Cover Ruins and Remains

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2022

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
23.09.2022

Label: ECM Records

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Crossover Jazz

Interpret: Wolfert Brederode, Matangi Quartet, Joost Lijbaart

Komponist: Wolfert Breferode

Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1Ruins II03:02
  • 2Swallow03:35
  • 3Remains01:46
  • 4Cloudless05:29
  • 5Ruins and Remains05:00
  • 6Ka03:31
  • 7Ruins I05:14
  • 8Duhra03:22
  • 9Ruins III02:00
  • 10Retrouvailles01:49
  • 11Nothing for granted05:17
  • 12Dissolve02:57
  • 13March01:14
  • 14Ruins IV03:24
  • Total Runtime47:40

Info zu Ruins and Remains

Ruins and Remains, eine Suite für Klavier, Streichquartett und Schlagzeug, wurde 2018 von Wolfert Brederode zum 100. Jahrestag des Endes des Ersten Weltkriegs komponiert. Seitdem hat die Suite jedoch eine umfassendere und persönlichere Bedeutung angenommen, mit weitreichenden Konnotationen. "Auf mehreren Ebenen hat das Stück mit Trauer und Verlust zu tun und mit dem Lernen, wieder aufzustehen", erklärt der niederländische Pianist. Die Musik hat eine verletzliche und zugleich widerstandsfähige Qualität, mit Stimmungen, die sowohl düster als auch vorsichtig hoffnungsvoll sind. Das Album ist von dem hochsensiblen Zusammenspiel zwischen Brederode, dem Schlagzeuger Joost Lijbaart und dem Matangi Quartett (das zunehmend als eines der spannendsten Streichquartette der Niederlande gilt) geprägt und wurde im August 2021 im Bremer Sendesaal aufgenommen und von Manfred Eicher produziert.

Wolfert Brederode, Klavier
Matangi Quartet:
Maria-Paula Majoor,Violine
Daniel Torrico Menacho, Violine
Karsten Kleijer, Viola
Arno van der Vuurst, Cello
Joost Lijbaart, Schlagzeug, Percussion




Wolfert Brederode
piano playing and compositions are interlaced with subtle contrasts. His elegant melodies are the first thing that catches listeners' attention, brought to life by his precise and delicate touch. Few pianists are so recognizable while continuing to surprise. Brederode achieves that primarily by allowing for space: space for his own ideas, and for those of his fellow musicians; space for each individual note. Those notes form the building blocks of his melodies, which are catchy but never predictable and characterised by delicate shifts. And there is always a penetrating but elusive atmosphere of melancholy, with a restrained but threatening undertone.

Brederode often contrasts the gracefulness of his melodies with short bursts of vitriolic rhythmic variations, and that suffuses his music with energy. A restrained acidity often rings through, and becomes even more menacing by being held in check. It's no wonder Brederode gave one of his albums the title 'Black Ice,' referring to the treacherous gleam that is transparent but dangerously slick. That title also encapsulates the tension, which in Brederode's music remains an essential – albeit underlying – characteristic.

Brederode's music is accessible, yet its depths can never be fully plumbed. There is friction between control and letting go, between composition and improvisation, and between the search for restraint and stillness as apposed to the complex capriciousness of a deeply felt emotion. With Brederode, a single note can become a world in itself. Because that note has been chosen in a thoughtful and well-considered way, but primarily because it reflects Brederode's broad range of interests in theatre, film and literature. His fascination with the past is reflected in Brederode's passion for historically grounded novels by such authors as André Makine and Philippe Claudel. Another writer he admires, especially for his gritty rawness, is Dimitri Verhulst. Brederode is passionate about the Impressionists—both in art and music—including Claude Debussy. That is in line with his tendency to leave things to listeners' imaginations without filling in all the blanks. Additionally, he has an abiding love for Russian composers like Sergei Rachmaninoff and Alexander Scriabin[1] . This devotion was sparked by Brederode's first piano teacher, who didn't assign him the standard practice repertoire. According to Brederode: 'Instead, I played Russian children's songs, remarkably simple, but with beautiful melodies.'

After graduating from The Hague Conservatoire, Brederode attracted international attention with his atmospheric, spatial music. He founded the Nimbus and Batik groups and led a quintet with drummer Eric Ineke. Brederode also formed a successful duo with drummer Joost Lijbaart. In 2007, his album 'Currents' appeared on ECM, a renowned label he is still affiliated with. In 2011, also on ECM, he released 'Posts Scriptum' with his international quartet. That album was followed in 2016 by his trio CD 'Black Ice.' In 2022 Brederodes's impressive composition 'Ruins and Remains' will be released, a sensitive interplay recorded with drummer Joost Lijbaart and the Matangi Quartet. 'Ruins and Remains' is a work that perfectly sums up Brederode's style, composed with vision and a sense of atmosphere while also giving the musicians plenty of freedom.

As both a bandleader and a sideman, Brederode plays entirely in the service of the music. Nevertheless, his playing is immediately recognizable because of its focus and subtle intensity. In addition, he always allows for a great deal of contrast, especially in how he elegantly makes a piece's dynamics his own, creating an energetic twist. Brederode also performs with the Swiss singer Susanne Abbuehl and with the Dutch saxophonist Yuri Honing. He has had a longstanding duo with percussionist Joost Lijbaart. In addition, he performs with such renowned international musicians as the singer Jeanne Lee, the percussionist Marilyn Mazur, the violinist Mark Feldman, the reed-players Michel Portal and David Liebman, and the trumpeters Mathias Eick and Arve Henriksen. Brederode has released acclaimed albums with pianist Martin Fondse and saxophonist Kika Sprangers, among others, and his works have twice been awarded an Edison. He regularly receives rave reviews both at home and abroad.

Matangi Quartet
The last twenty-two years has seen Matangi grow into one of the most prominent and versatile ensembles in the Dutch music landscape and on the international stage. Its four members are all independent and distinctive musicians, but what binds them is an unbridled creative curiosity: for new music styles, and for as yet unknown repertoire and unexpected collaborations with other art forms, from cabaret to dance.

The quartet has never limited itself to one style of music since its foundation in 1999 at the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague and the Rotterdam Conservatory. It has always embarked on new adventures, from classical to jazz and from dance to pop.

The Matangis have shared the stage with top classical musicians such as Maarten Koningsberger, Tania Kross, Paolo Giacometti, Severin von Eckardstein and Quatuor Ébène, and they have also ventured into crossover projects, including with comedians Herman van Veen and Youp van 't Hek, with bandoneon player Carel Kraayenhof, with jazz trumpeter Eric Vloeimans and pianist Martin Fondse, jazz pianist Michiel Braam, DJ Kypski, jazz vocalists Mathilde Santing and Ruben Hein and singer-songwriters Lori Lieberman and Tom McRae. With such pioneering forays outside of classical music, Matangi knows how to enthuse new audiences for the string quartet.

The quartet has appeared at numerous festivals, including the Delft Chamber Music Festival, the Grachtenfestival, Festival d'Aix-en-Provence, the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival, Festival de Carthage in Tunisia, the World Expo 2010 in Shanghai, the International Conservatoire Festival in St Petersburg, North Sea Jazz and the Liberation Festival Utrecht.

With their own annual (Un)heard Music Festival in The Hague, the Matangi Quartet surprises listeners with music that they have often never heard. They shine a spotlight on works that are rarely if ever heard in Dutch concert venues, and they also make connections with more well-known repertoire.

In 2002 the quartet was awarded the prestigious Kersjes van de Groenekan Prize, which is awarded annually to exceptional talent in Dutch chamber music.

All four musicians perform on instruments of Dutch workmanship. The cello and first violin have been provided on loan by the Dutch National Musical Instrument Foundation.

Matangi has released several CDs with Challenge Records International, Matangi Music, and Deutsche Grammophon. Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad wrote about their most recent CD, Canto Ostinato, Strings Attached (2020): “Matangi is emerging as the ideal interpreter. Anyone who has heard this quartet’s performance of Beethoven's through-composed Fourteenth String Quartet knows that these strings can weave a hypnotic long arc of tension. They also manage to evoke the addictive enchantment of Canto Ostinato.”



Booklet für Ruins and Remains

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