May 6 2016
Recommended: Per Oddvar Johansen – “Let’s Dance”
The heart of this album is a soft patter, a beat that registers as barely above a murmur, and it’s how drummer Per Oddvar Johansen is able to repeatedly transform that tiny sound into expressions that resonate with remarkable strength that speaks to the winning formula of Let’s Dance. On the title-track, the piano phrasings of Helge Lien radiate a powerful grace, each note dripping with the gravity of heavy emotions spoken with composure and care, so that even when Johansen sends out flurries of rhythm to batter against the thick melodic strains of Torben Snekkestad’s saxophone, the song’s core holds strong.
This trend continues on a track like “Forest Flower,” with its striking dissonance whispered softly as if into a conspirator’s ear. The dissonance of this track leads into the blossoming loveliness of “Flying” and blurs the lines between songs as well as those between the furtive, labored efforts of starting up and the breathless freedom of liftoff.
The nuanced beauty of this album, thankfully, isn’t shielded from view by the more dramatic statements etched into the surface of the recording. Johansen utilizes an array of stringed and percussion instruments, sometimes with the lightest touch of electronics and violin as on “Flying” and sometimes shining bright as a new day sun as on “Uluru” with guitars and wood block percussion.
This is officially Johansen’s debut album, but a perusal of this site will see his name appear in a number of recommended albums, including those by Tore Brunborg, Mette Henriette, Christian Wallumrod and Adam Baldych… which goes a long to explaining why a debut album achieves a fullness and focus typically not seen until after a handful of projects see the light of day.
Let’s Dance is just a gorgeous album that, impressively and confidently, finds a number of different ways to express it.
Your album personnel: Per Oddvar Johansen (drums, violins, vibraphone, guitars, wood percussion, electronics), Helge Lien (piano) and Torben Snekkestad (saxophones, reed trumpet).
Released on Edition Records.
Listen to more of the album at the artist’s Bandcamp page.
Jazz from the Oslo, Norway scene.
Jul 18 2016
Recommended: Stein Urheim – “Strandebarm”
A Stein Urheim recording is like staring into the soul of a kaleidoscope or the dream imagery of the Aurora Borealis while it sleeps away the day. A one-man band of stringed instruments and harmonic devices, Urheim’s sonic manipulations are awash in striking, gorgeous details, and none of those details get lost in the shuffle or obscured from view as he lays it on thick. Strandebarm, his newest, might be the most beautiful thing he’s created yet.
Album opener “Water Part 1” immediately shows that the folk music influence will be prominent, but that’s just one element of songs that seem to be perpetually undergoing a dramatic transformation. At times, the wobbling melody of title-track “Strandebarm” is reminiscent of both mid-period Nordic Jazz and the drug-rock drone of the Spacemen 3-Spiritualized crossover projects. “Fjellbekken” goes from a thick ambient wash that dazzles like a sky full of stars to something more stark and pronounced before ending with a drone that swerves and dives and comes crashing down. Even the (relatively) straight-forward blues of “Berlin Blues” occasionally breaks into the hyperactive transformations one gets from turning the dial quickly across an expanse of radio stations.
A nice surprise is the addition of vocals on a couple tracks. “Water Part 2” and “Oh So Nice” utilize voice to add to the harmonic texture, and Urheim’s round sound brings some nifty contrast.
This album is about as beautiful as it gets.
Your album personnel: Stein Urheim (guitars, vocals, flutes, harmonica, slide tamboura, fretless bouzouki, turkish tanbur, mandolin, langeleik, banjo, loops and delay, pocket-cornet, percussion) and Jørgen Træen (modular synth, effects).
Released on Hubro Music.
Music from the Bergen, Norway scene.
Available at: Amazon | eMusic
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By davesumner • Beyond Jazz Reviews, Featured, Jazz Recommendations - 2016 releases • 0 • Tags: Hubro Music, Stein Urheim