Jun 1 2017
Recommended: Christian Meaas Svendsen – “Avin”
There’s a heavy emotional weight that acts as a counterbalance to the lovely melodic persona of Avin. The key component that secures both qualities is how Christian Meaas Svendsen slips between evocative, poignant expressions with a fluid grace that’s almost stunning for its subtle transformations. The album is effectively split between two suites. The gentle lullaby of “Da du og var vi” transitions into the tense “Kretsløp” without a pause between, and the comforting tone becomes more ominous. And then this, too, shifts into the wistful title-track “Avin.” Here, the harmonics reflect an uneasy state of existence… a far cry from the thick, heartmelting harmonies of the suite’s opening. Svendsen’s vocals are delivered with an even hand and a light touch, and nothing about those qualities hides the impassioned feelings of the words themselves.
“I Berlin” is a solitary piece that separates the two sections. The ensemble’s chamber music nature shines strongest here, and the seamless way in which the string section switches between a disarming and a choppy melodicism is emblematic of the album’s approach and its structure.
“Katarsis” begins the second section with silence, interrupted by spoken word that leads into the melancholy “11 Dager,” a song that features Svendsen’s acoustic guitar, a duet with another vocalist, and then a thin ray of sunlight at song’s end in the form of warm harmony from a children’s choir. Those harmonics lead right into the album finale “Tørr og sliten jord.” It’s a song that brings the album full circle with the emotional tones and personable tunefulness of the album’s opening track, but with a mood that shades more to a state of contemplation.
The album’s title and the artist’s liner notes indicate this album is about love and his current relationship and all of the turbulence, uncertainty and joy that comes with it. That assertion rings true from every note of this gorgeous album.
Your album personnel: Christian Meaas Svendsen (vocals, guitar), Vilde Alnæs (violin), Adrian Løseth Waade (viola), Kaja Fjellberg Pettersen (cello), Inga Aas (double bass), Henrik Munkeby Nørstebø (trombone), Espen Reinertsen (saxophone) and Agnes Hvizdalek (vocal).
Released on Nakama Records.
Listen to more of the album at the label’s Bandcamp page.
Music from Oslo, Norway.
Dec 23 2017
Best of 2017 #28: Daniel Herskedal – “The Roc” (Edition Records)
If there exists a societal opinion that tuba is incapable of being the source of beautiful music, then Daniel Herskedal has something to send that premise crashing down. The Roc is arguably the most gorgeous recording of 2017. Built upon the tubist’s personal concoction of modern jazz, chamber and folk, Herskedal adds an intriguing influence of Arabic music to the mix, as well as expands his ensemble with a cellist and violinist. As with previous Herskedal recordings, The Roc is an album overflowing with cinematic imagery, thick beautiful harmonies and melodies as bright and clear as a forest stream. The addition of Arabic music creates a rhythmic environment that brings a life to those elements that breathes an entirely new way, and has the melodic effect of a shapely allure, of providing an enchantment impossible to ignore. This is a phenomenal album from a musician who just keeps raising the bar on his own projects, and exceeding it.
Music from Oslo, Norway.
Read more at Bird is the Worm.
Like this:
By davesumner • Recap: Best of 2017 • 0 • Tags: Daniel Herskedal, Edition Records, Jazz - Best of 2017, Oslo