Cover Cloudland

Album info

Album-Release:
2021

HRA-Release:
28.05.2021

Label: ACT Music

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Contemporary Jazz

Artist: Lars Danielsson Liberetto

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1 Vildmark 01:12
  • 2 Cloudland 04:34
  • 3 The Fifth Grade 05:37
  • 4 Nikita's Dream 04:40
  • 5 Tango Magnifique 03:53
  • 6 Desert of Catanga 06:17
  • 7 River of Little 03:22
  • 8 Yes to You 03:35
  • 9 Intermezzo 01:58
  • 10 Villstad 04:12
  • 11 Sacred Mind 05:02
  • 12 Imagine Joao 03:41
  • Total Runtime 48:03

Info for Cloudland



Beauty of sound, melodic elegance, dream-like interplay and atmospherically dense jazz compositions: Lars Danielsson's Liberetto has built up a reputation as one of the finest jazz ensembles in Europe and this new release merely enhances that point of view.

Good things are worth waiting for. Lars Danielsson had recorded just a few tracks for a new Liberetto album in late 2019. So, when a window appeared in September 2020 between the lockdowns across Europe, he seized the opportunity to bring his fellow band-members back to his studio near Gothenburg to finish what they had started.

Those who know how attractive and approachable Liberetto’s music is will find all their expectations fulfilled on “Cloudland”. The 'elegant lyricism' and 'unerring groove' which Canadian writer John Kelman (All About Jazz) spotted in 2011 in the band’s first album are to be found in abundance on this, their fourth. "I think of my compositions as songs,” says Danielsson, who never forgets the importance of melody. After all, as he still vividly remembers, his very first music teacher was an organist responsible for steering the congregation through the hymns in a church. “Cloudland” also shows the variety of Danielsson’s range of timbres and expressive possibilities. We find them in both foreseeable and new ways. Right from the start of “Imagine Joao'', a duet with John Parricelli, he states the melody with the elegance and eloquence of the consummately lyrical bassist we have come to expect. Whereas, for the last sixty seconds of Villstad, most listeners will probably jump to the obvious but wrong conclusion that the heroic, Hendrix-like sound they are hearing is an electric guitar. There is definitely alchemy, sorcery going on here and appearances can be deceptive: this is Danielsson playing cello and using a distorted amp.

There are new elements in “Cloudland”: Danielsson’s desire to work in asymmetric meters has been an area of exploration for many years, the bassist/cellist having been a member of Trilok Gurtu’s band in the 1990s, and he has taken it further here, while never sacrificing the appeal and the emotional impact of the music. Danielsson’s philosophy, essentially, is this: “If it sounds natural then it doesn’t really matter what meter it's in.” And that is particularly true of the title track, which is in seventeen time, but has a completely irresistible pulse, flow, even an airy elegance about it, enhanced by the unique presence of trumpeter Arve Henriksen as the lead voice.

Another new feature is the first outing for a five-string bass-cello hybrid which Lars Danielsson plays ‘arco’ on the opening track “Vildmark” (meaning wilderness) and plucked in “Tango Magnifique”. “It’s a rebuilt 18th-century instrument,” says Danielsson, “and it doesn’t just look beautiful, it has a wonderful sound – it really sings!” This album also marks the Liberetto debut of lively Syrian-born clarinettist/composer Kinan Azmeh. He is a multi-talented musician whose activity ranges from Yo Yo Ma’s Silk Road Ensemble to commissions as composer from the NY Philharmonic. In the quietly reflective “Intermezzo” we hear both his warm and beautifully focussed tone on the clarinet, and a poet's sense of phrasing.

This album is also a celebration of the myriad talents which the members of Liberetto bring to Danielsson’s music. These musicians have been familiar with his music for most of a decade. They understand it, they cherish it, and throughout “Cloudland”, the joy they are evidently experiencing in being back together playing it is palpable. On “River of Little”, pianist Gregory Privat’s playing of the theme has luminous precision, yet the glimpse he gives us into an improvised world of freedom and fantasy is magical. We hear guitarist John Parricelli’s range: from the nylon-string delicacy of “Tango Magnifique” to the casbah-ish electric riffs of “Desert of Catanga. Arve Henriksen's playing on the title track “Cloudland” will stay in listeners’ minds for a long time. And drummer Magnus Öström’s sensitive command of timbre and texture is jaw-dropping in the hushed “Nikita’s Dream”.

“Cloudland” richly rewards listeners' patience; one of its very special features is the variety of its beautifully crafted endings. Take for example, the perfect poise of the 'rallentando' which brings the title track to a close; or the enigmatic and questioning final bars of “Sacred Mind”; or the flawlessly precise and crisp conclusion to “Desert of Catanga. These are just three examples of careful, thoughtful work by the co-producers who have clearly been working throughout the time the album has been in the making as a harmonious creative team: Cæcilie Norby, Magnus Öström and Danielsson himself. In every sense, this album provides a reminder that worthwhile creative processes take time to mature.

Lars Danielsson, double bass, cello
Grégory Privat, piano
John Parricelli, guitars
Magnus Öström, drums & percussion
Guests:
Arve Henriksen, trumpet
Kinan Azmeh, clarinet



Lars Danielsson
The late great Danish bass legend Nils-Henning Ǿrsted Pedersen didn't only leave the world a direct legacy of great jazz through his own playing; a part of what he has bequeathed is indirect. When the young Swedish musician Lars Danielsson once heard him in concert, he was so deeply affected, he turned towards jazz, and to the bass. Until that point, Danielsson, born in Gothenburg in 1958, had been studying classical cello at the conservatory in his home town of Gothenburg. Fortunately, that study of the cello is not something he has chosen to shrug off, he has integrated it into what he does now. Not just in the sense that he always includes the cello in his repertoire, but also that his bass-playing unmistakably has a slightly more melodious, floating and lyrical ring to it than that of many of his fellow bass players.

These were the special qualities which soon placed him in very high demand internationally as a sideman. As early as the 1980s, he had worked not only with local and European greats such as Lars Jansson, Hans Ulrik, Carsten Dahl, Nils Landgren, Christopher Dell, Johannes Enders and Trilok Gurtu (in whose group he remained a member for some time), but also with luminaries of the American scene such as saxophonists Rick Margitza and Charles Lloyd, the Brecker Brothers, drummers Terri Lyne Carrington , Jack DeJohnette and Billy Hart or guitarists John Scofield, Mike Stern and John Abercrombie. But Danielsson has never been content with just an accompanying role. He has always been a creative composer as well and is one of a relatively small group of bassists who has also emerged as a significant bandleader.

The ensemble which gave Danielsson the best outlet in his quest for musical self-expression for almost 20 years was his own all-star quartet with American saxophonist David Liebman (who used to play with Miles Davis), Swedish pianist Bobo Stenson and Norwegian drummer Jon Christensen. Stenson and Christensen are both pioneers of the "Nordic Sound", the combination of jazz with the Scandinavian ethos, and both are also long-standing artists on the ECM label. Four albums by the quartet under Danielsson‘s name and six more albums with guests consolidated Danielsson's reputation as one of Europe's leading jazz musicians, receiving not just enthusiastic reviews but also many awards. Furthermore, this band laid the foundation for his work as a composer, arranger and producer, which has developed in a major way since then. Danielsson has worked in these capacities with the Danish Radio Concert Orchestra, the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, the NDR Big Band, the St. Petersburg Symphony Orchestra and the JazzBaltica Ensemble, the drummer Jonas Johanssen and the singers Viktoria Tolstoy and Cæcilie Norby - the latter being his wife, whom he regularly accompanies.

In the past few years, Lars Danielsson has also expanded his musical frame of reference and stylistic range of his own projects. His ACT debut, "Libera Me" from 2004, proved him to be a master of orchestral jazz. "Mélange Bleu", two years later, sprung a surprise with a modern, carefully applied electronic framework for his expansive and sonically adventurous and rich compositions. With "Pasodoble" in 2007, he created a breathtaking manifesto of beautiful sound in a duet with the Polish pianist Leszek Możdżer, which occupied the terrain between classical music and jazz, and received superb reviews. "Tarantella" continued the productive collaboration with Możdżer in 2009, but transferred the basic musical idea into the context of a chamber jazz ensemble. All these albums (as well as those that followed) went either gold or platinum, and the orchestral project "Blauklang", co-initiated by him and conducted by Vince Mendoza, was nominated for a Grammy.

To some extent, Danielsson really found the quintessence of his diverse forms of expression in 2012 - and also the right name for it: "Liberetto". His newly-created word "describes a certain mood in which I want to develop my music,“ he says. "It follows on from my earlier albums - purely linguistically as in the reference to classical music." The album, itself entitled "Liberetto" with the Armenian star pianist Tigran, e.s.t. drummer Magnus Öström, British guitarist John Parricelli and trumpeter Arve Henriksen found a new balance between jazz, classical music, pop and European folk music and thus opened up a new dimension of how compositional processes and dramaturgy could be used in jazz. It was so successful that the project continues to this day: After "Liberetto II" in a very intimate duo with Tigran and "Liberetto III" in the tried and tested quartet, with the addition of a new and different hue in the form of French-Caribbean pianist, Grégory Privat, Danielsson performed a symphonic version of this concept and the compositions for it at the Leopolis Jazz Fest. There will also be a recording of this project in the near future.

Naturally, Danielsson also leaves plenty of room for other interesting projects: he participates in the unique concert series "Jazz at Berlin Philharmonic", and he works in a duo with the Sardinian trumpeter Paolo Fresu, one of the most lyrical players anywhere. Their joint album "Summerwind" is the latest proof of what makes Danielsson quite so special: technical brilliance, a vivid and consistently fertile musical imagination, and an almost telepathic understanding with other musicians.

Booklet for Cloudland

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