Showing posts with label Caprice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caprice. Show all posts

Saturday, August 9, 2025

DON CHERRY – The Swedish albums 1967-1977

It's really quite strange that it took me 13 years of progg blogging before Don Cherry got his own post here. He's emblematic to what I think is the true spirit of the blog, a place where all kinds of music meet as long as it has a mind of its own. And perhaps that's why I overlooked his inclusion for so long: he's so huge and obvious that maybe I thought he was here already. Well, he actually is if only in small portions as he appears on albums by Bengt Berger and Bitter Funeral Beer Band.

Born in Oklahoma City in 1936 with music running in the family, he made his mark on jazz already in the late 1950s when teaming up with Ornette Coleman for a long series of albums including milestone releases ”The Shape Of Jazz To Come” and ”Free Jazz”. He also performed with John Coltrane, Archie Shepp, George Russell, Albert Ayler, Charlie Haden – he passed gracefully through jazz history and jazz history passed smoothly through him and his trumpet. He even played percussion on Allen Ginsburg's album of William Blake interpretations, collaborated with Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki and Terry Riley, and co-wrote the score for Alejandro Jodorowsky's surrealist movie ”The Holy Mountain”. There's also a famous 1976 recording of Lou Reed live at The Roxy in Los Angeles with Don Cherry sitting in. He often did that – I know several Swedish musicians of different kinds who can tell stories of how they suddenly heard a beautiful sound on stage and when they turned around, there was Don Cherry with his pocket trumpet joining in, uninvited but welcome.

He spent time in Europe in general and Scandinavia in particular. There are for instance a set of great recordings from the Montmartre jazz club in Copenhagen 1966 released on ESP Disk in the late 00s. But it's his recordings with Swedish musicians that stand out from his European years. Cherry's playing was usually great no matter who he performed with, but it was here in Sweden he really found a home both musically and physically. He moved permanently to Sweden in the late 60s, bought a defunct schoolhouse i Tågarp in the beautiful Österlen region of the southern county of Skåne with his wife Monica ”Moki” Cherry. Moki was a textile designer; her works were as colourful and striking as her husband's music and graced several of Don's album covers. They had several children involved in music, with Eagle-Eye Cherry being the best known. Don's stepdaughter Neneh Cherry has also had an interesting and multifaceted career in music.

The house in Tågarp became something of a centre for friends and musicians, and the place where Don Cherry's Organic Music Society shaped and developed, a concept that to all intents and purposes was the forerunner to what would later be known as 'world music', only freer and more open.

Outpourings of Don Cherry's Swedish years weren't that many to begin with, but there's been an upsurge of archival recordings from this period, especially after Cherry's untimely death at 58 in 1995. I have included every album recorded in Sweden and/or with Swedish musicians between 1967 and 1977, except for those where only Moki Cherry appears usually on tamboura. That's not to dismiss her efforts but because I consider her and Don a unit. Also, it shouldn't surprise anyone that I consider Maffy Falay and Okay Temiz Swedish musicians too even though they techncially were Turks. There are also recordings featuring Swedes prior to 1967, such as ”Psycology” [sic!] with domestic free jazz pioneer Bengt ”Frippe” Nordström and released on his own Bird Notes label in 1963 (an album that interestingly enough also features drummer Bosse Skoglund on one track). A George Russell live document from Beethoven Hall in Stuttgart 1965 has both Don Cherry and Bertil Lövgren on trumpets, but that too is excluded due to the early date.


Movement Incorporated (Anagram, 2005; rec. 1967)
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

Don Cherry used to hold workshops and music classes at ABF, the labour movement's education centre, and this disc was recorded at one of their locales in July 1967. Old friend from years back Frippe Nordström appears along with Leif Wennerström and Okay Temiz on drums, Maffy Falay on trumpet and flute, Tommy Koverhult on tenor sax and Bernt Rosengren on tenor sax and flute, plus American trombonist Brian Trentham. I'm not sure how official this release actually is. Anagram had a few interesting discs out (including a great one by Gilbert Holmström). The sound quality is nevertheles a good mono recording and once it gathers momeutum, the recording is an excellent example of spontaneous collective composing. ”Suite 3” and ”Surprise Surprise” particularly point to the future with their clear Oriental/Arabic influence. Not easy to find these days – I suppose it only had a small run and the label is now definct, but it's well worth looking for.

 
Brotherhood Suite (Flash Music, 1997; rec. 1968-1971)
released as Don Cherry with Bernt Rosengren Group
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

Recorded at various Stockholm locations during the course of four years with roughly the same group as on ”Movement Incorporated”, this is one of my favourite Don Cherry releases. Not only am I a fan of Bernt Rosengren in general, but him in combination with Cherry is usually explosive matter. The sound quality varies due to the different sources, but it's a varied and vivid selection. Some continues along the lines of ”Movement Incorporated” with free jamming while other tracks are composed and focused. If you don't mind the fidelity fluctuations (nothing sounds bad) and the stylistic span, this is a wonderful compilation of an excellent composite of musicians.

 
Live In Stockholm (Caprice, 2013; rec. 1968/1971)
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

Much like a latecoming expansion pack to the Flash Music disc above, these recordings originate from 1968 and 1971, with the half-hour long ”Another Dome Session” being recorded the same night as ”In A Geodetic Dome” on ”Brotherhood Suite”. The remainder of this release is dedicated to the two-part ”ABF Suite” with the second portion being based on Turkish folk melodies brought in by Maffy Falay. Again a collaboration between Cherry and Rosengren's group, but it's a bit different than the two albums above. Here you can sense the direction in which the trumpeter was heading in the future, getting closer to a more dissolved, genre bending style, the musical crossroad of the entire world. As a study of his development it's certainly rewarding, but it doesn't quite have the same impact as other Rosengren/Cherry documents.

 
The Summer House Sessions (Blank Forms Editions, 2021; rec. 1968)
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

This is an absolutely fantastic album that perfectly melds Cherry's free jazz power with his search for a universal expression! It was recorded in the summer home of Göran Freese, sound engineer and musician (appearing on, for instance, G.L.Unit's ”Orangutang”), and mixes members from the ”Live In Stockholm” band with musicians from his international ensemble New York Total Music Company. The idea was to have them jam and rehearse freely without any intention of making an album, but thankfully the tapes rolled and the recordings were finally presented to the world in 2021. The undemanding setting made for some stunning performances that rank among the finest ever from Cherry and his cohort. The music flows freely between traditions, and Turkish hand drummer Bülent Ateş really adds an extra dimension. Essential!

 
Eternal Rhythm (MPS, 1969; rec. 1968)
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

Another international grouping comprising American, German, Norweigan and French musicians, plus Swedes Bernt Rosengren and Eje Thelin, recorded live at the Berlin Jazz Festival in November 1968. It's a long suite notable for utilizing a large number of flutes and an array of Gamelan percussion. A giant step in Cherry's career, and the first album to properly predict the 'organic music' concept. With names like Albert Mangelsdorff and Sonny Sharrock it's clear from the start that the music is grounded in free jazz, but when adding the unusual (for jazz) timbres of the metal instruments, it becomes something else, something wider in scope and emotion. The thing is that is doesn't sound at all contrived suggesting that Don Cherry had a very clear idea worked out in his head what he wanted to achieve by using them. AllMusic's Brian Olewnick called ”Eternal Rhythm” ”required listening” and I am the first to agree.

 
Live Ankara (Sonet, 1978; rec.1969)
Instrumental
International relevance: **

Having already acquainted Maffy Falay and Okay Temiz, Don Cherry was no stranger to Turkish music, and in late 1969 he got to play at the U.S. Embassy in Ankara with Temiz, saxophonist Irfan Sümer and bassist Selçuk Sun. Despite relying heavily on Turkish traditional material, it's a fairly straightforward set revealing strong traces of Cherry's past with Ornette Coleman (especially with two Ornette compositions in the set). It's not very exciting, and the dull sound also hampers the experience a bit.

 
Music For A Turkish Theatre (Caz Plak, 2024; rec. 1970)
released as Don Cherry/Okay Temiz
Instrumental, wordless vocals
International relevance: **

Another Turkish recording, this time with an interesting backstory. The music was commissioned for a play written by James Baldwin who was living in Turkey off and on between 1961 and 1971 having fled racism and homophobia in the U.S., and produced by theatre owner Engin Cezzar. Dealing with gay relationships in an Istanbul prison, the play was controversial and banned by the Turkish government in after 30,000 people had already seen in it in two months. The music has its moments, but it's by no means essential. It's value lies mainly in the story behind it. Released physically on vinyl only, it came with four different covers, all in limited editions and now sold out.

 
Blue Lake (BYG, 1974; rec. 1971)
Instrumental, wordless vocals, other languages
International relevance: **'

A trio date from Paris, 1971 with Cherry, Temiz and bassist Johnny Dyani. I don't like it at all. First of all, I don't think Temiz and Dyani is a good team (see thisreview), and second of all I don't like Don Cherry's vocals and there's a lot of that on ”Blue Lake”. The playing is messy and sometimes simply directionless, it just goes on forever without getting anywhere. The album was originally released only in Japan 1974 but has for no good reason been reissued several times since.

 
Orient (BYG, 1973; rec. 1971)
Instrumental, wordless vocals, other languages
International relevance: ***

A sister album to ”Blue Lake” released the year before, with half of the double album having more tracks from the same Cherry/Dyani/Temiz date, meaning they also sound about the same. The two albums were reissued together on CD in 2003.

 
Organic Music Society (Caprice, 1973; rec. 1971-1972)
Instrumental, English vocals, other languages, wordless vocals
International relevance: ***

The album that most of all epitomizes Don Cherry's 'organic music' theories. It's intriguing and annoying, messy and flourishing, intense and flaccid all at once. There are field recordings and studio takes, focused performances and half-baked ideas in a raffle of sound and it's sometimes hard to make sense of it. That is the album's weakness but also its strength, and what you think of it probably very much depends on your current mood. I personally would have preferred the double album slimmed down to a single disc, keeping side 2 and 3 (despite Cherry's vocals) and perhaps keep the rather captivating ”North Brazilian Ceremonial Hymn” as an opening track. It would have narrowed the scope of the organic music idiom and by that missed the point, but it would have made a more cohesive album.

A nice list of performers though: Tommy Koverhult, Christer Bothén, dynamic duo Temiz & Falay, and – most importantly – Bengt Berger. Engineered by Göran Freese, the summer house owner who initiated the majestic 1968 recordings.

 
Organic Music Theatre: Festival de Jazz de Chateauvallon 1972 
 (Blank Forms Editions, 2021, rec. 1972)
released as Don Cherry's New Researches featuring Nana Vasconcelos
Instrumental, English vocals, other languages, wordless vocals
International relevance: ***

The organic music brought to the stage for the very first time. With Christer Bothén and various tag along friends from Sweden plus Brazilian percussionist and berimbau player Nana Vasconcelos performing as Don Cherry's New Researches in the Southern France. Much more focused than ”Organic Music Society” although Cherry's vocals are still a major snag.

 
Eternal Now (Sonet, 1974)
Instrumental, other languages
International relevance: ***

With the organic music concept being worked on for a couple of years, the essence of it had finally crystallized on 1974's ”Eternal Now”. A mellow and spiritually gripping album that stands head and shoulders above any previous attempts in the style. Maybe because not every Tom, Dick and Harry creaks and clangs and babble their way into the music – with a personnel of only five including Cherry himself, they can move in the same direction without any distraction from unnecessary outsiders. Especially as they're such a tight unit to begin with, with Cherry, Berger, Bothén and Rosengren at the core with Agneta Arnström only adding Tibetan bells to one track and ngoni (a West African string instrument) to another. ”Eternal Now” (a beautiful title!) oozes with midnight magic, it's like incense for the ears and enlightenment for the soul. Without a doubt one of Cherry's best 70s albums and one of Moki's best album cover works to boot.

 
Modern Art (Mellotronen, 2014; rec. 1977)
Instrumental, other languages
International relevance: ***

A live recording from The Museum Of Modern Art in Stockholm in early 1977. Per Tjernberg from Archimedes Badkar finally makes an appearance on a Don Cherry album – it seems just so appropriate. More unexpectedly, so does Jojje Wadenius who sounds a bit lost to begin with when on electric guitar but blends in better once he switches to the acoustic. (He returns to the electric towards the end and seem a bit more comfortable then.) It's a set heavy on Indian influences so it's surprising not seeing Bengt Berger here. I think he might have been a great staibilizer, because although the performance is rather pleasant, it's a bit trying and uncertain.

However, like I said earlier, Berger's and Cherry's collaboration continued later with Cherry being a vital part of the excellent Bitter Funeral Beer Band. A collaboration that extended beyond the time frame of the Swedish Progg Blog.

There are of course numerous of other Cherry albums without any Swedish connections, some of them less good but some of them among the best jazz music ever put to disc. Don Cherry was a true master, and as a Swede I feel honoured that he chose to live here for so long and also produce some of the finest music of his career while doing so. He was not only a real visionary, he was also a true genius.

Movement Incorporated no links found
Brotherhood Suite full album
Live In Stockholm full album playlsit 
The Summer House Sessions full album playlist       
Eternal Rhythm full album playlist   
Live Ankara full album  
Music For A Turkish Theatre full album playlist (Bandcamp)
Orient / Blue Lake full album playlist
Organic Music Society full album playlist  
Organic Music Theatre full album playlist (Bandcamp) 
Eternal Now full album
Modern Art full album playlist     

There's also an hour-long Don Cherry documentary called "Det är inte min musik" (="it's not my music") made  by Swedish Televison in 1978 that gives some further insight into his life in Sweden. You can watch it here

Thursday, July 24, 2025

ÄNGLASPEL – Jazz i Sverige '82 (Caprice, 1982)


Instrumental
International relevance: *

Included for relations rather than content. We have Erik Dahlbäck (Fläsket Brinner), Anders Jormin (Dan Berglund, Mwendo Dawa), Stefan Forssén (Narren, Dan Berglund, Maria Hörnelius), Stefan Isaksson (Ibis, Hawkey Franzén) and Ann-Sofie Söderqvist (Thomas Almqvist, Hawkey Franzén). Not as progg-y as one could expect, but more an album of technical post bop. This was their first album but leader Stefan Forssén used the Änglaspel name on several more scattered over the decades.

Full album playlist 

Thursday, October 6, 2022

BRITTA LINDELL – How Would I Like (Prophone, 1973) / Waiting For The Next Sunrise (Caprice, 1981)


Swedish vocals, English vocals, other languages, instrumental
International relevance: **

Certainly one of the most curious entries here, Britta Lindell's music defies any easy categorization. If there was one artist worthy of the buzz phrase 'thinking outside the box', then it might as well be her. It's definitely not jazz, it's not folk, it's not classical, I don't even know if it's prog or progg but it's definitely progressive in the sense it doesn't sound quite like anything else.

Lindell was born in Lisbon in 1943 and moved around Europe, and as a trained alto violinist she had played with several European symphony orchestras before settling down in 1970 in a cottage in Västmanland, an area west of Uppsala and Stockholm. She mastered more than 50 instruments of different kinds including the piembalo, a prepared piano she came up with herself. Over the years, she worked as teacher, and briefly as a choreographer for the Swedish national television, wrote music for the stage and even a contribution the Eurovision Song Contest in 1986 that never got as far as to the actual competition.

Her debut album appeared already in 1973, with ”How I Would Like” on the independent label Prophone. A curious mix of folk music from around the world, baroque and renaissance music, and something that was simply Britta Lindell's own mind, with some lyrics from Swedish poet Nils Ferlin and William Shakespeare. At times she reminds me of both Iva Bittová and Dagmar Krause but with more of a playful tongue-in-cheek humour. Although she draws from a plethora of 'high-brow' influences, she never fell prey to pretentiousness. The album is fun, and Lindell's approach is almost that of a child discovering the world through magical thinking. Through charm she tunes you gently to her wavelength; she makes you not listen to her music, but to listen to it with her.

It took until 1981 before she released her next album, ”Waiting For The Next Sunrise” on Caprice Records. It pretty much follows along the lines of ”How I Would Like”, but it sounds a bit more elaborate, more developed and with a greater emphasis on the renaissance strain. It's still a good album, and still clearly original, but it feels a bit more contained and therefore lacks some of the wide-eyed freshness of the debut. The best track on ”Waiting For The Next Sunrise” might be the last one, the strangely eerie and suite-like ”The Next Sunrise”.

Britta Lindell released one further album called ”Lights” plus a single of her rejected ESC song ”Simsalabim”, both on the Siljum label in 1986.

Lindell passed away in 2000, leaving a slim but highly original and often intriguing recorded legacy behind.

How Would I Like full album

Waiting For The Next Sunrise full album playlist

Wednesday, June 15, 2022

VARIOUS ARTISTS – Jazz & Rock (Caprice, 1979)


Featured artists: Barabbas / Stetson Cody Group / Ramaskri
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

Caprice Records have always been tireless flagbearers for Swedish contemporary and historic music, but then again, being the record outlet for the Rikskonserter organisation, they were on a mission from the Swedish Social Democrat government in the 70's. While that might sound dull, more often than not it wasn't, as their catalogue of jazz, folk and classical music is as almost as qualitative as it is quantitive. Don't forget that their series of annual volumes of ”Jazz in Sweden” gave us both Sevda and Rena Rama back in the day. While Caprice have graced ”Jazz in Sweden” with CD and/or digital reissues, of the informal trilogy of ”Jazz- Och Rockstipendiater 1976”, ”Tvärsnitt” and ”Jazz & Rock” only the latter resurfaced as a (digital) reissue for the time being. Similar in spirit to ”Jazz in Sweden”, these three volumes are different insofar they also present rock oriented bands.

On the live recorded ”Jazz & Rock”, the most out-and-out rock – or progg – band here is Ramaskri. Their three tracks remind me of a more rudimentary ”Hej på er!” era Trettioåriga Kriget, which means I'm not at all impressed by them. Very dull.

Only marginally better are Stetson Cody Group whose four tracks are more varied. ”Kraftrock” suggests King Crimson or perhaps some lesser RIO act. Then they go from undistinguished prog over pseudo-symphonic rock to 'complicated' and pretty embarrassing funk fusion. Worth mentioning is that this was Kjell Hilding Lövbom's first band. He later changed his name to Kee Marcello and made it big with hair metal band Europe.

Barabbas round off the album in a slightly more pleasing manner with two rather energetic free jazz/post-bop outworks. While not top of the heap, they're at least OK.

All in all, this is far from any of Caprice's most memorable releases. Europe completists (if there's such a thing) need it, but hardly anyone else.

Full album playlist

Monday, May 17, 2021

VARIOUS ARTISTS – Gatumusik från Stockholm sommaren 76 (Caprice, 1977)

Instrumental, Swedish vocals, English vocals
International relevance: *

While not a progg album proper, this one fits hand in glove with the progg zeitgeist and ethos. The title means ”street music from Stockholm, summer '76”, and that's exactly what it is, street musicians performing in their natural environment on the streets of Stockholm to unsuspecting passers-by. Few of them got beyond obscurity with the exception of Don Partridge who already had several albums under his belt, and even a 1968 hit song in ”Rosie” and another one, ”Blue Eyes” from the same year. He was a drifter, touring the streets of Europe and settled in Sweden where he lived for years in the 70s. He was a well known and colourful character with his one-man-band act that even I caught as a kid in those days when visiting Stockholm with my parents.

The music on the album ranges from The Salvation Army and old-timey to traditional fiddle tunes and organ grinders. None of it is very good; the best track being Andrés Daniel Spatola's fluent but redundant performance of old Neil Young chestnut ”Heart of Gold”, followed by Patridge's stomping take on ”Kansas City”. It's not an album you'd put on for musical enjoyment but it's fun as an aural snapshot of times gone by.

No links found.

Saturday, January 9, 2021

WHITE ORANGE – White Orange (Caprice, 1980)

 
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

Partly formulaic, partly overwrought jazz rock by a one-off outfit on Caprice Records with a former Gimmicks member plus a slew of session players. Typical sterile turn-of-the-decade production and competent and mostly soul-bereft playing with the mandatory jazz funk and samba moves. Parts of it sounds like background music to a 'B' grade TV movie. Only for seasoned genre freaks who can't get enough of castrated fusion albums, but chances are even they might write this off as as pale and colourless as the fruit on the album cover. Not even the collector cognoscenti cares about this - it can still be found for next to nothing (which is still too much).

Side one
Side two

Friday, December 14, 2018

VARIOUS ARTISTS – Alternative Instrumental Music (Caprice, 1980; rec. 1970-1978)

Featured artists: Kebnekaise / Arbete & Fritid / Bo Hansson / Fläsket Brinner / Tillsammans / Samla Mammas Manna / Spjärnsvallet / Iskra / Archimedes Badkar / Anita Livstrand / Ramlösa Kvällar
Instrumental 
International relevance: ***

An excellent if redundant compilation in Caprice Records' ”Music In Sweden” series. This is volume 7 and just like the title says, focusing on instrumental progg. All tracks are taken from previously released albums so there's nothing exclusive here. But, as a cream-of-the-crop overview, it's carefully selected and sequenced, with great numbers from the likes of Kebnekaise (from their second, invincible album and before their changed their spelling to Kebnekajse), Arbete & Fritid, Fläsket Brinner, Archimedes Badkar, Anita Livstrand, Spjärnsvallet and Bo Hansson. Pretty much the go-to album for a progg newbie interested in the non-vocal side of Swedish progg, as well as a thoroughly enjoyable disc to the ears of the already converted.

Monday, September 17, 2018

A VARIOUS ARTISTS SPECIAL – 3 jazz compilations

Featured artists: Kustbandet / Arbete Och Fritid
Club Jazz 6 (SR, 1972)
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

”Club Jazz” was a series of nine volumes of radio recordings released on Swedish Radio's own imprint SR Records from 1970 to 1974, a jazz equivalent of sorts to the early 80's ”Tonkraft – Levande musik från Sverige” series. The featured artists were either given a full album or one LP side each, and the series captures performers such as Eje Thelin, Stefan Abeleen with Lasse Färnlöf, Opposite Corner and vocalist Nannie Porres. The most interesting volume from a progg perspective is also the one with the most bizarre coupling. The sixth installment has one side of Kustbandet's uninteresting trad jazz and the second one dedicated to Arbete & Fritid. The Arbete & Fritid part is Ove Karlsson's fantastic 20 minute track ”Ostpusten-Västpusten” in its entirety, recorded at Uppsala Stadsteater in April 1972. It's Arbete & Fritid at their gorgeous best, and thankfully the track was resurrected as a bonus track on the CD reissue of their third album making it easier to obtain (and easier to avoid Kustbandet).

Jazz från det svenska 70-talet (Caprice, 1974)
Featured artists: Kustbandet / Jazz Doctors / Rolf Larsson & Jack Lidström Dixieband / Ove Linds Kvartett / Björn Milder / Umeå Big Band with Benny Bailey / Peps Blues Band / Gugge Hedrenius Big Blues Band / Lars Gullins Kvintett / Nisse Sandströms Kvartett / Lasse Werner och hans vänner / Nannie Porres Kvintett / Stefan Abeleens Kvintett / Arbe Domnérus Kvintett med Rune Gustafsson / Arbete & Fritid / Bernt Rosengrens Kvartett / Rena Rama / Egba

International relevance: **
Instrumental, English vocals

The title means ”Jazz from the Swedish 70's” and features a wide stylistic range, from the blues of Peps Persson to the fusion of Egba, from the dixieland stomp of Kustbandet to the post bop of Bernt Rosengrens Kvartett. So it serves its purpose of being a non-discriminating catalogue of contemporary jazz but it's also an incredibly frustrating spin if you listen to it all way through. But with such an array of styles, there are of course worthwhile moments. Fans of vocal jazz should be delighted by Nannie Porres's take on ”Willow Weep for Me” – after all, she's the second finest Swedish jazz vocalist after Monica Zetterlund. The contribution from the aforementioned quartet led by Bernt Rosengren is good and lively. Rena Rama makes one of their best vinyl appearances with ”Daisy Lee McGhee” – probably the best selection on the album, and better than Arbete & Fritid's bluesy but unsatisfying ”En solig dag på landet/The Big Bad Bag of Baba-Louie”.

Det nyJAZZte från Göteborg (Caprice, 1977)
Featured artists: Mount Everest / Opposite Corner / Mwendo Dawa / Soffgruppen

Instrumental
International relevance: **

Another Caprice Records release, this time showcasing the talents of the mid 70's Gothenburg jazz and improvisation scene. Mount Everest (as a trio) has a great Coltrane fuelled medley of ”Black Snow” and ”Sherpa Dance”, Mwendo Dawa is a little too close to fusion for my comfort, Opposite Corner is good, while Soffgruppen isn't quite as great as on their album.

Sunday, September 16, 2018

RENA RAMA – The 1970's albums

Rena Rama were founded in 1971 by drummer Bengt Berger, bassist Palle Danielsson and pianist Bobo Stenson. Soon after, saxophonist Lennart Åberg joined. The newly formed band did a session for Swedish television, and toured in Germany in 1972. The following year they received Rikskonserter's yearly Jazz i Sverige (”jazz in Sweden”) award, and as a result they released their first album ”Jazz i Sverige '73”. Rena Rama was influenced by Indian and African music and their initial music may be described as a kind of 'world jazz'.

Jazz i Sverige '73 (Caprice, 1973)
Instrumental
International relevance: **

Everything is right about ”Jazz i Sverige '73”, the intentions, the musicians, their skills, their outlook on music, but somehow the album just don't take off. It sounds like a collection of great ideas they never manage to quite set into motion. The music often sounds forced, as if Rena Rama try hard to push it forward to where they want it, to a point where it takes on a life of its own, but it never really happens. ”Jazz i Sverige '73” is a rare example of a Bengt Berger driven album that doesn't fulfill its potential.

Landscapes (Japo, 1977)
Instrumental
International relevance: **

In 1975, Bengt Berger left the band and was replaced by American born drummer Leroy Lowe who had played with trombonist Eje Thelin prior to Rena Rama. He has a lighter touch on ”Landscapes” than Berger had on ”Jazz i Sverige '73” which makes for a smoother running albeit less 'ethnic' sounding music where Palle Danielsson in particular seems to be more at ease – his elevated ”Rumanian Folk Song” is the best moment on here. ”Landscapes” reaches further than Rena Rama's debut but still isn't quite there

 
Inside-Outside
(Caprice, 1979)
Instrumental
International relevance: **

In 1979 Rena Rama was back with Caprice for an album that moves between the obvious traditional influences of the first album and the more straight ahead jazz of ”Landscapes”. It's all well played but not too inspiring.

Rena Rama existed for a long time still with a couple of line-up changes, and released a few more albums. A 1975 live recording with Leroy Lowe on drums was released in 1983, simply entitled ”Live”.

Friday, September 7, 2018

MOUNT EVEREST – The 1970's albums

Mount Everest was one of the most important bands to grow out of the fertile jazz and improvisation soil of Gothenburg, formed by the marvellous saxophonist Gilbert Holmström who also was the only constant all through Mount Everest's everchanging line-up.

Mount Everest (Philips, 1972)
Instrumental, English vocals
International relevance: ***

At the time of Mount Everest's maiden work they were eight people which perhaps suggests it's a wild and expressionistic affair. But it's actually a comparatively reflective and withheld effort, slightly in the vein of the first Egba album. The method of harnessed energy creates some tension, but some tracks feel out of place. ”Torero” sounds as if it belonged to another album altogether, and the last two, ”Afrodolphia” and ”No Other Choice” (the only vocal track) feels more like session outtakes than an integrated part of the album.

Waves from Albert Ayler (LIM, 1975)
as Mount Everest Trio
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

Three years later and Mount Everest was a trio with Holmström on sax, Kjell Jansson on bass and Conny Sjökvist on drums. The album title is appropriate – although only ”Spirits” is an Ayler composition, the entire album is in the spirit of the free jazz pioneer. Only ”Orinoco” and ”Elf” take it down a bit, the rest is powerful and violent free jazz with especially Holmström and Sjökvist in good shape. Fewer musicians work up a higher energy level on an album that is much better than their debut.

The album was reissued with bonus tracks by Atavistic in 2000.

Jazz i Sverige '79 (Caprice, 1979)
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

In 1979, the trio turned into a quartet and was awarded 'best jazz group of the year' why they were that year's installation in Caprice's ”Jazz i Sverige” (”jazz in Sweden”) series. Again they had a new line-up, this time a quartet including piano. Unfortunately they also swung towards fusion and that seriously diminished the music's impact. The most imaginative track is ”African Daybreak”, but even that is far from Mount Everest at their best.

The 70's Mount Everest can also be heard on various artists comps "Tonkraft 1972-74", "Det nyJAZZte från Göteborg" (1972), and "LIM – Levande improviserad musik från Göteborg" (1975). They released two further full length albums on Four Leaf imprint in 1981 and 1983 respectively, "Latin Doll" and "Latin Blue".

from Mount Everest

Friday, August 31, 2018

ISKRA – The 70's albums

Iskra made free jazz and improvisation fun. They could be playful and made the music accessible through audience participation, but they never lost their integrity. They used silence to create a dynamic tension, much like The Art Ensemble of Chicago.

Jazz i Sverige '75 (Caprice, 1975)
Instrumental
International relevance: ***
 
Iskra's first album was this double LP in Caprice's ”Jazz i Sverige” series, which caused some annoyance with jazz purists and a debate whether this was jazz or not. Nevertheless, it's an excellent example of Iskra's brilliance. All their trademarks are here, hushed reflection, sudden full force aural outbursts, percussion pieces exploring rhythms, ethnic influences, and of course their disarming playfulness. You could say that Iskra was a complete band as they included the full range of human characteristics in their music. This is easily one of the best ”Jazz i Sverige” installments, and Iskra at their best.

Allemansrätt (Ett Minne För Livet, 1977)
Instrumental 
International relevance: ***
 
Opening with a piece of humour (”Den ensamme cyklisten”), this is one of Iskra's most relaxed efforts, and also the one with less violent jazz outbursts. Instrumental quacks, farts and laughs might seem silly to some but it puts a smile to my face. It's not my first-hand Iskra recommendation to someone unfamiliar with them, but once you've grown to love them, this is a joyful little addition to the collection.

Besvärjelser (Ett Minne För Livet, 1979)
International relevance: ***
Instrumental

Their most serious album, permeated by an eerie mystical feel (the title means ”incantations” in English). ”Besvärjelser” moves on a subconscious spiritual level, like a ritual, why it stands out as Iskra's most profound release. This and ”Jazz i Sverige” are both essential albums.

In 1983, Iskra made the disappointing ”Fantasies” for the Mistlur label. It sounds like a well meant attempt to beef up their sound, meaning it's produced in a way their previous albums aren't, but unfortunately, it detracts from the immediacy of their best music. ”Luft” followed in 1990, and then it took more than twenty years for their next album to materialize, this time on the Country & Eastern label. Interesting enough, that album – ”Liberté Égalité Humanité” – is their best one altogether, just about perfectly balancing everything that's good about Iskra. There's also a digital compilation released by Caprice featuring a fair amount of previously unreleased material. The album, ”Gränslös musik”, was released in conjuction with an Iskra biography of the same name, almost like a soundtrack to the book.

Monday, August 27, 2018

SEVDA – Jazz i Sverige '72 (Caprice, 1972) / Live at Jazzhus Montmartre (Caprice, 1972) / Live at Fregatten (Sonet, 1974)

Jazz i Sverige '72 (Caprice, 1972)
as Maffy Falay, Sevda
Instrumental
International relevance: ***
 
Ranked #9 on the blog's Top 25

One of my all time favourite bands operating on the progg/jazz scene, led by Turkish trumpeter Maffy Falay and featuring fellow countryman and drummer Okay Temiz, Fläsket Brinner saxophonist Gunnar Bergsten, and jazz pianist Bernt Rosengren to name a few of Sevda's original members.

Sevda was a very powerful unit, strikingly vital, organic, dynamic – everything you could ask for from a top notch jazz outfit. The Turkish harmonies enrich the music immensely, creating a tension field that is almost unique to Sevda (almost, because Okay Temiz's albums under the Oriental Wind banner were rather similar to Sevda). 

I've included only one album by each artist on the Top 25 list, and I picked this one to represent Sevda, but I could easily have chosen any of their albums because all of them are absolutely brilliant. They're all so good they're basically beyond criticism.

Live at Jazzhus Montmartre (Caprice, 1972)
Instrumental 
International relevance: ***
 
Recorded on legendary Copenhagen jazz ground a mere week after ”Live i Sverige '72” and released in the same year, this is like a companion volume to the previous album. ”Live at Jazzhus Montmartre” captures Sevda in an even more expressive mood; the music is rawer and with an even greater Turkish emphasis. The playing is so intense it's almost dangerous – when at their most frenzied, I almost want to duck not to get hit in the head from the debris and splinters flying off the music. An incredible album.


Caprice combined ”Jazz i Sverige '72” and "Live At Jazzhus Montmartre to the lovely "Exclusive Collector's Edition" box set in 2011, adding a bonus DVD with the television performance also documented on the ”Jazz i Sverige” album. An essential edition of two essential albums. 

Live at Fregatten (Sonet, 1974)
as Maffy Falay and Sevda
Instrumental
International relevance: *** 
 
All Sevda albums are recorded live, this one at Stockholm Jazz Festival in August 1973. Like their previous albums it opens with a taksim (an improvisation) by the wonderful violinist Salih Baysal, and then all hell breaks lose again. ”Live at Fregatten” has an altered line-up, with Björn Alke on bass instead of Ove Gustavsson, and Tommy Koverhult replacing Gunnar Bergsten on sax. Maybe that changed the musical chemistry of the band, as the album again has a different feel than Sevda's previous albums. Actually, this is very much Okay Temiz's album – he pushes the music ahead of him like a powered up high speed bulldozer, drumming away like a raging madman. I can almost see the faces of the other members while they're playing – ”man, Okay's really on tonight!”. ”Live at Fregatten” is every bit as essential as the ”Jazz i Sverige '72” and ”Live at Jazzhus Montmartre”, another a masterpiece from an almost unrivalled band. It should have been a great inclusion in the Caprice box set, but ”Live at Fregatten” was an original Sonet release.
Live At Fregatten no links found

Sunday, August 26, 2018

RESA – Cozy Square (Sonet, 1975) / Lycklig mardröm (Caprice, 1980)

International relevance: ***/**
Instrumental

Resa (not to be confused with Resan) was a fusion band with members from Egba, Häxmjölk and Eje Thelin Group. Their first album ”Cozy Square” was released in 1975 and is more reflective and not at all as egomanical than many other fusionists. The title track a bit similar to Made In Sweden while keyboard player Harald Svensson adds a tiny Bo Hansson touch to ”Dalecarlian Samba”. Overall a nice and enjoyable effort.

Resa's second album didn't appear until five years later on the Caprice imprint. It has a lacklustre studio sound and just doesn't sound as inspired as ”Cozy Square”. ”Cozy Square” had a pensive playfulness that ”Lycklig mardröm” doesn't have. Lovely cover art and liner notes by Turid Lundqvist (!).

from Cozy Square
from ”Lycklig mardröm”

Saturday, August 18, 2018

FÖRKLÄDD GUD – Jazz i Sverige '77 (Caprice, 1977)

Instrumental
International relevance: **

The 1977 installment in Caprice Records ”Jazz i Sverige” (”jazz in Sweden”) series that was initiated in 1972 and ran until 2010. Förklädd Gud only released this one album, recorded live in a school in the posh Stockholm suburb Lidingö during two days in April '77. The music is a bit similar to that of of Iskra, meaning the music often hold its breath and work up a slow burning tension. But Förklädd Gud is rawer than Iskra, also featuring electric guitar, with more ferocious free jazz outbursts closer to the contemporaries on the vivid European avant jazz scene of the day, than Iskra and their American relatives Art Ensemble of Chicago. ”Jazz i Sverige '77” might not be the best example of Swedish free jazz but it's a fine enough album and should appeal to fans of free improv.

Full album playlist

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

ELISABET HERMODSSON – Vad gör vi med sommaren, kamrater? (Proprius, 1973) / Disa Nilssons visor (Caprice, 1975) / Vakna med en sommarsjäl (Caprice, 1979)

Gothenburg born multitalent Elisabet Hermodsson was a rare ange bird on the scene. An author, journalist, painter, songwriter, singer, with an education in rhythmics, she was involved in the 70's feminist movement but the three albums she made during the decade was of a more reflective personal kind without exhausting in-your-face politics. She appeared in the stage performance ”Röster i ett mänskligt landskap” along with Lena Granhagen, released on album by Proprius in 1971.

Vad gör vi med sommaren, kamrater? (Proprius, 1973)
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

Hermodsson's first solo album showcases her style at its best, with an abundance of hushed songs, with delicate arrangements underlining the inherent melancholy. Recorded with Arne Domnérus, Georg Riedel and Rune Gustafsson to mention but three of the musicians, ”Vad gör vi med sommaren, kamrater?” has mild jazz strokes without ever becoming a jazz album. It's hard to pinpoint Hermodsson's style; she's too original to easily fit in with any defined genre. There's a particular kind of Swedish music called 'visa' (plural: 'visor'), somewhere between singer/songwriter and French chansons, and that would be the most appropriate classification for Elisabeth Hermodsson. Whichever way, ”Vad gör vi med sommaren, kamrater?” is a dimly lit and ultimately touching album.

Disa Nilsons visor (Caprice, 1975)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

Swapping the small back-up unit on her debut with a larger ensemble of new musicians diminished the emotional impact of Hermodsson's songs. The songs are still poetic and the arrangements are carefully crafted but lack the element of surprise that helped making ”Vad gör vi med sommaren, kamrater?” a captivating album.
 
Vakna med en sommarsjäl (Caprice, 1979)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

Despite being subtitled ”Disa Nilsons visor II”, ”Vakna med en sommarsjäl” is different to the first volume of the two centered around the fictious Disa Nilson character. The album again utilizes a new set of musicians, this time including the likes of Jan Schaffer, Björn J:son Lindh, Stefan Brolund and wind player Sven Berger. Also featured is classical string quartet Freskkvartetten. The mood is closer to ”Vad gör vi med sommaren, kamrater?”, often sombre and dusky, although not on par with the special intimacy of her debut. 

Both ”Disa Nilson” volumes were combined to one CD, unfortunately with the tracks from the two albums jumbled up to a new track sequence.

Elisabet Hermodsson spent most of her time living in Uppsala and her summer house on Fårö (a place familiar to director Ingmar Bergman fans). She died in 2017 at the age of 89.