Saturday, 30 July 2016
Lars Klevstrand / Guttorm Guttormsen Kvintett in 1978's Høysang from Norway
It gives me such a such a feeling of joy to discover a treasure like this; magnified then by the chance to share it with others who might have a fertile openness to it.
If anyone recalls the album I once posted by Wisse Scheper, Topaz, or the Stefan Nilsson poetry collaboration with Tommy Korberg, Blixtlås - Svensk 70-Tals Poesi from the infant days of this blog, this is very similar, with well-composed and uniquely interesting folky-jazzy songs, mostly piano-based, composed with very high maturity and skill.
The singer and majority composer here (and genius!) is Lars Klevstrand himself, who has quite a discography (he sits far left on the verso scan). In the band he plays guitar, while the amazing piano work is by Jon Balke, also a composer in the credits. How sad they are unknown to the world at large (perhaps not in Norway).
Track A6:
I love how the chords, although slightly conventional, passing from tonic in G to C, then the descending pattern: F to E bass for C, Eflat, D bass for G, are played with such delicatesse by the guitar and curlicued piano accompaniment. Stay tuned till the bridge where a surprising modulation to tonic A major occurs, and subsequently the coda, which uses the Bminor to E7 springboard to launch into F major, then to Aflat under Fminor, to close out into a new tonic of C! Not an overly complex number but quite enjoyably pretty.
The title track that commences side 2 will really blow you away, unfortunately it's too long to quote here, but stay tuned for that one when you shoot through this, with its myriad turns around the corners from jazz to pop, to a more playful Spanish tempo. Really stunning tergiversations, and I sure wish I could understand of what Lars is crooning. Maybe someone out there could help me, there's something about Angelina, obviously not Jolie, thank god, and an anaconda. Gotta love those snakes.
But I wanted also to present the penultimate track as an example of how outrageously thoughtful these artists can be. Really, as a once wannabe musician, I can't even begin to understand how they thought up these ideas, and so what hope does google's "deep mind" AI have? In particular, those opening chords are not just hard to analyze, but I have trouble even understanding how they can connect together and retain such a harmonious movement:
This one is a composition by Espen Rud, btw. (Who???)
Of course, this music, with its amalgamation of folk, jazz, pop-like songs and even choral (on the last track) didn't really stand a chance, did it?
Wednesday, 27 July 2016
Family of Percussion's Moon at Noon [with Albert Mangelsdorff and Wolfgang Dauner, from 1987]
In my opinion the most interesting track especially with its eerie muted trombone (?) opener, is the last one, Für E.W. (by Mangelsdorff), closing out the LP with a reflective or meditational exercise in thoughtful shifting scales and surf-like cymbals...
Amazing?
And isn't the drawing on the vinyl beautiful? And so seventies-- oh wait, this is 1987. Doesn't matter, unlike the previous two posts, with this record we feel we are back in those groovy seventies again when there was oh so much hope for the future-- and music.
Not so much now.
Monday, 25 July 2016
VA Kleeblatt 24 - Jazz Rock (GDR 1988)
More light fusion from the GDR, perhaps less interesting to us in general. The bands include Flair, Fill In, the awfully named Bossa Nostra, Gin-Chilla. The final three didn't appear elsewhere, to no one's surprise. The first track, by Flair:
Saturday, 23 July 2016
L'Art De Passage – Sehnsucht Nach Veränderung (GDR 1989)
Jazz-rock from the GDR with a neoclassical Picassolike cover - from just after the fall of the wall. Though we lost one wall there, we have recently gained so many more: between India and Bangladesh, all around Israel, and soon, between the US and Mexico. If that one proves a success, perhaps between the US and Canada next, to keep the beavers out. Will there also be one between the Europa of infidels and the true believers, the 70-virgin blessed? Surely we can easily imagine a future in which this is the norm, and every land is surrounded by either waters or walls-- perhaps the Chinese will finally finish up their wall too?
But let's look back 30 years to a wonderful time when walls were being destroyed...
This record is a very pleasant mix of jazz-rock and pop with some easy elements thrown in. Note the presence here of Hermann Naehring, the percussionist who made a quite endearing album as band leader or solo artist (highly recommended). His co-composition in the A4 position (Groovin' Too - Für R.K.) you'll note is stamped with his imprimatur of a gong for the end:
I get the feeling the majority of the work can be attributed to an accordionist called Tobias Morgenstern, who has nothing else in this period in time.
Another mighty fine track, called Jana:
A pleasantly overlong LP too, clocking in at approximately 50 minutes. Not a minute wasted, however.
Wednesday, 20 July 2016
Musyl & Joseppa: 1981's Das Mädchen mit den Schwefelhölzchen (The Girl with the Little Match)
Here's one that came completely out of left field and a welcome surprise from our very good friend in a relatively quiet summer of new explorations. Of course one couldn't fault anyone when the temperature is so high in the northern hemisphere and the children are out of school and playing in our ears all day...
I had no idea they even existed heretofore, and this duo put out it seems three albums in the period we are reviewing here. This particular release is just full of the progressive spirit with turbo-crazed compositions and marvellous ideas filled with emotion, while the others on either side of 1981 are somewhat slacking in comparison.
I had no idea they even existed heretofore, and this duo put out it seems three albums in the period we are reviewing here. This particular release is just full of the progressive spirit with turbo-crazed compositions and marvellous ideas filled with emotion, while the others on either side of 1981 are somewhat slacking in comparison.
Notice for example the second track, with its fusionoid opening, leading into a very odd chord change indeed, Die Mutter & Der Tod (i.e., mother and death):
The odd thing here is the fact the tonic starts the song then uses the tritone interval up to modulate down a minor second. And be assured that side b, which contains even superior music, is totally out of this world in terms of its progressive content. I'll mention the most impressive thing which is the way the music alternates between string quartet, fusion, and jazz-pop.
I'll quote their story from the Austrian rock archive (apologies as usual for google translate which I left verbatim in all its silly robotic AI glory --and we're supposed to trust them with driving our cars??):
Joseppa: Voice / Text
Paul M. Musyl: Guitar, Flute, Keyboard / Music
Paul Musyl played already in the 1960s with his group "Pauli & We" sophisticated cover versions since pushed ca.1969 who grew up in Afghanistan Joseppa the band. As to the two main protagonists all musicians went different professional paths, which took the two to the occasion to gain experience with different musicians in Germany, Belgium, Holland and the USA. Back in Austria, they united various forces around and started under the new band name "Musyl & Joseppa" concretely implement their ideas in their own compositions. 1973 produced first LP "Rozz" emerged, an unusual mix of rock and jazz, in equally unusual, varying instrumentation (e.g. String Quartet). The single "a friend went to America" was coupled, a setting of a Peter Rosegger-poem, the first no wanted, to advertising manager HG Haberl she heard and squeeze as promotional single for the company Humanic let ... the song became a big hit and later used in America as Signation "Radio Edelweiss".
"Musyl & Joseppa" published more records and CDs, produce for film, television, radio and advertising, organizing annual midnight concerts, composed 1983, the musical setting for the meeting of the Pope with the youth at the Prater Stadium, 1995, the music for interreligious meeting with the Dalai Lama and won in 1999 with the song "No more was "the Peace song Contest in Ireland.
Many musicians Styrian music scene working with" Musyl and Joseppa "together, which all names would call the scope of this book.
The out-LPs" Rozz "and" the girl with the Little Match "were reissued in 2010 as CDs.
Having returned to "Musyl & Joseppa" form in many variations and find a string quartet its unique and idiosyncratic sound.
"Musyl & Joseppa" produce in 1975 its first single, "A friend went to America" (Text: Peter Rosegger), a setting that would not have until HG Haberl, advertising manager, and she heard immediately - in one of Austria bestselling edition of 13,000 copies - produced. Meanwhile, this plate is busily black pressed. 1983 is pressed again for the Peter_Rosegger-year in an edition of 13,500 pieces and is the identifier for "Radio Edelweiss" in the US and Canada.
At the same time, the first LP "Rozz" published, a plate without compromise and therefore producible only with its own resources. Meanwhile, an unfortunately out of print object for lovers.
"Musyl & Joseppa" compose among others, the Humanic advertising, which in 1981 was awarded the State Prize for Advertising.
Movies with music by Musyl & Joseppa received throughout Europe first prizes.
1978 will find a TV portrait "Musycal "" What makes the wind when it is not blowing. "
in addition to radio and TV productions of the ORF is a special event for years traditionally become midnight concert on 24.12. to 24, which will be 1983 up recirculation for the sixth time.
1981 produced the LP "The Girl with the Little Match", a gift from Musyl & Joseppa to disabled children and youth.
1982 present Musyl & Joseppa her now 3rd album "Barney Leather", a collection of Soundtracks who wrote Paul M.Musyl in recent years for advertising, presentations and short films.
1983 Pope's visit to Vienna.
came for the event "meeting the Pope with the youth" at the Prater stadium to the 80,000 visitors who by Television TV viewers around the world reached, compose and perform Musyl & Joseppa "the entire musical accompaniment."
(from the official biography http://www.musyl.com/german/joseppa/main.html . Last visit: April 22, 2009)
Note the little comment regarding the release featured here today:
The LP "The Girl with the Little Match", a gift from Musyl & Joseppa to disabled children and youth.
What's for certain is these artists had a totally uncompromising attitude towards music and composition which surely deserves to be celebrated appropriately in today's more mature (huh?? are you following the Trump saga?) environment.
Joseppa: Voice / Text
Paul M. Musyl: Guitar, Flute, Keyboard / Music
Paul Musyl played already in the 1960s with his group "Pauli & We" sophisticated cover versions since pushed ca.1969 who grew up in Afghanistan Joseppa the band. As to the two main protagonists all musicians went different professional paths, which took the two to the occasion to gain experience with different musicians in Germany, Belgium, Holland and the USA. Back in Austria, they united various forces around and started under the new band name "Musyl & Joseppa" concretely implement their ideas in their own compositions. 1973 produced first LP "Rozz" emerged, an unusual mix of rock and jazz, in equally unusual, varying instrumentation (e.g. String Quartet). The single "a friend went to America" was coupled, a setting of a Peter Rosegger-poem, the first no wanted, to advertising manager HG Haberl she heard and squeeze as promotional single for the company Humanic let ... the song became a big hit and later used in America as Signation "Radio Edelweiss".
"Musyl & Joseppa" published more records and CDs, produce for film, television, radio and advertising, organizing annual midnight concerts, composed 1983, the musical setting for the meeting of the Pope with the youth at the Prater Stadium, 1995, the music for interreligious meeting with the Dalai Lama and won in 1999 with the song "No more was "the Peace song Contest in Ireland.
Many musicians Styrian music scene working with" Musyl and Joseppa "together, which all names would call the scope of this book.
The out-LPs" Rozz "and" the girl with the Little Match "were reissued in 2010 as CDs.
Having returned to "Musyl & Joseppa" form in many variations and find a string quartet its unique and idiosyncratic sound.
"Musyl & Joseppa" produce in 1975 its first single, "A friend went to America" (Text: Peter Rosegger), a setting that would not have until HG Haberl, advertising manager, and she heard immediately - in one of Austria bestselling edition of 13,000 copies - produced. Meanwhile, this plate is busily black pressed. 1983 is pressed again for the Peter_Rosegger-year in an edition of 13,500 pieces and is the identifier for "Radio Edelweiss" in the US and Canada.
At the same time, the first LP "Rozz" published, a plate without compromise and therefore producible only with its own resources. Meanwhile, an unfortunately out of print object for lovers.
"Musyl & Joseppa" compose among others, the Humanic advertising, which in 1981 was awarded the State Prize for Advertising.
Movies with music by Musyl & Joseppa received throughout Europe first prizes.
1978 will find a TV portrait "Musycal "" What makes the wind when it is not blowing. "
in addition to radio and TV productions of the ORF is a special event for years traditionally become midnight concert on 24.12. to 24, which will be 1983 up recirculation for the sixth time.
1981 produced the LP "The Girl with the Little Match", a gift from Musyl & Joseppa to disabled children and youth.
1982 present Musyl & Joseppa her now 3rd album "Barney Leather", a collection of Soundtracks who wrote Paul M.Musyl in recent years for advertising, presentations and short films.
1983 Pope's visit to Vienna.
came for the event "meeting the Pope with the youth" at the Prater stadium to the 80,000 visitors who by Television TV viewers around the world reached, compose and perform Musyl & Joseppa "the entire musical accompaniment."
(from the official biography http://www.musyl.com/german/joseppa/main.html . Last visit: April 22, 2009)
Note the little comment regarding the release featured here today:
The LP "The Girl with the Little Match", a gift from Musyl & Joseppa to disabled children and youth.
What's for certain is these artists had a totally uncompromising attitude towards music and composition which surely deserves to be celebrated appropriately in today's more mature (huh?? are you following the Trump saga?) environment.
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