The international project "Penderecki... jazz" (2002) combines contemporary music and jazz. This unique project was created under the honorary patronage of Krzysztof Penderecki. Outstanding musicians like Romanian pianist Mircea Tiberian, German clarinet player Rudi Mahall, bass player and percussionists Marcin and Bartlomiej Oles fused Penderecki's compositions with jazz.
Contemporary Quartet
Plays the music of Bacewicz, Kisielewski, Komsta, Lutoslawski, Penderecki
Label: NotTwo, 2003
Catalogue No: MW 744-2
Format: CD
Tracks:
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Prelude
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Suite
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Langueur
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Sonate Foggy
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April
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Per Slava
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Seven Hands
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Bucolique
All Music composed by Polish composers: Krzysztof Penderecki, Stefan Kisielewski, Grazyna Bacewicz, Witold Lutoslawski, Marzena Komsta
Line-up:
Marcin Oles - bass
Bartlomiej "Brat" Oles - drums
Rudi Mahall - bass clarinet
Mircea Tiberian - piano
Recorded:
April 18-19, 2002 in Krakow, Poland
About:
The international project "Penderecki... jazz" (2002) combines contemporary music and jazz. This unique project was created under the honorary patronage of Krzysztof Penderecki. Outstanding musicians like Romanian pianist Mircea Tiberian, German clarinet player Rudi Mahall, bass player and percussionists Marcin and Bartlomiej Oles fused Penderecki's compositions with jazz.
"Penderecki...jazz" project is a continuation of 1971 "Action" release by "New Eternal Rhythm Orchestra" (especially assembled for this project to perform under the direction of Krzystof Penderecki and Don Cherry). The Orchestra were a veritable who's who of the then emerging European Free Jazz scene; Peter Brotzmann, Willem Breuker, Paul Rutherford and Han Bennink, plus Terje Rypdal, Kenny Wheeler and Tomasz Stanko are all in evidence.
These must have been very heady days indeed when 'serious composers' like Stockhausen and Penderecki could find a common ground with jazz players like those above. For whatever reasons the Classical composers were finding that their interests and working methods (structured improvisation, graphic scores, conduction and gesture as composition) were overlapping with like-minded musicians from an altogether different area, that of free jazz. "Actions" often sounds more overtly 'jazz' than that group; there are episodes that showcase the explosive playing of guitarist Terje Rypdal and saxophonist Brotzmann that will make your hair stand on end.
Sadly Cherry has passed on, and Penderecki's promised further pieces for the group didn't materialize until this relese. The combustible influences that shaped "Actions" are still relevant today and find echoes in the work of Butch Morris and myriad others.
This CD also includes interpretations of compositions by other contemporary Polish composers such as Grazyna Bacewicz, Witold Lutoslawski, Stefan Kisielewski and Marzena Komsta.
Reviews:
With their slightly oversize elegant hard card packaging, they look like Japanese imports, but they're not. Not Two is a label run out of Cracow in Poland by jazz enthusiast Marek Winiarski, and if these releases are anything to go by, it's a label to watch. The Contemporary Quartet consists of Romanian pianist Mircea Tiberian, German bass clarinettist Rudi Mahall, and the Polish kickass rhythm section of bassist Marcin and drummer Bartlomiej Oles. Don't be put off by the text "plays the music of Bacewicz, Kisielewski, Komsta, Lutoslawski and Penderecki" - this is no pale collection of oh-so-tastefully arranged Polish contemporary classical music, but a dynamic and hard swinging treatment of the kind of repertoire jazz musicians have usually tended to steer clear of, at least since the heady days of Gunther Schuller's Third Stream experiments. Taking Penderecki's 1987 "Prelude" for clarinet solo as a bona fide head in its own right kick-starts the album in fine style; Mahall and Tiberian turn the theme inside out, while Oles and Oles power the music forward. Stefan Kisielewski's "Duet" (from a 1954 "Suite" for oboe and piano) segues into Marzena Komstal's "Langueur", from a piano piece of the same name written thirty-six years later, without skipping a beat. Penderecki's "Violin Sonata", written back in 1953 long before the composer burst onto the contemporary music scene with the legendary "Threnody (for the Victims of Hiroshima)", provides the source material for the three following tracks: "Sonata I" is a solo vehicle for Tiberian, followed - rather too abruptly methinks - by "Sonata II", which finds Mahall negotiating the bass clarinet's impossibly high register with frightening ease before letting rip with some awesome multiphonics while the austere counterpoint of the original continues underneath. "Sonata III" begins with an accomplished five-minute percussion solo before the band slips in with barely a minute to go to round things off with a unison flourish. Two years after Penderecki penned his violin sonata, Grazyna Bacewicz wrote the "Sonatina for oboe and piano" that provides the material for following track, "Foggy", essentially a long obbligato bass solo accompanied by some distantly menacing percussion. Drummer "Brat" Oles provides two pieces himself for the quartet, the first of which, "April" begins with a Mahall solo exploration before Tiberian inserts a rolling ten-note ostinato for (partially prepared) piano, over which Mahall and the composer trade extended technique licks. The music remains in improv (as opposed to jazz) territory for "Per Slava", based once more on Penderecki, this time a cello solo of the same name written in 1986. Marcin Oles negotiates the high lyrical cello line on bass, while Mahall twitters and flutters around him, until Brat starts riding the cymbal like Jon Christensen and sends the music back to the supple freebop of 1970s ECM. If I were Manfred Eicher I'd be reaching for my phone. "Seven Hands", which also follows on from "Per Slava" without a break (if you weren't watching the indexes change you'd never know), is Oles' second original composition, and inhabits the same slightly melancholy harmonic world as the Penderecki, until once more it starts swinging furiously - Tiberian turns in his best solo on the album, and Mahall throws in a bundle of angular lines worthy of Eric Dolphy, until little by little he unravels the beat. For once, you're expecting a segue into another piece, but instead there's another rather peremptory fade. The closing track, "Bucolique no IV" from Witold Lutoslawski's 1952 piano pieces of the same name, concludes proceedings on a somewhat reflective note. It's beautifully played, but once more its rather sudden ending makes one wonder if its inclusion was absolutely necessary. Still, it's but a minor quibble about a smashing record. (Dan Warburton, ParisTransAtlantic)
*****
Using so-called classical themes as a basis for improvisation isn't a new
idea. John Kirby's Sextet did so in the early 1940s and flautist Moe Koffman and
the Modern Jazz Quartet got plenty of mileage out of re-interpreting Bach.
But using these themes as more than a jumping off point for unconnected soloing
had to wait until a group of musicians exists that is as comfortable working on
the improv side of the fence as the legit side. It also helped when some
contemporary composers got over their snobbish distaste for so-called jazz
music.
This sea change has been particularly evident in Europe, and that's one of the
reasons this CD is so special. Two young Polish players, plus a slightly older
German clarinetist and a Romanian pianist, take nine pieces by contemporary
Polish composers and transform them using the techniques and freedom of improv.
Most notably, they don't "jazz the classics", but metamorphose the existing
notation into organically legitimate new pieces. Drummer Bartlomiej Brat Oles,
who arranged all the tracks, also throws in a couple of his own tunes here that
naturally fuse with the other sounds.
Oles and his twin brother, bassist Marcin Oles, provide the Janus-headed hope
for contemporary Polish jazz establishing itself as memorable and original. Not
only have the two played with local heroes like saxists Mikolaj Trzaska and Adam
Pieronczyk, but also with outsiders like American reedist David Murray, German
bass clarinetist Theo Jörgensmann and the two foreigners featured here. "Brat",
by the way doesn't mean what it seems to for English speakers; it means
"brother" in Polish.
Accustomed to similar musical fusion, reedist Rudi Mahall is an inspired
addition. He plays contemporary music with European orchestras and improvises
often with Japanese pianist Aki Takase and guitarist Frank Möbus. Pianist Mircea
Tiberian is one of the most active Romanian jazzers, having played with
Americans including guitarist Larry Coryell and bassist Ed Schuller, as well as
Poland's best-known musical export, trumpeter Tomas Stanko.
Composers represented here are Paris-based Marzena Komsta; Krakow's late Stefan
Kisielewski; the late Witold Lutostawski, who taught in Sweden and United
States; the late composer/pianist Grazyna Bacewicz, a neoclassicist with
international stature; and most notably, composer/academic/conductor Krzysztof
Penderecki, five of whose representative pieces are interpreted on the CD.
Although Penderecki was open minded enough to be involved in a similar
jazz-classical fusion with American trumpeter Don Cherry and Stanko in 1971,
it's likely he never imagined his "Sonata III from Sonata for violin & piano
1953" as a drum showcase. But, as Bartlomiej Oles expresses it here, the sonata
now includes shakes and rattles from various percussion instruments, cymbal and
cowbell accents, nerve beat wooden stick sounds, tambourine shivers and straight
rolls and flams from snares and toms. Other interpolations include abrasive
ponticello bass lines that eventually morph into walking bass, key clipping from
the pianist and exaggerated clown horn beeps that become a jaunty squealed
countermelody arising from Mahall's reed.
All this follows Tiberian's oh-so-correct voicing of the theme on "Sonata I from
Sonata for violin & piano 1953' that only gradually features variations on the
theme. Later the pianist's low frequency linear playing turns to snaking
cadenzas on "Sonata II from Sonata for violin & piano 1953". On the same piece,
Mahall carefully accents slurred single notes then note clusters, ending his
solo with a gravelly siren-like tone, while Maricin Oles' bass work includes
extensive tremolo bowing and powerful Mingus-like pizzicato swoops.
Penderecki's "Per Slava from Per Slava for cello solo 1986" is transformed into
another bass showcase, with Oles' shuffle bowing and grating arco lines evolving
from scratches and bird-like squeaks to a legato melody. Mahall flutter tongues
and key pops add color, eventually introducing trilling low notes following the
pianist's consonant chording and Brat's boppy cymbal accents and bass drum
thumps. With Marcin almost subliminally knitting the strands together from the
bass clef, Tiberian sounds out a pastoral, double-timed line as Bartlomiej hits
most parts of his kit without overpowering the other players. Coda is made up of
unison floating bass clarinet and arco bass tones.
Bartlomiej's restraint is confirmed on his own compositions, both of which are
more notable for group contributions than drum fireworks. On "Seven Hands for
contemporary quartet 2002" -- which musician is missing a limb, by the way? --
the steady clattering of rim shots, cymbal shimmers and press rolls merely adds
to the quasi night club ambiance. Marcin alternates between walking bass lines,
slides and shuffles, as Mahall emphasizes a slinky note pattern from the darkest
part of his reed until shrill, but carefully modulated glissandos are heard.
Standout here is the pianist, with a tough-touch keyboard fantasia. Working in
vein that joins Wynton Kelley with McCoy Tyner, he emphasizes the changes with
both hands, then decelerates into comping.
"April for contemporary quartet 2001," Brat's other tune, is more of the same
with Tiberian's playing ranging from 10-finger crescendos to speedy arpeggios to
an ostinato of striding cadenzas. Meanwhile Mahall's slurred double tonguing
gives way to metallic spetrofluctuation and trilled vibrations.
With the pianist's formalism including echoes of impressionistic jazz
technicians like Bill Evans and Keith Jarrett, and the reedist's extended
technique on hand to bring out every nuance -- and more -- of the compositions,
this experiment in genre shifting works without exposing fissures.
Exemplary improvisers and organizers, CONTEMPORARY QUARTET is another example of
why Marcin and Bartlomiej Oles' names may soon lose their unfamiliarity for
non-Polish jazz fans.
(Ken Waxman)
*****
El disco más serio, en el sentido en el que se dice que la música clásica es
seria (!) es el del Contemporary Quartet. Rudy Mahall, conocido en la comunidad
del jazz por ser miembro del trío alemán Der Rote Bereich y por haber grabado el
magnífico “Duet for Eric Dolphy” (Enja) con la pianista Aki Takase, toca en este
cuarteto de excelentes músicos junto con el pianista rumano Mircea Tiberian y
los polacos Marcin Oles, contrabajo, y Bartolomiej “Brat” Oles, batería. Todo el
repertorio está cuidadosamente formado por temas de compositores polacos del
siglo XX, al que se añaden dos originales del batería “Brat” Oles.
El subtítulo del disco, Plays Music of Bacewicz, Kisielewski, Komsta,
Lutoslawski, Penderecki, puede inducir al oyente a error. Conviene aclarar de
que no se trata de interpretaciones literales de las partituras de los autores
nombrados, ni siquiera de arreglos especialmente concebidos para su ejecución.
Las composiciones funcionan como matrices sobre las que el cuarteto improvisa
libremente tocando y volviendo los temas del revés. Y lo hacen con competencia,
buen gusto y eficacia, aplicando sistemáticamente el arte de cruzar los mundos
de la música contemporánea, la improvisación europea y el jazz sin collages o
superposiciones, sino como un todo coherente.
El resultado es menos jazz y más improvisación europea, aunque ocasionalmente el
swing despunte y caliente ambiente, llevando con el movimiento corporal lo que
generalmente es más propio de estados de alma más melancólicos y meditativos.
Pero cuando toca swinguear, ¡el Contemporary Quartet swinguea muy bien y lo hace
con todas las ganas!
Rudi Mahall es el músico fuera de serie de costumbre. Se las sabe todas. Si
fuese necesario, el disco serviría para confirmar que es uno de los mayores
exponentes del clarinete bajo. Poseedor de un estilo anguloso, rápido y
colorista, su frescura evoca el arte de Eric Dolphy, paralelismo que Mahall
ciertamente no rechaza, no sólo porque estas conexiones sean obvias, sino porque
esta es una forma conscientemente digna de rendir homenaje al gran maestro que
fue Dolphy para los instrumentistas modernos del clarinete bajo. Por ejemplo, la
introducción y desarrollo del tema de Marzena Konsta, “From Languer for Piano”,
es Dolphy en estado puro, sin quitar ni poner nada.
El pianista, el contrabajista y el batería son, como era de esperar, músicos
expertos en la tradición a la que nos han acostumbrado las escuelas de aquellos
parajes europeos. A la vez que demuestran una fina ejecución técnica, saben ser
muy buenos improvisadores con un discurso fluido y bien organizado, que
contribuye en gran medida a hacer de este un excelente disco.
(Eduardo Chagas, tomajazz.com)