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Pokazywanie postów oznaczonych etykietą Ślusarczyk Marcin. Pokaż wszystkie posty
Pokazywanie postów oznaczonych etykietą Ślusarczyk Marcin. Pokaż wszystkie posty

sobota, 15 lutego 2020

Grzegorski / Ślusarczyk / Białowolski / Adamczak / Skolik – To Muniak With Love (2019)

Grzegorski / Ślusarczyk / Białowolski / Adamczak / Skolik

Tomasz Grzegorski - tenor saxophone
Marcin Ślusarczyk - alto saxophone
Tomasz Białowolski - piano
Maciej Adamczak - bass
Arek Skolik - drums



To Muniak With Love

PRIVATE EDITION 5908254159879

By Adam Baruch

This is an album by Polish Jazz quintet co-led by saxophonists Tomasz Grzegorski and Marcin Ślusarczyk with a rhythm section comprising of pianist Tomasz Białowolski, bassist Maciej Adamczak and drummer Arek Skolik. The album presents ten Jazz standards and one original composition by Białowolski, which is both the title track and a bonus track. The album is dedicated to the memory of the legendary Polish Jazz saxophonist/composer Janusz Muniak, who was a Father figure to many younger Polish Jazz musicians. The album was produced by Sławomir Majewski, Polish Jazz activist and a great connoisseur of classic mainstream Jazz.

The albums holds no surprises, exactly as intended, and is meant to be listened to by lovers of conventional, well known Jazz tunes, which are amicably played by professional musicians. This type of unpretentious, good time and somewhat nostalgic mainstream Jazz is relatively not so easy to come by in Poland, where the new generation of musicians and apparently also listeners tend to prefer much more complex and advanced Jazz explorations, which often distances older and more conventional Jazz connoisseurs from the contemporary scene.

The music offers a nice blend of ballads and up tempo numbers, which should keep the listeners happy and the beautiful piano/saxophone duet closing the album is an appropriate gesture to commemorate one of the most beloved figures in Polish Jazz history.

wtorek, 25 października 2016

Cracow Jazz Collective – No More Drama (2016)

Cracow Jazz Collective

Mateusz Gawęda - piano
Cyprian Baszyński - trumpet
Dominik Mietła - trumpet
Marcin Ślusarczyk - alto saxophone
Sławomir Pezda - tenor saxophone
Bartłomiej Prucnal - baritone saxophone
Piotr Południak - double bass
Dawid Fortuna - drums

No More Drama

FOR TUNE 0093

By Adam Baruch

This is the debut album by Polish Jazz ensemble Cracow Jazz Collective, an octet led by pianist/composer Mateusz Gawęda, one of the most notable upcoming Polish Jazz musicians in recent years. The rest of the ensemble consists of other young and upcoming Polish Jazz musicians: trumpeters Cyprian Baszyński and Dominik Mietła, saxophonists Marcin Ślusarczyk, Sławomir Pezda and Bartłomiej Prucnal, bassist Piotr Południak and drummer Dawid Fortuna. The album presents three expanded compositions, all originals by Gawęda.

The music embodies an amazing amalgam of contemporary Modern Jazz, which moves stylistically between swinging melodic themes and collective group improvisation with elegance and grace. The sound of the octet is typical of much larger ensembles and is no less powerful than a Big Band at times. The arrangements, which call for unisono brass parts and almost Rock like rhythmic riffs, create a fat sound, which is extremely effective. All these contribute to the fact that this is one of the most quite recordings on the Polish scene lately.

The extended pieces offer plenty of opportunity to show the individual talents of the ensemble members, which are all very impressive, but also emphasize the ability of the musicians to sub-divide the lineup into sections, which play in a variety of combinations from unisono to individual improvised statements. The majority of the music is however very "well behaved" and follows strictly wonderfully arranged scenarios.

This album reveals a much lesser known side of Gawęda, who so far is mostly known as a piano virtuoso of highly individual style, who plays mostly Free Jazz and Improvised Music, whereas here he symbolizes the Jazz tradition not only as the composer and arranger but also as a player, which can be followed through out this album. Perhaps the fact that this music was recorded a couple of years before it was released, portrays Gawęda at that time, which is not what he does now, but I certainly hope he will make more music as majestic and skillfully arranged as this one in parallel to his explorations of the Free realms.

There is little doubt as to the fact that music is such complexity on one hand and perfect execution on the other is the proof of the incredible level of the young generation of Polish Jazz musicians, who are slowly taking over the local scene into their capable hands. In fact it is so good that it should studied by other young musicians as a model of what Jazz is all about. Definitely a shining gem of an album!

poniedziałek, 8 sierpnia 2016

Cracow Jazz Collective - No More Drama (2016)

Cracow Jazz Collective

Mateusz Gawęda - piano
Cyprian Baszyński - trumpet
Dominik Mietła - trumpet
Marcin Ślusarczyk - alto saxophone
Sławomir Pezda - tenor saxophone
Bartłomiej Prucnal - baritone saxophone
Piotr Południak - double bass
Dawid Fortuna - drums

No More Drama

FOR TUNE 0093

By Maciej Krawiec

Cracow Jazz Collective jest kolejnym, po składach PeGaPoFo, Silberman czy autorskim triu, przedsięwzięciem Mateusza Gawędy. Niemal wszyscy muzycy, którzy występują na płycie "No More Drama", zdążyli już dać się poznać jako wyróżniające się talenty polskiej sceny jazzowej. Łączy ich wspólne doświadczenie słuchania i kreowania muzyki na krakowskim Kazimierzu, w miejscu zwanym Jądro Jazzu. Ta towarzysko-artystyczna płaszczyzna zainspirowała pianistę do opracowania utworów i aranżacji na oktet z dominującymi instrumentami dętymi. 

Trzy rozbudowane kompozycje na albumie to konstrukcje, które umiejętnie łączą ścisłą dyscyplinę, fantazyjną dezynwolturę i pełną swobodę. Tematy Gawędy są znakomite – choćby poruszający, melancholijny wstępny pasaż "Jazz Drama" czy też seria ekspresyjnych wątków w "Piano Drama". Pośród charakterystycznych motywów i kluczowych zwrotów akcji muzycy gęsto prezentują swoje indywidualne bądź kolektywne improwizacje. Wszystkie elementy bogatej koncepcji Gawędy – oparcie utworów na nawracających tematach, jazzowa sekcja (brawa zwłaszcza dla Dawida Fortuny za pełne charyzmy dialogowanie z dmącymi kolegami!), wolny od rytmicznych ram impresjonizm, agresywnie wrzaskliwy free jazz, skupione improwizowanie solo – są stosownie wyeksponowane, składając się na różnorodną, interesującą i spójną całość. Wysoka jakość tych niebanalnych narracji jest niewątpliwa. 

Ponadto album krakowskiego kolektywu spowity jest pewną aurą retro, która przywodzi na myśl legendarne albumy Komedy czy Trzaskowskiego. Klasyczne formy i ponadczasowe brzmienia jazzu są Gawędzie bliskie, ale te odniesienia w wykonaniu oktetu żyją współczesną energią, pomysłami i budzącą podziw techniką młodych artystów. Jest to również muzyka na swój sposób poważna – jej rozmach formalny oraz niesione przez nią emocje sprawiają, że mamy do czynienia z płytą dojrzałą, proponującą sztukę bez mała dramatyczną. Zważywszy ów fakt, jej tytuł to jedyna oznaka przekory lidera. 

Nie tylko zawiązaniem projektu Cracow Jazz Collective, ale przede wszystkim jego wartością artystyczną Mateusz Gawęda unaocznia, że nie jest po prostu kolejnym zdolnym pianistą młodego pokolenia. Jakość kompozycji i aranżacji, jakie słyszymy na "No More Drama", sytuują go pośród najciekawszych wschodzących gwiazd polskiego jazzu, ambitnie myślących o sztuce w kategoriach nie tylko wykonawczych, ale i kompozytorskich oraz konceptualnych.

czwartek, 20 grudnia 2012

Leszek Mozdzer & Tymon Tymanski Polish Brass Ensemble - Chopin Etiudy Przystanek Woodstock (2012)

Leszek Mozdzer & Tymon Tymanski Polish Brass Ensemble

Antoni Ziut Gralak - trumpet
Bronislaw Duzy - trombone
Marcin Slusarczyk - alto saxophone
Ireneusz Wojtczak - soprano and tenor saxophone
Leszek Mozdzer - piano
Ryszard Tymon Tymanski - double bass
Kuba Staruszkiewicz - drums

Chopin Etiudy Przystanek Woodstock (2012)

By Monika Okrój

This recording is influenced by four personalities and, respectively, four musical circles as represented by Frederic Chopin, Leszek Możdżer, Tymon Tymański and... Jurek Owsiak. Joining together in order to revive Chopin timeless music the project may be seen as searching for common ground between the classical music, modern jazz, yass and… rock influenced mass festivals. To be able to grasp better how such a diversity might work let us look closer at the protagonists of this unique enterprise: 

Leszek Możdżer's improvisations on Chopin's works are among the best in this genre, and certainly the most original. His first album "Chopin - impresje" (1994) was reissued to commemorate the composer's 200-birth year as a "Impressions on Chopin" (2010). Pianist often includes the reminiscences of those albums in his concert repertoire. 

The meeting of Leszek Możdżer with Ryszard Tymon Tymański again on one stage is also significant. Their musical roads came together in the late 80, when formed already legendary jazz band from Tri-city "Miłość" („Love”), from which hatched the concept of "yass" (merger of jazz, punk rock and folk) and subsequently spread over a fair part of then young music scene. 

And there is also Jurek Owsiak – a great figure of Polish charity, the founder of "Wielka Orkiestra Świątecznej Pomocy”. It is a foundation which every year collects money to help the sick, especially children, by buying the necessary equipment for hospitals. His foundation since 1995 also organizes fully sponsored festival “Przystanek Woodstock”, inspired by the Woodstock, with music - willy-nilly - rather different from jazz. 

When Leszek Możdżer was asked to give a concert at the festival, he didn't hide his embarrassment: “this is a specific festival - said in an interview for the Polish Radio Dwójka - hundreds of thousands of free people under the stage. It was a heavy mental strain for me, even though I was only an hour on stage, the whole half a year I was disturbed by this term. I didn't know how it will look like. Two days before the concert I wrote arrangements. I knew that if I take “hooligan-boys” to the team and we play together on the big stage, we will be understood". 

In result, the concert was listened by 200 thousand of people, what can be heard on the recording full of cheers, whistling, vibrant reactions. The evidence of what was happening at this festival is a voice of Jurek Owsiak, or rather what remained from it. Możdżer always so very eloquent and talkative on stage, this time adapted his announcements to the omnipresent noise; sometimes it sounds funny for a jazz fan - "Etude in E-major, E-major, which we love and respect”. So what about the music? The arrangements are various and Chopin's themes - if they occur - very clear. In the original pieces, particularly in etudes, it is possible to hear many, both rhythmical and melodic layers which attests to their richness. This “hooligan” approach to the very sensitive matter on the one hand deprives them of such value, but on the other hand gives back the pure essence. Educational role? Why not? 

In the recording, we find several themes arranged literally, but there are also others, that contain only shreds of themes and chords, as for example Etude in G-flat major, Op 25 no 9, which begins with a strong, funky drum solo, and then develops vigorously along hardbop lines. Another Etude in C major Op 10 no 7, very "brillante" in its essence, is the one where we can hear the melody in parts of wind instruments, sounding like a big band, in a midst of which we can hear Możdżer’s improvises. In the opening Etude C major Op 10 no 1 the pianist fiery plays the original in the background, when the band firmly plays vertical chords. Each piece is actually a separate story, has its own tension, is a source of concern and curiosity, as the famous Etude in C minor Op 10 no 12 “Revolutionary”, played in kind of "tempo rubato" and completely free. And just here, the bass solo of Tymon Tymański makes the silence in the audience. 

The band manages to sneak in an unusual way the wonderful themes even in a pretty romantic version: Prelude in E minor Op 28 no 4, very often played by jazz musicians, was played here almost like a ballad. It's incredible in the end, when Leszek Możdżer plays original Etude in E major Op 10 no 3 - the best proof that Chopin's music was received with approval, that the great music stands no artificial borders. Celebrating 200th years since the birth of this arguably most famous of Polish composers, this album is the most credible evidence that the clashes of different cultures and aesthetics could give great results indeed!



Tracklist:
1. Etiuda C Op. 10 Nr 1
2. Etiuda F Op. 10 Nr 9
3. Etiuda E Op. 10 Nr 3
4. Etiuda C Op. 25 Nr 12
5. Etiuda Ges Op. 25 Nr 9
6. Etiuda C Op. 10 Nr 7
7. Etiuda C Op. 10 Nr 12
8. Preludium E Op. 28 Nr 4
9. Etiuda E Op. 10 Nr 3 Solo


niedziela, 14 października 2012

New Bone - Destined (2012) by Philip Coombs

New Bone (band)

Tomasz Kudyk – trumpet & flugelhorn
Marcin Ślusarczyk – alto saxophone
Paweł Kaczmarczyk – piano
Maciej Adamczak – bass
Dawid Fortuna – drums

special guests:
Jan Pilch – percussions
Tomasz Grzegorski – tenor saxophone

Destined (2012)

If free jazz was the affair and this album was the marriage, a divorce would almost be certain. The lawyers would have been called in and all parties lectured on what to say as to not lose everything in the settlement. The point I will try to make surfaces in songs like, 'New Ballad For'; a beautifully played tune with plenty of hooks and familiar melodies but a marriage needs to be based on love and when loves fades or leaves completely, we tend to go out and find a new variation or a complete replacement. This song and many others on the New Bone album 'Destined' fit into that category. They are easy to really like but difficult to love.

As with any marriage that has had any longevity, there are moments and memories that will play over and over in your head regardless of how horrid it ended. The opening track, 'We'll See', will have you humming the melody days after you have turned the album off and started listening to something else. One morning you will be frozen in front of a mirror brushing your teeth trying to place where such a lovely melody came from. Was it the music on the beach during the honeymoon or was it New Bone?

The musicianship on this album is at times breathtaking but it also seems that they are playing a very familiar songbook. Tomasz Kudyk (trumpet and flugelhorn), Marcin Slusarczyk (alto sax), Pawel Kaczmarczyk (piano), Maciej Adamczak (bass) and Dawid Fortuna (drums) sound like they could play this blindfolded. To their credit, and what seems to be a sense of the marriage starting to fall into complacent mode, decide to spice up the relationship by adding percussionist Jan Pilch and tenor sax player Tomasz Grzegorski. However, they too fall into some mainstream trappings with familiar Latin beats and comfortable solos and breaks, albeit played very well.

'Altanowa 18' again gives us a killer melody that is destined to get stuck in your head in no time. The solos get traded off seamlessly and sound effortless. Kaczmarczyk kicks off 'Like Me' with a wonderful piano mood giving way to a wall of horns. Can it be that this piece is predicting the end? It is more serious than the rest while generating some guilty emotion and a little darkness. 

The moral of the story; buy your loved one a little something on your way home today just for the element of surprise.

Philip Coombs


Track listing: 1. We’ll see; 2. New Ballad for...; 3. Altanowa 18; 4. Like me; 5. At last free; 6. Destined...; 7. Straight and Swingly; 8. Oh! The end 

niedziela, 1 lipca 2012

New Bone - Destined (2012) by Adam Baruch

New Bone (band)

Tomasz Kudyk – trumpet & flugelhorn
Marcin Ślusarczyk – alto saxophone
Paweł Kaczmarczyk – piano
Maciej Adamczak – bass
Dawid Fortuna – drums

special guests:
Jan Pilch – percussions
Tomasz Grzegorski – tenor saxophone

Destined (2012)

This is the 3rd album by the Polish acoustic Jazz quintet New Bone, founded and let by trumpeter Tomasz Kudyk, who also composed all the music included herein, and including in its current lineup saxophonist Marcin Slusarczyk, pianist Pawel Kaczmarczyk, bassist Maciej Adamczak and drummer Dawid Fortuna. Two guest musicians: saxophonist Tomasz Grzegorski and percussionist Jan Pilch participate on most of the tracks. All these young musicians are excellent players with a proven record and evident abilities, but the music they perform here presents them with no real challenges. It is mainstream Jazz with strong Afro-Cuban rhythmic tendencies, which sounds good at all times but disappears from one's mind the minute the sound is over. It seems that New Bone tries very hard to sound exactly like an average American Jazz ensemble, which they definitely manage perfectly, rather than search for a unique identity, which is characteristic of most Polish Jazz. I'm sure many listeners, perhaps even the majority, will enjoy this music immensely, but honestly we should expect more from an ensemble of such high potential. Hopefully they'll do better next time.



Track listing: 1. We’ll see; 2. New Ballad for...; 3. Altanowa 18; 4. Like me; 5. At last free; 6. Destined...; 7. Straight and Swingly; 8. Oh! The end

By Adam Baruch
http://www.adambaruch.com/

środa, 9 maja 2012

New Bone - Destined (2012) by Maciej Nowotny

New Bone (band)

Tomasz Kudyk – trumpet & flugelhorn
Marcin Ślusarczyk – alto saxophone
Paweł Kaczmarczyk – piano
Maciej Adamczak – bass
Dawid Fortuna – drums

special guests:
Jan Pilch – percussions
Tomasz Grzegorski – tenor saxophone

 Destined (2012)

This is third release by New Bone after debut "Something For Now" (2004) and "It's Not Easy" (2009). Ensemble is led by trumpeter Tomasz Kudyk who also penned all compositions. As on last recording he is accompanied by Marcin Ślusarczyk on alto saxophone, Paweł Kaczmarczyk on pianio and Maciej Adamczak on double bass. As for regular members of band veteran drummer Arek Skolik was replaced by young Dawid Fortuna who plays on regular basis in Paweł Kaczmarczyk trio who is most prominent musician of all of them with one album recorded already for ACT in 2009 ("Complexity In Simplicity"). Additionaly two guests are appearing that is Jan Pilch on percussion and Tomek Grzegorski on tenor saxophone.

Regardless all these changes in personnel music remains basically the same as on previous albums of this group. It may be described as classical jazz. Definitely not avangarde and not even mainstream as jazz as music is defined by searching for novelty and there is nothing new in this music. On the other hand it is so well played, with such a dedication and enthusiasm that one cannot deny it its value. Hommage to golden years of jazz as it was in 50ties or 60ties last century it shall appeal to all those that look at this form of jazz as final and impossible to be surpassed by any modern innovations. Seen from this very specific point of view it may even very well be one of best releases in Polish jazz in this year 2012...


Track listing: 1. We’ll see; 2. New Ballad for...; 3. Altanowa 18; 4. Like me; 5. At last free; 6. Destined...; 7. Straight and Swingly; 8. Oh! The end

By Maciej Nowotny



środa, 14 marca 2012

New Bone - It's Not Easy (Gowi Records, 2009)

New Bone (band)

Tomasz Kudyk - trumpet & flugelhorn
Marcin Ślusarczyk - alto saxophone
Paweł Kaczmarczyk - piano
Maciej Adamczak - bass
Arek Skolik - drums

It's Not Easy (Gowi Records, 2009)

This is second release of this band after debut "Something For Know" and before this year "Destined..." which premiere is announced for beginning of April 2012. Historically it is yet another band of friends who once studied together, in this case in Kraków and Katowice Music Academies with an important exception of veteran drummer Arek Skolik. Like other such bands one can marvel at high level of musicianship. It appeals to me much more than other proposals because it is clearly influenced by bop tradition which gives music big punch and energy I so appreciate in jazz. But... to be honest it is too little to really make me excited. Unfortunately nothing surprises me here, I therefore should call it classical music rather than jazz which by definition should be focused on new, creative and rebellious side of music. If however you believe (like so many worldwide) that quality of jazz today shall be measured by how exact it is copy of music of great masters who lived and created 50 or 60 years ago, then you may find this disc satisfactory. I do not...   

1. The Torn Veil [11:35]; 2. Song for Kacperek [09:38]; 3. It's Not Easy [06:24]; 4. How I Miss You [08:33]; 5. Freddie [06:44]; 6. Charlie Knows [06:02]; 7. Blues for L.M. [03:29]; 8. Mekta Hakumba 
[05:46]


By Maciej Nowotny

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