Showing posts with label Tintomara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tintomara. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

VARIOUS ARTISTS – Bara brudar (Silence, 1978)

 
Featured artists: Tösabeat / Søsterrock / Husmoderns Bröst / Anita Livstrand / Feminist Improvising Group / Reis Kjerringa / Tintomara
Swedish vocals, other languages, instrumental
International relevance: **

Recorded live at the Women Festival in Stockholm in August 1978 with the profits going to the Women House Fund. Musicians came from Sweden, Denmark and the UK – one of the Brits is Henry Cow's Lindsay Cooper here appearing with the Feminist Improvising Group. It's a wide array of styles, spanning from acoustic folk to free jazz. Anita Livstrand's ”Dervishen”, otiginally on her fantastic album ”Mötet”, is intense and the high point of the LP, but ”Bara brudar” is overall one of the best feminist albums of the era. Also features contributions from Husmoderns Bröst and Tintomara.

Full album playlist

Thursday, August 8, 2024

TINTOMARA – Tintomara (Abra Cadabra Production, 1979) / Lek (Amigo, 1981)


Instrumental
International relevance: **/**

Before pianist Elise Einarsdotter became a respected name in jazz of her own, she was in late 70's/early 80's jazz quartet Tintomara along with for instance flautist Katarina Fritzén known for her work with visa singer Fred Åkerström and also appearing on a later album by Lena Ekman. Her flute is one of the most prominent features in Tintomara where she almost took on the role of a singer.

Tintomara's first, eponymous album (released on Danish imprint Abra Cadabra Production) is an incredibly tight performance with some latin touches and excellent ensemble playing. The sound is lush and airy making for an easy listen, but at the same time it's a bit unengaging. Everything is nice and there's nothing particularly wrong with it, but somehow it never concerns me much. It passes rather unnoticed despite several welcoming traits. Still better than their second album ”Lek” though.

Released on the higher profile label Amigo, ”Lek” is a much more produced affair with an overuse of smooth-over reverb. It's also an unwanted step closer to jazz fusion which is a rather ill-fitting garb for Tintomara who thereby sacrifice too much of the friendly spirit of their first effort.

Tintomara full album
Lek full album