Donnerstag, 22. November 2012

Foils Quartet & Superimpose

Foils Quartet am 06.10.2012 bei "Jazz and More Festival" in Sibiu, Rumänien.

Aus "Foils" ist das "Foils Quartet" geworden!!!!!

Mit großer Vorfreude möchte ich auf zwei Konzerte hinweisen, bei dem Frank Paul Schubert und ich gemeinsam mit den beiden großartigen englischen Musikern John Edwards (Bass) und Mark Sanders (Schlagzeug) auftreten werden:

01.12. Altbüron/Schweiz, Bau 4
02.12. Schorndorf, Manufaktur


Und außerdem gibt es ein Jahresabschluss-Set von "Superimpose"! Wir haben uns ja ein bisschen rar gemacht in diesem Jahr, aber nächstes Jahr sieht das wieder ganz anders aus....!!!!

15.12. Graz/Österreich, "Interpenetration Festival", Forum Stadtpark


- Alle weiteren Termine wie immer auf meiner Website -

Review Posaunenglanzterzett

Ken Waxman hat sich die außerordentliche Mühe gemacht und drei CDs besprochen, auf denen insgesamt neun (!) Posaunisten am Werk sind - und sonst niemand! Hier der Ausschnitt, bei dem es um das "Posaunenglanzterzett" geht. Der gesamte Artikel ist auf www.jazzword.com nachzulesen.

"Any one of these CDs could easily answer the question: “how many trombonists does it take to change a light bulb?” Substitute “improvise impressively” for the action and the answer becomes: “as many as needed”. At the same time, the four Americans, three Germans and two Italians represented on these sessions demonstrate that brass ‘bone creativity can be doubled and/or tripled.
...
Many of these same brass strategies are exhibited, often at breakneck pace, in the Bauer-Müller-Thewes capillary meeting. Each player too has extensive experience Müller with bands featuring the likes of guitarist Olaf Rupp and trumpeter Nils Ostendorf; Thewes with bands including pianists Ulrich Gumpert and Uwe Oberg; and Bauer with everyone from saxophonist Evan Parker to drummer Roger Turner.
There are points here at which it seems that the combo from a rickety-tick minstrel show has suddenly decided to try out some of Vinko Globokar tougher trombone exercises. That’s because some tunes balance on a swinging beat created by a slide ostinato, as soloists compete to see who can blow the loudest and strongest. Renal growls, staccatissimo jitters, triple-tonguing smears, whinnies and staccato bites are all heard. Affiliated, but not in unison, the resulting textures can be half fire engine siren and half euphonious whine, before finally reaching a point where singular smears collide. Elsewhere the collective bass notes are such that subterranean tones are lower pitched than anything pulled from the tubas on the other CDs; other times long-lined puffs stack up into brassy bugle-like fanfares.
Passing the narrative among all three trombonists, the session’s layered tour-de-force is the aptly named “Quintessence”. Taken at a breakneck pace, the oscillations and multiphonics frequently meld into a dense mass. But despite the solid mass, individual timbres are still audible. As the intermezzo intensifies, combinations of trios, duos and solos are tried out, as are a nuanced collection of extended techniques. For instance two ‘bonemen harmonize as the third develops a solo out of air bubbled through the horn’s body tube without slide or valve motions. Multiphonics take the form of unattributed clicking sounds, animal-like yelps, drum stick approximating rattles or old-timey tailgate-styled slurs. Bravura in execution, nephritic buzzes are heard along with split-tone variations on the theme which become more staccato as it develops. Finally the three join in mellow, good-humored tessitura which extends without rigidity into a powerful finale.
If trombone sounds pull your slide, than you should be in brass heaven with any or all of these CDs. At the same time each confirms that the right players can create an enthralling recital with only the timbres available from multiple brass instruments."
--Ken Waxman