium player Sigbjørn Apeland) and ample touring schedules across Europe. Where on their previous album Het Verdriet they gave Flemish folk new depths, De Wonderen is again a completely free record on which the three musicians’ idiosyncratic musical paths take them into the contemporary through free jazz. Again and again discovering new atmospheres with challenging then atmospheric sounds. The Wonders tells stories about the mundane. Something that never sounds mundane in the musical world of Thunder. Listen to that exuberant percussion connecting the beautiful piano sounds and lovely vocals of Callewaert in Fragmented and you’ll totally understand what I mean. Just like that beautiful album finale Oh My Love. Working so straight across emotions from the piano with percussion and bass is equally addictive.

Krzysztof Komorek:
The album ultimately contains seven tracks. Quite long, leaving the listener – as Mikołaj Trzaska himself puts it – space for reflection and experiencing. They are meditations of sorts, though not always conducted in a contemplative mood. The music is sometimes dignified, sometimes poignant, echoing the history of the place in which it was created. It intrigues, surrounds the listener with intensity and narrative density. An excellent piece.

Jacek Brun:
This is how you play jazz! That is blues, that is groove, that is jazz! The magic of what is most important in jazz: emotions expressed through sound and rhythm, played with relish and a full, juicy sound. Maik Krahl plays here in the natural, unpretentious way that characterises all his work to date, leaving plenty of room for his bandmates, especially Seamus Blake. The effect is simply electrifying! The album is a revelation!

Bega Villalobos:
Alfred Vogel, drums- Camilia Nebbia , sax – Leo Genovese, pianoIf a minimum common denominator had to be established between Leo Genovese, Camila Nebbia and Alfred Vogel, it would perhaps be the elusive and unclassifiable nature of their conception of improvised and free music, and Eyes to the Sun gives a good account of this: a recorded album, mixed and mastered in a single day in Buenos Aires; without prior rehearsals, without set directions or clear intentions. The only plan: capture a session of pure improvisation between three figures that are difficult to classify.

Peter Slavid:
“A beautifully measured quartet album that displays a wit and intelligence in its mission to experiment with polyphony while still making for a hugely listenable set.” writes UKJN’s reviewer Richard Lee.This is a fine quartet featuring Mike Chillingworth’s sparkling alto sax with Ivo Neame on piano, Tom Farmer on bass and Jon Scott on drums. The album is particularly enjoyable for its playful use of rhythm. Their version of Steve Swallow’s “Ladies in Mercedes” combines complexity with wit in a way that makes it all feel very accessible.

Yves Tassin:
Listening to these intertwined breaths (the tenor, the bansuri, the flute) and vibrations (the waves…), we feel both beauty and peace.

Jos Demol:
Alexandre Frazão, arguably one of the most active drummers in Portuguese jazz, finally makes his debut here. It would have been easy for the musician to convene a star-studded constellation, but Frazão decided to take a risk and surround himself with young musicians with the aim of scattering seeds to ensure that the jazz being made here will be in good hands. Sharing the spotlight, or even leaving it to others, has never been a problem for the drummer, but rather an act of intrinsic generosity. Alexandre Frazão appealed to that existential motivation that characterises him, with the aim of generating the necessary dynamism and agitation that served as an engine for the experimentation and creation needed for the collective construction of ‘Quintessência’.

Kaspars Zavileiskis:
Kristaps Vanadzinsh is award-winning and one of the most unusual Latvian pianists who has his own drive. This is also reflected in his sixth album Latviskā elegance (Latvian Elegance), in which compositions by a wide variety of Latvian composers are arranged. But they are not simple pop, rock, folk and classical overlays in jazz. These are new compositions based on nostalgic memories of old hits and their melodies, and thus conjure up a new Latvian elegance, as seen by Kristaps Vanadzinsh. He is a fearless walker of his own path, who does not lack strong associates. In this case, double bassist Jānis Rubiks and drummer Kaspars Kurdeko. Perhaps this is the album that best expresses the Latvian mentality that has been made in jazz so far. And the painting on the cover of the vinyl record does not depict Italy. It is a completely Latvian landscape near the resort town called Sigulda. So to say – welcome!

Matthieu Jouan:
Third solo album from the Brooklyn-based guitarist and another beautiful journey into heavy bluesy tunes, trash impro and noisy music blobs. Her voice is still rock’n’roll and fits the project perfectly. The circular train travels from station to station, telling stories and reminding people. And the classic Lead Belly tune «Irene, Goodnight» is back, almost 15 years after Gussie Lord Davis’ version of «Goodnight, Irene» was recorded on her first solo album, Shadow Stories. Ava Mendoza leads the way, softly but surely.

Jan Granlie:
Lars-Göran Ulander is a veteran on the Swedish free jazz scene. On this compilation with recordings from 1965 to 1977, where we meet him and his alto saxophone with his own septet (from1965), Lars Lystedt Kvintett (from 1967) and Per Henrik Wallin Trio and duo from 1977. He is still active on the concert scene at the age of 81 years young, and he still plays a type of free jazz that goes straight to the soul and to the heart. This is the second release in the series Öppet, where saxophonist Mats Gustafsson and Roger Bergner at the Center for Swedish folk music & jazz research have selected various archive recordings from the 1960s and 1970s. In addition, they received assistance from jazz researcher Jan Bruer and drummer Peter Olsen, all selected in close collaboration with Ulander. The result is a fantastic collection of Swedish free jazz in absolute top class. And after this release I am waiting for examples of his releases after 1977.

Paweł Brodowski:
When the Polish pianist Leszek Możdżer, Swedish bassist Lars Danielsson and Israeli percussionist/vocalist Zohar Fresco first met together 20 years ago, they were instantly referred to as the dream team – for their virtuosity, lyricism and uncanny communication. They have since given countless performances and recorded several bestselling albums. The newest one, made last year and released this November, has been promoted on a tour of sold-out concerts to enthusiatic audiences. The three co-leaders are all exceptional musicians, Leszek Możdżer being a genius, a true innovator.
On Beamo he presents a completetely new idea, playing simultanously on two and sometimes three different pianos with three different systems of tuning – 440 Hz, 432 Hz, and a decaphonic tuning with an octave divided into ten even intervals – creating a sound environment that has never been heard before. The new reportoire is based mainly on Możdżer’s compostions. There is an uneasy feeling of music played out of tune, but the beautiful melodies and harmonies prevail, cemented by deep basslines and colored by subtle percussion and enchanting vocals.
But whether this experiment is not merely an innovator’s whim and will be pursued in the future remains to bee seen.