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Artistic Partnerships
29 Oct 2008, 14:35 by Retronius
I was reading through my normal load of publications and I ran across a brief article that bothered me so much upon reading it that I just had to write something about it.
NME reported yesterday morning that John Paul Jones and Jimmy Page got tired of waiting for Robert Plant to make up his mind about doing a new tour with Led Zeppelin and they're just going on without him. Considering how late to the game I am to one of the best bands ever, I cannot feel right in saying whether or not this must stand, but I know this certainly bothers me.
Maybe it's a matter of perspective, but at what is the art still pure from its source when the authors are missing? Is Led Zeppelin still Led Zeppelin if Bonzo's son is playing the drums and some other dude is doing all the singing? When it was 75% original band and things were kept in the family for the other 25%, the claim was still there. The one-off concert they did recently in London still rocked hard from what I heard. But when you're only running with two original members, is the art still pure?
I ask this from time to time with other musicians. If Nine Inch Nails is really just Trent Reznor doing everything himself in the studio, when he goes on tour, is the band really Nine Inch Nails or NIN with friends? The original artisan is present, but are these added components adding to the work or corrupting it? If this new product is good (which it is), is it a result of the other musicians or the structure Reznor initially presented? Is it still essentially the same work?
Guns N' Roses is finally going to release the long awaited album, Chinese Democracy (and while I don't listen to Guns N' Roses, I will be looking for my free can of Dr. Pepper). The thing is, since Slash and Buckethead are not included, is this really a work of Guns N' Roses or just the new work of Axl Rose? Can Axl definitively say that he alone is the entire band that people have known for years?
Let me get a little less mainstream and a little more esoteric (but something that's a little stronger to my suits). In 1973, Herbie Hancock put together a band and recorded the classic album, Head Hunters. The band was known by that name and recorded a few albums together (1974's Thrust and the Japanese import live album Flood). But from 1975 to 1998, Herbie Hancock was no longer with The Headhunters. The band stayed in the same style as its founding, but it was lacking with the loss of Hancock (especially in comparison to Hancock's various creative directions over the many years). Could they still be the Headhunters with the loss of their founder?
In the 1960s, Joe Sample, Stix Hooper, Wilton Felder, and Wayne Henderson formed the Jazz Crusaders (and later the name was shortened to The Crusaders). The group had considerable fame in its time and especially after 1979's Street Life. Yet the group started to dismantle in 1975 when Henderson left the group. Over the years members left until the group was considered disbanded. When Sample and Felder got together in 1991 for Healing the Wounds, was this really a Crusaders album? When Henderson made a new band of the same name, was this really The Crusaders? When Sample, Felder, and Hooper got together in 2003 for Rural Renewal without Henderson, was this really a Crusaders album?
When creating art in a group, the integrity of the group and the work must be taken into account. It's why when Esbjörn Svensson passed this past June, Esbjörn Svensson Trio was no more. It's why TLC hasn't been able to properly get back together after Left Eye died. It's why Roger Avery isn't wowing people with his own personal work but when he worked with Quentin Tarantino for everything they did from Pulp Fiction and back, film lovers took notice.
Artistic partnerships are beautiful, symbiotic relationships. They can be closer than marriages. But if a breakup happens, one cannot just look at the art the same way. To do so would discredit the basis of the relationship and the quality of the work. It lacks objectivity. It lacks respect. Analyzing each artist's contribution to a work is crucial, especially in a partnership.
And this is why I'm saying 50% of Zeppelin may just not do.
For other writings that aren't necessarily about music, but you never know, head to In Retrospect. -
Jazz festival tribute
26 Oct 2008, 17:13 by shbadr

Jazz festival tribute
26.10.08
Winter is in the air, and the festivals taking place this season are amongst some of the most exciting both in the realm of the arts and music. The upcoming Jazz Festival in London is certainly no exception; and as I do every year, I look forward to immersing myself in its dynamic programme for as many nights I can between the 14th and 23rd of November. Promising a bit of something for everyone (if jazz isn’t your thing, you might even be persuaded), the 2008 line-up includes some of today’s most well-known jazz acts, as well as a series of sessions available for free entry including a few launching various ensembles playing between a host of popular West End and Central London venues. For sake of narrowing down this endless list of listening enjoyment, fellow lovers of Herbie Hancock will be sad to know that tickets for his Sextet’s gig at the Royal Festival Hall have unfortunately already been sold out; however there’s no shortage of alternatives ranging from the London Jazz Collective, the Portico Quartet and Norwegian saxophonist Frøy Aagre.
All thing considered, I’m even more gutted that Murcof’s performance with Bcn216 and Oren Marshall is also unsurprisingly sold out, but I have no doubt that nights with legends Erik Truffaz and Ketil Bjørnstad will more than make up for missing out on such an opportunity (Arkhangelsk and Floating are amongst some of my most prized jazz records at the moment). Others that would be an absolute shame to miss out on are the Matthew Herbert Big Band (yes, the Matthew Herbert, master of organic electro-sampling), and Turkey’s eclectic Taksim Trio with Omer Klein, the latter whose instrumentational influence is derived from the Middle East and North African traditions. Other performances will include New Jazz Now and several Unplugged Sessions offering a selection of the classics and more contemporary, alternative cross-over styles of jazz on the circuit. And in memory of possibly the most exceptionally brilliant trio to be heard over the last two decades, a tribute will be held at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in honour of the Esbjörn Svensson Trio, whose pianist sadly passed away earlier this year.
Back in July after receiving word of Esbjörn Svensson's tragic death, I had promised to follow up with fuller commentary in a review of sorts when at the time I found an obituary would suffice until the release of E.S.T.’s then long-awaited (and perhaps final) album. Taking the opportunity to do so now, especially if you are unable to attend next month’s Memorial at the Southbank Centre, I strongly encourage you to add Leucocyte to your collection as soon as you possibly can. Exemplary modal jazz brimming with the melodious articulation that only Sweden’s most-famed jazz outfit can achieve, all ten tracks on this volume provide a window into the extensive repertoire of E.S.T. that would suit both veteran listeners and newcomers alike. With their quintessential mix of acid jazz and Scandinavian folk-inspired non-diatonic structures punctuated by the splendor that is Esbjörn Svensson’s mastery of the keys, Leucocyte has quelled any doubt I may have had before as regards to whether or not any album succeeding Tuesday Wonderland and Viaticum would be able to carry on that musical legacy beyond another level of dynamic complexity.
Poignant, mesmerizing and truthfully exceeding all expectation, it goes without saying that it doesn’t disappoint in any way one can humanly imagine…
See you at the Festival!
- Sarah Badr -
esbjörn svensson
29 Sep 2008, 10:34 by gunerri
Esbjörn Svensson Trio
İyi ki bu adamı öldükten sonra tanıdım. Yoksa daha fazla üzülürdüm.İyi müzik herzaman yaşar. -
Konzerte 2005
23 Sep 2008, 08:04 by Horst_Schlemmer
08.01. 3rd Planet Myer Day, Leipzig Moritzbastei (Chinese Black, OVNI, XPQ-21, Needle Sharing, Haujobb)
22.01. Die Sterne (Support: Jens Friebe), Leipzig Conne Island
18.02. Kante, Oldenburg Amadeus
27.02. Dieter Nuhr, Leipzig Gewandhaus
02.03. Diary of Dreams (Support: Psyche), Leipzig Moritzbastei
10.03. Wladimir Kaminer, Oldenburg Kulturetage
12.03. Phillip Boa & The Voodooclub, Bremen Schlachthof
15.04. Die Fantastischen Vier (Support: Afrob), Leipzig Arena
18.04. Esbjörn Svensson Trio, Halle Oper
06.05. Fink, Halle Turm
08.05. Wir sind Helden (Support: EL*KE), Leipzig Haus Auensee
13. – 16.05. Wave Gotik Treffen, Leipzig überall (Atargatis, Penumbra, Nik Page & The Sacrifight Army, Astrovamps, Apoptygma Berzerk, The Wounded, Darkwood, In My Rosary, Sol Invictus, Visage, Welle:Erdball, The Human League, Coinside, Nebelhexe, NFD, Hekate)
17.06. The Crüxshadows (Support: Ego Likeness), Wilhelmshaven Pumpwerk
30.06. Herbert Feuerstein, Fourschlag, Kaiser-Haiser-Kombüse, Leipzig Moritzbastei
17.07. Heinz Strunk (Lesung), Oldenburg Küchengarten (Kultursommer)
13./14.08. M’era Luna-Festival, Hildesheim Drispenstedt Flughafen (In Mitra Medusa Inri, Qntal, The Crüxshadows, Combichrist, Scream Silence, Trisomie 21)
27.08. Manfred Krug, Leipzig Parkbühne
03.09. Zwischenwelten-Festival, Koblenz Festung Ehrenbreitstein (Nocte Obducta, Chamber, Janus, The Vision Bleak, Schandmaul)
08.09. Olli Schulz & der Hund Marie, Bremen Tower
17.09. Heinz Strunk, Bremen Güterbahnhof Tor 48)
24.09. Project Pitchfork (Support: Milú/Altera Forma), Leipzig Werk II
06.10. Project Pitchfork (Support: Milú/Altera Forma), Magdeburg Factory
07.10. Alec Empire, Leipzig Conne Island
20.10. Oasis (Support: Art Brut), Hamburg Alsterdorfer Sporthalle
21.10. Spillsbury (Support: T-Seven), Bremen Römer
31.10. Die Happy (Support: Revolverheld), Leipzig Werk II
11.11. Out of Line-Festival, Leipzig Werk II (Solitary Experiments, Decoded Feedback, Blutengel, u.a.)
18.11. Phillip Boa & The Voodooclub, Halle Easy Schorre
26.12. Phillip Boa & The Voodooclub (Support: Jamboree), Leipzig Moritzbastei
27.12. Phillip Boa & The Voodooclub (Support: Lament), Leipzig Moritzbastei -
Konzerte 2003
23 Sep 2008, 07:20 by Horst_Schlemmer
17.01. Physical Graffiti – Oldenburg Charly’s
23.01. Fehlfarben – Bremen Schlachthof
05.03. Die Ärzte (Nackt Unter Kannibalen) – Leer Zollhaus
08.03. Oasis (Support: The Hiss) – Hamburg Colorline-Arena
14.03. Qntal (Support: Somnambul) – Wilhelmshaven Pumpwerk
15.03. De-Phazz – Oldenburg Kulturetage
19.03. Project Pitchfork (Support: Angels & Agony) – Hamburg Docks
25.03. Project Pitchfork (Support: Angels & Agony) – Hannover Capitol
28.03. Such a Surge – Bremen Schlachthof
20.04. Ratpack (Support: Straight On, Lichtblick, Irgendwas Anderes) – Bremen Tivoli
10.05. Do not Dream (Support: Sis) – Oldenburg JuZ Bürgerfelde
11.05. Herbert Grönemeyer (Support: Creutzfeldt & Jakob) – Bremen Weserstadion
13.05. Wolfsheim – Hamburg Grosse Freiheit 36
01. – 04.06. God’s Bow, Soman, Cinema Strange, In Strict Confidence, Ikon, Wayne Hussey, Placebo Effect, Solitary Experiments, Dance on Glass, Closterkeller, Boytronic, Mesh, Kontrast, Aurum Nostrum, Lux Interna, Of the Wand and the Moon - Leipzig (Wave Gotik Treffen)
14.06. Ratpack – Oldenburg Charly’s
20. – 22.06. Gus Gus, Tocotronic, Union Youth, Grandaddy, Apocalyptica, Turbonegro, Underworld – Scheeßel Eichenring (Hurricane Festival)
30.06. John Cale & Band – Oldenburg Schlossplatz (Kultursommer)
02.07. Jocelyn B. Smith – Oldenburg Schlossplatz (Kultursommer)
05.07. Fehlfarben – Oldenburg Schlossplatz (Kultursommer)
12.07. Thanateros, Saltatio Mortis, Diorama, Qntal, Secret Discovery, The Crüxshadows, Subway to Sally – Mülheim an der Ruhr Schloss Broich (Castle Rock IV)
09. – 10.08. [:SITD:], Zeraphine, Haujobb, In Strict Confidence, Project Pitchfork, Hekate, Wayne Hussey, Apoptygma Berzerk, Camouflage – Hildesheim Flugplatz (M’era Luna)
28.08. Ratpack – Oldenburg MTS-Bühne (Stadtfest)
29.08. Subway to Sally – Wilhelshaven Pumpwerk
21.09. Wir sind Helden (Support: Astra Kid) – Oldenburg Kulturetage
30.09. Zeromancer (Support: Delaware) – Hannover Faust
07.10. Florian Poser’s Brazil Experience – Oldenburg Kulturetage
15.10. Tomte (Support: Home of the Lame) – Oldenburg Amadeus
16.10. David Bowie (Support: The Dandy Warhols) – Hamburg Colorline-Arena
19.10. Esbjörn Svensson Trio – Oldenburg Kulturetage
23.10. Blackmail (Support: sugar breath & Mob) – Oldenburg Kulturetage
29.10. Wir sind Helden (Support: Olli Schulz) – Bremen Aladin
14.11. Sense Field (Support: Deadline/One Man and His Droid) – Oldenburg Amadeus
17.11. Blumfeld – Oldenburg Kulturetage
21.11. Anne Clark – Bremen Modernes
26.11. John Cale (& Band) – Bremen Schlachthof
09.12. Olli Schulz – Bremen Tower
25.12. Haujobb (Planet Myer Day) – Leipzig Moritzbastei
27.12. Phillip Boa & The Voodooclub – Leipzig Moritzbastei
Ist das alles lange her... -
E.S.T. - "Leucocyte"
18 Sep 2008, 08:32 by Shu_Gi
This is strange music, and something i wouldn't have expected from E.S.T. Esbjörn Svensson Trio after hearing their Hamburg-Live Album Live in Hamburg. A mixture of many different styles, with many changes in it.
It is a hint of how EST were pushing themselves into uncharted territories territories. Very impressive is their acting as a whole unit, like its just one mind in control of six hands and three minds in improvisational arches.
Sometimes they are very "aggressive", more aggressive then most metal i have heard (to be honest: i havent heard much) sometimes its close to thoughtful melancholic music, or even serial structures, reminding a bit of Pierre Boulez Pierre Boulez. Sometimes it brings pictures to mind of brutal nature forces, then of idyllic landscapes. And yes, sometimes the music transports a certain "deep water" sensation - no wonder with Svensson being a diver one might say, on the other hand i cant help but have a weird feeling while listening ... It was probably not meant as "legacy", but by becoming one - due to the circumstances of Svenssons untimely death - it has its certain eligibility as such.
In the end the music more is often disintegrating then restructuring itself - Svensson was known to be active in ecology issues, some of the tracks (Earth, Decade, Ad Mortem) might be a foreboding, plotting a dark outlook on the world
Its really sad that this is the end of the journey of E.S.T., i guess much more fascinating music would have come from this trio. Somehow it feels although that this release might work as a "Leucocyte", and is able to eat some of the minds bacteria and viruses away and telling the music and the life: Ad infinitum.
Esbjörn Svensson Trio - "Leucocyte"
Esbjörn Svensson Trio (piano),
Magnus Öström (drums),
Dan Berglund (bass) -
Ein wahrer Aderslass...
12 Sep 2008, 12:17 by JawsSurfer
...zu was sich mancher Entertainment- bzw. Musikredakteur (Link) hinreißen lässt, zum neuen und leider wohl letzten Album des Esbjörn Svensson Trios. Todesvorahnung, Gedenkalbum...so ein Mumpitz. Sicherlich werden auch die anderen beiden Mitglieder des Trios um Ihren verstorbenen Freund trauern aber sich zu solchen Bemerkungen hinreißen zu lassen ist schon fast Taktlos. Ein Freudentaumel ließ sich auf den bisherigen Alben auch nicht gerade vernehmen obwohl es natürlich auch einige schöne und fröhliche Lieder des Trios gibt.
Für mich ist Leucocyte durchaus ein Album mit beklemmenden Abschnitten und "ja" es gibt auch so etwas wie eine Schweigeminute aber das gehört zum Konzept der letzten vier Lieder und hat wohl kaum etwas mit irgendwelchen Tauchunfällen zu tun. Es sei denn Dan Berglund und Magnus Öström haben absichtlich nochmal nachträglich einige Passagen neu arrangiert. Auch Wasserplätschern entspringt höchstens der glühenden Phantasie des aufmerksamen Hörers.
Genug davon...es gibt also einige eigenartige und vielleicht traurige Songs, die sich aber immer wieder mit beschwingenden Arrangements abwechseln, darin übergehen. Es ist eine Weiterentwicklung zu hören in der auch mit kratzenden, rauschenden Geräuschen und zerstörten bzw. verzerrten Tönen und Instrumenten gearbeitet wurde. Ich hab mich sehr drauf gefreut und sehe keinen Grund übermäßig auf dem Ableben eines tollen Musikers rumzureiten, wenn er zum Abschluss ein so gut und vielfältig produziertes Album hinterlässt. Kann sich ein Musiker etwas schöneres wünschen als sich in so einer Form unvergesslich zu machen?!
Danke für die Musik! -
the best non-ECM Contemporary Jazz
27 Jul 2008, 18:34 by germanius
Discovering contemporary jazz arena i was very surprised to find out wonderful music of great musicians, but not ECM. Of course they can't be leaved by me without any attention. At first i wanted to place them behind ECM albums, but finally i decided to indicate them apart, letting ECM be unique instead of genre.
So, here they are:
[DIW-627] Helge Lien Trio (2002) Spiral Circle
[CAMJ-7763] Pieranunzi, Johnson, Baron (2004) Play Morricone
The albums of:
Brad Mehldau Trio
Esbjörn Svensson Trio
The Brian Melvin Trio
are next pretenders to be in my top-list. -
The Chillage Idiots - Dublin XFM
18 Jul 2008, 01:08 by cm1974
Big thanks to Mick and Paul Chillage for featuring a track from my Alien Genome Project album and also for featuring a track from Engine7's fantastic Me, But Perfect album out now on Herb Recordings.
You can download the full show which features some great electronica below.
The Chillage idiots XFM Dublin
get the latest show here >>>>>
http://www.xfmdublin.com/blog/wp-content/the-chillage-15-07-08.mp3
Tracklisting: 15/07/2008
The Future Sound of London: "I've Become What You Were" (Insider Mix) [The Pulse Eps]
Jumpin' And Pumpin'
Thomas P. Heckmann: "Genocide" [The Lost Tales Vol. II] Fax
Spooky: "No Return" (Dorset Echo) [Open] Spooky
808 State: "In Yolk" [Quadrastate] Rephlex
Fanu And Bill Laswell: "Fourth Voice" [Lodge] Ohm Resistance
Esbjörn Svensson Trio: "Years Of Yearning" [Strange Place For Snow] Act Music
Engine7: "Me, But Perfect" [Me, But Perfect] Herb
Gate Zero: "Counter Balance" [Green Planet] http://www. stadtgruenlabel. net
Ciaran Byrne: "Moving Sungold" [Nine Lives Causeway] Psychonavigation
Reln: "Never To Return" [unreleased] http://www. myspace. com/reln
Phasen: "That Rainy Feeling I Get" [The Crisis Is Over] Distant Noise Records
Jay Riordan: "Signs" [unreleased] http://www. myspace. com/jayriordan
Sen: "Voyager" [unreleased] http://www. myspace. com/1138thx
Jack Dangers: "Burbidge Chain" [Music For Planetarium] Brianwashed
ch.pm: "Mystic Structure" [The Alien Genome Project]
http://www. myspace. com/solipsism
Christopher Bissonnette: "Comfortable Expectations" [Periphery] Kranky
B12: "Metropolis" [Electro-Soma] Warp -
e.s.t :,(
13 Jul 2008, 21:49 by twist0r
This must not be true. I was looking forward to seeing Esbjörn Svensson Trio in Kassel next week, playing the stuff from their greatest album. And just today i found out that Esbjörn died. I was shocked. This is so incredibly sad :(
This band definitely influenced my musical taste. Jazz was suddenly easy to listen to. They opened an entrance. My first and only concert with e.s.t was such a great experience. Diving should be forbidden by law in every country of the world. It took away one of the greatest musicians and a father of two kids.
Rest in peace, Esbjörn. Your music will never die.