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Jakob Bro / Time (with Lee Konitz, Bill Frisell, Thomas Morgan)
Жанр: Modern Creative, Chamber Jazz
Носитель: CD
Страна-производитель диска (релиза): DK
Год издания: 2011
Издатель (лейбл): Loveland Records
Номер по каталогу: LLR013
Страна исполнителя (группы): DK/US
Аудиокодек: FLAC (*.flac)
Тип рипа: tracks
Битрейт аудио: lossless
Продолжительность: 00:42:19
Источник (релизер): what.cd
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: нет
Треклист:
1. Nat (04:39)
2. Cirkler (07:27)
3. A Simple Premise (03:06)
4. Swimmer (05:22)
5. Northern Blues (07:13)
6. Fiordlands (04:15)
7. Yellow (06:17)
8. Smaa Dyr (03:32)
Код:
AUDIOCHECKER v2.0 beta (build 457) - by Dester - opdester@freemail.hu
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-=== DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE! ===-
Path: ...\Jakob Bro - Time (2011)
1 -=- 01 - Nat.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
2 -=- 02 - Cirkler.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
3 -=- 03 - A simple premise.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
4 -=- 04 - Swimmer.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
5 -=- 05 - Northern blues.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
6 -=- 06 - Fiordlands.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
7 -=- 07 - Yellow.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
8 -=- 08 - Smaa dyr.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
Summary 100,00% CDDA
2795444
Доп. информация:
front, 1200px @ jakobbro.com
Recorded and mixed at Avatar Studios, NYC, September 2011
Part 2 of the trilogy including
[1.]Balladeering (+Paul Motian) - 2009
[3.]December Song (+Craig Taborn) - 2013
Artist Biography by Matt Collar
Danish guitarist and composer Jakob Bro makes expansive, forward-thinking jazz that's atmospheric and experimental, while still being grounded in the tradition. Born in Risskov, Denmark in 1978, Bro played trumpet in his youth and first became exposed to jazz via his father's big-band and jazz record collection. Around age 12, Bro also started playing guitar, a passion that overtook trumpet and led to stints studying music at such institutions as Denmark's Rhythmic Conservatory, the Berklee College of Music in Boston, and the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music in New York. Although he never secured a degree, his adept approach to improvisation and group interplay caught the ear of local N.Y.C. musicians including Paul Motian, who hired him to play with his Electric Bebop Band. Since the mid-2000s, Bro has worked with a bevy of artists including Lee Konitz, Bill Frisell, Paul Bley, Chris Cheek, Ben Street, Mark Turner, Chris Speed, David Virelles, and others. As a leader, Bro has released a steady stream of albums including Daydreamer (2003), Pearl River (2007), The Stars Are All New Songs (2008), White Rainbow (2008), Who Said Gay Paree (2008), Balladeering (2009), Bro/Knak (2011), and December Song (2013). In 2015, Bro made his ECM debut with Gefion, which showcased his trio with bassist Thomas Morgan and drummer Jon Christensen. Streams followed a year later with Joey Baron in the drummer's chair.
http://www.allmusic.com/artist/jakob-bro-mn0002326029/biography
Hearing music is a journey towards discovering the world anew. If anything, this is a philosophy that the young Danish guitarist Jakob Bro has taken to heart. Throughout a career that has seen him playing in a wide range of constellations, among them groups led by trumpeter Tomasz Stanko and the late drum legend Paul Motian, Bro has never lost his intuitive approach to making music. No matter who he is playing with, there is never a sense of redundancy; instead, music becomes a serious playground where anything can happen.
Of all the projects in which Bro is involved, his recordings as a leader hold a special place. In true democratic fashion, the guitarist seems to bring out the best in his fellow players. Thus, Balladeering, his magnum opus from 2009, brought out a seasoned beauty in the playing of masterful saxophonist Lee Konitz, whose fragile tone poems on that album surpass the altoist's endeavors on the high profile Live at Birdland (ECM, 2011).
Sensing there was special chemistry between them, Konitz and Bro team up once again on Time along with guitarist Bill Frisell, who also played on Balladeering, and bassist Thomas Morgan.
Together they create an intimate and abstract chamber music that never loses track of a beautiful melody with a folk-like simplicity. The opener "Nat" ("Night") is a case in point, with its nocturnal mood and breezy blowing from Konitz and a shimmering riverbed of chords from Bro and Frisell.
"Northern Blues" is a perfect description of the aesthetic of an album whose organic sound and blue melancholy still comes across as cathartic, with a childlike sense of the wonder of creation. Thus, no-one brings the attention to the bass' tactile quality of wood and steel like Morgan, as he plucks the strings with delicacy and strength.
Overall, there is unique sense of the power of space as the four musicians transform the fluid shapes of melodies and drum-less rhythms into a moving eulogy to time as the condition of all musical art—although, paradoxically, what remains in the end is a timeless work of art.
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/time-jakob-bro-loveland-records-review-by-jakob-baekgaard.php
Of the three albums in Bro’s trilogy, 2011’s Time is most cohesive and radiates the strongest presence. As a result, its seaside ease conjures up the imagery of the shoreline and salt in the air, and translates the immensity and vastness of a large body of water without sacrificing the music’s calm serenity.
On “Sma Dyrr,” steel-string guitar glitters like sunlight. Thomas Morgan’s bass is bright and resonant. On “Swimmer,” guitar lines plume upward from the dancing flame of Lee Konitz’s sax. The expression on “Cirkler” is one of determined will, but it grows increasingly drowsy, as if having spent all its energy before drifting off to sleep. The Frisellian influence is stronger on “Fiordlands” and “Nat.” On the former, the rhythmic touch by guitars and bass is almost hypnotic, while the latter track’s shimmery guitars incite an ethereal presence that drifts peacefully along, even as melodic fragments create an ominous tone that hangs in the air. The quartet gets a lot of mileage out of the mix of earthy and mysterious tones on Time, and it’s a big reason for the album’s success.
http://www.birdistheworm.com/i-listen-to-all-of-this-the-jakob-bro-balladeering-trilogy/
I first encountered the playing of Danish guitarist and composer Jakob Bro when he appeared at the Edge Arts Centre in Much Wenlock, Shropshire in November 2009 as part of a “Nordic” quintet led by the venerable Polish trumpeter and composer Tomasz Stanko. That same quintet appeared on Stanko’s typically excellent ECM album “Dark Eyes” and Bro impressed equally in both the live and recorded contexts.
As a solo performer Bro came to international prominence in 2009 with the highly successful album “Balladeering”, an award winning album that found the Dane working with a host of prominent Americans including fellow guitarist Bill Frisell, saxophonist Lee Konitz, bassist Ben Street and the late, great Paul Motian at the drums. Not that this represented Bro’s début, he has recorded prolifically as both leader and sideman and due to links forged when he studied at the Berklee College of Music in Boston and the Manhattan School of Music in New York he has worked frequently with other Americans including guitarist Steve Cardenas and saxophonists Mark Turner and Chris Cheek. Bro also toured as a member of Motian’s Electric Bebop Band.
“Time” appears on Bro’s own Loveland label and can be seen as a continuation of the musical relationships explored on “Balladeering”. Frisell and Konitz appear once more with bass duties being taken over by another American, Thomas Morgan. However the drummer-less line up represents a significant change in emphasis with the focus now very much on mood, colour and texture. The title of the album references both the chronological span of the ages of this cross generational group of musicians but also the sense of time and movement within the music itself.
When I first heard Bro performing with Stanko his playing evoked comparisons with Frisell and it should perhaps come as no surprise to find that the two guitarists have struck up such a perfect understanding. Indeed Frisell seems to positively relish playing with other guitarists, notably his work as part of a two guitar front line with either John Scofield or Pat Metheny in bands led by bassist Marc Johnson.
The playing of Konitz is little short of astonishing. At eighty five he is playing as well as ever and his musical curiosity remains undimmed. His tone remains remarkably pure and his musical intellect is as sharp as ever, Konitz has spent his professional life nudging at the boundaries and he shows no signs of wanting to stop that yet. His contribution here and across many decades of music making demands that he be considered as one of the all time greats.
The programme consists of eight Bro originals and begins with the emotive Nat (Danish for “Night”) which features the warm, breathy tone of Konitz’ alto above the delicate, intertwining lattice of Bro and Frisell’s guitars, the whole anchored by Morgan at the bass. Bro and Frisell use their effects judiciously, there’s a touch of Frisell’s trademark Americana twang and the slightest hint of electronica.
The air of fragile beauty created on the opener extends to the folk like melody of “Cirkler”. Although the album was recorded at Avatar Studios in New York City the presence of Bro ensures that the music retains a distinctly Nordic feel. If “Nat” was dominated by Konitz then “Cirkler” gives the guitarists a greater opportunity to stretch out. Their dialogue is unhurried, organic and natural with Morgan offering sensitive and intelligent support to their intimate conversations. Konitz is also given the opportunity to expound with long, melodic lines underscored by subtle guitar FX.
“A Simple Premise” features the string playing trio of Bro, Frisell and Morgan in a relaxed conversation that wouldn’t sound out of place on one of Frisell’s own records.
Konitz returns to add his fragile yet authoritative voice to the lovely “Swimmer”, another piece with a Nordic, folk like melody. Again the guitarists generate a rich backdrop of sounds with Frisell adding a touch of Americana to the European influences. Here as elsewhere the intuitive Morgan meanders through the piece, sometimes stepping into the foreground, at other times forming a stabilising presence. He is always thoroughly attuned to the sensibilities of his fellow musicians.
The quietly brooding “Northern Blues” features the melancholy saxophone of Konitz alongside the glacial sounds of the guitars, it seems to sum up the “frozen tundras” so often associated with Jan Garbarek. “Fiordlands” continues the Nordic theme but is slightly warmer in feel with a gorgeous saxophone melody alongside the rather chillier guitars.
“Yellow” maintains the album’s chamber jazz feel on another unhurried meditation featuring Konitz’s long lined sax lines above the tracery of guitars and bass on another song like Bro theme. It represents the final contribution from the venerable Konitz before the album concludes with “Smaa Dyr”, a beautifully tranquil conversation between acoustic guitars and double bass.
“Time” is an intriguing album. Resolutely unhurried and highly melodic it features intimate ensemble conversations based around song like folk melodies. Konitz is often the predominate voice but there is virtually no orthodox jazz soloing. This is chamber jazz at its most intimate and some may miss the element of swing. However “Time” is a total success in its own terms and the lustrous, tightly disciplined and often downright beautiful playing of the four protagonists is excellent throughout. Admirers of “Angel Song”, trumpeter Kenny Wheeler’s 1995 chamber jazz classic for ECM may appreciate this album, particularly so as Konitz and Frisell are common to both records.
Bro (born 1978) is an original voice on the world jazz scene and his reputation is certain to grow in the coming years. Since this November 2011 release he has issued the double CD set “Bro/Knak” , a series of large ensemble compositions featuring Frisell, Morgan, Wheeler, pianist Paul Bley, drummer Jeff Ballard and others plus a choir and theremin soloist Pamelia Kurstin. The second CD sees these compositions handed over in their entirety to Danish electronic artist Thomas Knak for a complete overhaul. It’s a fascinating project which I hope to take a look at in due course.
In the meantime there’s always this beautiful, lovingly crafted mood piece to enjoy.
http://www.thejazzmann.com/reviews/review/jakob-bro-time/
Jakob Bro, Bill Frisell - electric guitar
Lee Konitz – alto saxophone
Ben Street – double bass
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