Showing posts with label instrumental. Show all posts
Showing posts with label instrumental. 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

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

MWENDO DAWA – Basic Line (Sonet, 1979) / Free Lines (Dragon, 1981)

 
Basic Line (Sonet, 1979) 
Instrumental
International relevance: **

The first of many albums from these Gothenburg jazzers who carved out a fusion jazz niche of their own with Susanna Lindeborg's mini moog. However, it hadn't yet found its natural place in the music this early on, and it sounds a bit like it was added when the others had done their parts, like an afterthought. Mwendo Dawa was to a fair degree tenor saxophonist Ove Johansson's band, but it was Lindeborg's keyboards that gave them their special character. ”Basic Line” sounds as if they're still searching for their unique sound, like they still are getting to know each other musically. It took some time still before they got there. Recorded in 1978.

 
Free Lines (Dragon, 1981)
Instrumental, wordless vocals
International relevance: **

Two years and a couple of albums later, Mwendo Dawa had lost guitarist Ulf Wakenius which proved beneficial. ”Free Lines” is a much tighter work signified by a greater collective self-assurance. Ove Johansson plays with great ease here occasionally touching on free jazz, but the most striking leap forward comes from drummer David Sundby who's very powerful on ”Free Lines” giving the music a the much needed push that the debut lacked. Even the album's more lyrical moments are tenser and denser. And while Susanna Lindeborg may not have a leading role here, her keyboards slip much more smoothly into the music. 

from "Basic Line":
Important Level
Basic Line

from "Free Lines"
Maria

DICE – Live (Belle Antique, 1993; rec. 1978-1979)

 
English vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

The second of two live Dice discs on the Japanese Belle Antique label, the other being ”Live 1977”, and this the weakest of all available Dice albums. Compiled from four different sources, the sound quality varies. Only the last four cuts, billed as bonus tracks, are of studio quality but they're also the musically worst. No specific date is given, late 70s I guess, but the band sounds like a faceless FM radio band on these demos, like a mix between Kansas and Steely Dan.

The live portions are audience tapes of so-so quality, and Belle Antique has tried to cover up their limitations with added reverb. It still sounds like audience tapes though, I've heard worse, but the tinny sound soon gets fatiguing.

”Live 1977” was a motivated release, but ”Live” looks more like an attempt to squeeze water out of a stone. For Dice completists only.

No links found

Monday, August 4, 2025

PÄR LINDBLOM – I grönsakslandet (RCA Victor, 1973)

 
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance:**

Pär Lindblom has had many ways of earning his living. He started out in music in the early 70s, releasing his first album ”I grönsakslandet” on major label RCA Victor appealingly produced by his old schoolmate Tomas Ledin, made his second album two years later, appeared on Mora Träsk's debut album, turned to acting with Fria Proteatern and Musikteatergruppen Oktober, became a household face after appearing in a lottery TV commercial before becoming an author and illustrator of children's books in the late 90s. He also did a temporary music comeback with two CD singles in the mid 90s.

All songs on ”I grönsakslandet” are originals, and probably thanks to Ledin's involvement, he managed to get a line-up of seasoned studio musicians to back him up. Which means the usual suspects Jan Schaffer, Björn J:son Lindh, Stefan Brolund and Ola Brunkert. Lindholm himself isn't quite up to their level. His songs are OK enough, a bit of singer/songerwriter with some flashes of folk, but his vocals have an everyday feel to them. His voice is a wee bit like Bernt Staf's, but less piercingly nasal. 

But the ordinariness is also the contradictory charm of the album: It's like talking to someone about the weather and the rising cost of living and even though nothing is really said, it's quite pleasant, and then you step on the bus and go home with your grocery bag and you think, ”that was a nice fella”. And this was an unspectacular, nice nice album.

Grönsakslandet
Siw färg-tv

Sunday, August 3, 2025

MONGEZI FEZA & BERNT ROSENGREN QUARTET – Free Jam (Ayler, 2004; rec. 1972)

 
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

This is a double punch knockout! Recorded around the same time as trumpeter Mongezi Feza's albums with Johnny Dyani and Okay Temiz, this is miles above them all. (It should be said that Temiz is present here as well, but in a much more appropriate context.) The secret weapon here is Bernt Rosengren's quartet who really goes for it, and his band is a much better match to Feza.

Double CD ”Free Jam” was recorded during two shows in mid and late November 1972, and the title explains it all: this is collective improvisations. A dangerous game if you can't find the flow, but these five gentlemen sure do. They touch on multiple jazz styles, or more like referencing them, because it's all free jazz in the best sense of the word. Powerful, energetic, symbiotic, osmotic. It's so exhilarating when it happens and this is an exhilarating release.

The sound quality isn't top notch, it's a slightly distant audience recording from a somewhat echoey venue, but the force of the music still comes through with crystalline focus. If you're used to listening to free jazz it shouldn't be much of a problem, as many obscure free jazz albums aren't any hi-fi experiences anyway. And this is one of the finest examples of the style recorded and released in Sweden.

Selective album playlist (Bandcamp)

RADIO BALKAN – Radio Balkan (Mistlur, 1981) / Direktsändning (Mistlur, 1983; rec. 1981-1983)

Instrumental, Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

Before Anton Karis became a domestically well known radio journalist, he played the flute in Berits Halsband and also made a guest appearance on obscure band Occident's only album. After Berits Halsband disbanded, Karis went on world music band Radio Balkan who had two albums plus one single (with a non-album 'B' side) on the Mistlur imprint in the early 80s.

While there's nothing particularly wrong with any of them, they're a bit lacking. I'd love to hear a bit more oomph, it's too polite to really capture the real spirit of Balkan music. The first half of ”Direktsändning” was recorded live in 1982, and it's a bit better – the live setting probably triggered them a bit – but it's still not enough. The 'A' side of their single, ”Ella min vän” from 1981 is included, while remaining four tracks were recorded in 1983.

Radio Balkan full album playlist

Direktsändning full album playlist

KENNY HÅKANSSON – Beno's ben (Silence, 1981)

 
Instrumental, Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

A peculiar album lacking both direction and ideas. Those who expect electric folk rock à la Kebnekajse or Håkansson's first solo album ”Springlekar och gånglåtar” will be sorely let down. A couple of tracks sound like a heavier Isildurs Bane, including the best one here, ”Existensproblem”. Another in turn is an approximation of sequencer Tangerine Dream but with guitars instead of electronics. ”Om döden” is better in Dag Vag's live version on ”Almanacka”. The oriental touches in”Egna ben” can't hide it's really just an inferior postpunk song but still better than the pseudo melodic heavy metal of ”Encore”. All sounds like song sketches that should best have been left on hissy 4 track home tapes and not turned into a full, officially released album. I love Kenny Håkansson but this album just isn't any good.

Full album playlist

Thursday, July 31, 2025

OPPOSITE CORNER / PALLE DANIELSSON -6- – Club Jazz 5 (SR, 1971)

 
 Instrumental
International relevance: ***

The ”Club Jazz” series was a series of nine volumes of jazz recordings made for Swedish Radio between 1970 and 1974, a bit like a jazz equivalent of the three ”Tonkraft” double LPs released in the early 80s. The albums were usually split between two artists, one per side, and not all couplings made sense. There's for instance one album with Arbete & Fritid on one side and trad jazzers Kustbandet on the other. ”Club Jazz 5” has a better match, with a very early Opposite Corner recording and one by a rare sixpiece line-up led by bassist Palle Danielsson.

This session with Opposite Corner is five years earlier than their proper debut album ”Jazz i Sverige '76” and a bit different. It's not full on free jazz wild but they let loose a bit more here than they did later on. And it's much better! The Arabic scales in opening track ”Ayazin” is very tasteful, and Gunnar Lindgren delivers some fine tenor sax soloing in ”Blacklouti Strikes Back”. Last track from them is ”Tibetanskt urindop” and is probably as close Opposite Corner ever got to Arbete & Fritid. A very good session, well worth hearing even if you're not into their later work.

Turn the record over and you find four tracks from Palle Danielsson's band. This is where it gets really interesting. Featured here is an all star cast of Lennart Åberg, Bobo Stenson, Jon Christensen, Bengt Berger and Roland Keijser along with Danielsson himself! A highly vivid session with Berger in particular going bonkers on the drums – it's among the most ferocious drumming I've heard from him, and it's interesting to note that this was recorded in the same year as Fickteatern's ”Allt växer till det hejdas” which also has some mad Berger playing. But the ensemble effort is great all through, and I really wish there were more recordings from this particular lot.

So with two unique and splendid sessions, this is one for the ages.

Full album

AMBRA – Ambra (Symphilis, 2020; rec. 1975-1979)

 
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: ***

A symphonic quartet from Lidköping in the Western part of Sweden, existing from 1975 to 1979 but with only one single out, in 1977 on Anette, the same label Blåkulla were on. Both sides of the single ("Vandring" and "Scherzo") are here, but they obviously recorded a lot more than that – this archival disc is 80 minutes long.

Influenced by British symph rock bands, you can also spot traces from Kaipa. One blog reader described Ambra as a mix of Ragnarök and Atlas, and that's as accurate a definition as any. The synth sounds favoured by later symph bands are prevalent here supporting the fiddly guitars. They had a certain lyricism to their songs, but there's too much going on for any mood to properly settle – Ambra simply can't resist getting show-offy. I don't like the singer either; Michael Ellgren has a rather thin voice and sounds too much like a musicals reject.

Ambra indeed had ambitions and certainly some chops, but had they been a bit more economical about them, they wouldn't have become so overbearing.

Full album

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

NÄVGRÖT – Nävgröt (MNW, 1980)

 
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

A strange album, almost like an all African Archimedes Badkar stripped of everything except the percussion with (sometimes call-and-response) vocals added. Too bad the vocals are really bad. There are a lot of people involved in Nävgröt, and too many of them sing in an uninteresting, everyday manner. They make it sound like a children's program from the 70s; the kind where ten people sit in a ring dressed in plush dresses in poo brown, dirt orange and murky green with a backdrop of badly painted cardboard supposed to look like exotic trees and with crosseyed lions with weird proportions and a guy in a bowl cut and a beard that looks exactly like the bowl cut so if you turn him upside down he looks exactly the same telling you traditional tales from the curious continent of Africa. And then they play good and sing badly. ”Nävgröt” would have been much better if it was all instrumental, because the playing is indeed good with captivating rhythms. It's not surprising that Bengt Berger appears on one track – it actually sounds as if he could have been on the entire album. If only they would have shut up...

No links found 

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

SHEKINA – On Our Way To Love (Transubstans, 2024; rec. 1976)

 
English vocals, instrumental
International relevance: ***

After the demise of Änglabarn, his participation in ”Hair” and ”Jesus Christ Superstar” but before his solo career, Dan Tillberg teamed up with the band Solen Strålar (not to be confused with Solen Skiner) who had been around since the early 70s but only played a few gigs. The band asked Tillberg if he wanted to be their lead vocalist, and after only one rehearsal, he agreed to it. They changed their name to Shekina, new songs were written, and soon they found themselves recording a full album in Tillberg's newly built Bellatrix studio when it wasn't booked by other artists. However, running the studio and the label attached to it, Tillberg realized he didn't have the time to head a band too. The recordings ended up unreleased until Transubstans got their hands on them, finally releasing them as ”On Our Way To Love” in 2024.

One can only wonder what would have happened if the album had been released as originally intended. Because the thing is, it's a quite beautiful album of progressive pop with symphonic touches. The songs are really lovely and well-composed, the arrangements are lucid and Tillberg's vocals are the best I've heard, sincere but relaxed and respectful to the melodies. I sense a light touches of Moody Blues in Shekina's music and lyrics but without the Moodies' strains of self-pity.

I didn't know what to expect from Shekina on beforehand, but I was pleasantly surprised. The album has a mellow sweetness and melodic care that I find rather irresistable. As a matter of fact, it's a little gem that really should have been released already 50 years ago.

No links found

GÁBOR SZABÓ – The Swedish albums

Gábor Szabó was a Hungarian born American guitarist whose best known albums are ”Bacchanal”, ”Dreams” both from 1968, and unfortunately also unbelievably cheesy ”Jazz Raga” from 1967. If you want to hear stunningly bad sitar playing, please choose ”Jazz Raga”, one of legendary jazz label Impulse's greatest brainslips. ”Bacchanal” and ”Dreams” however are two lovely examples of pop jazz with psychedelic tinges. Two albums of quality cool kitsch.

 
Small World (Four Leaf Clover, 1972)
Instrumental
International relevance: **

Recorded in two days in August 1972 in Stockholm, this is the first Szabó album to feature Swedish musicians, this time Schaffer and Nils-Erik Svensson of Svenska Löd AB!, Stefan Brolund, Sture Nordin, and Berndt Egerbladh. It's one of Szabó's best 70s albums, very close to his 60s work, with his characteristic guitar sound set to a groove-laiden background. Szabó recorded the Oriental sounding ”Mizrab” several times, but this version is the best of them all, with a great, funky ensemble performance. (A mizrab is the special kind of plectrum you put on your index finger when you play sitar.) ”Small World” is an often overlooked album which deserves more attention. Several different cover variations exist.

 
Belsta River (Four Leaf Clover, 1979)
Instrumental
International relevance: **

Another two-day session in Sweden, this time in January 1978 (but not released until the following year). Only Schaffer is left from ”Small World”, with Wlodek Gulgowski, Malando Gassama, Peter Sundell (from De Gladas Kapell), and Finnish/Swedish Pekka Pohjola joining him. Nowhere near as good as ”Small World”, this is muzak fusion, decorative but dull. The Latin affected ”24 Carat” has some life in it, but it's still not very good. (The album was also released in Japan as ”24 Carat”.)

”Belsta River” was to be one of Szabó's last albums. He died in 1982 while visiting his birth town Budapest only 45 years old from liver and kidney failure caused by drug abuse.

Small World full album playlist
Belsta River full album playlist

Monday, July 28, 2025

LENNART ÅBERG – Partial Solar Eclipse (Japo, 1977)

 
Instrumental
International relevance: *

If you're into fusion jazz, this one looks promising at a first glance, with several EGBA members and Lennart Åberg himself from Rena Rama, Häxmjölk and Oriental Wind. ”Partial Solar Eclipse” is a suite in six parts, and ”IV” is OK, moving in freer areas. But most of it is contemporary jazz in a progressive big band mode with only very light fusion touches. And a bit too heavy on the big band part. Not exciting at all. As a matter of fact, it's pretty damn boring.

Full album playlist

A SEVEN INCH SPECIAL, VOL. 7: Psych & such

LUCAS – Antisocial Season / Hymn To The Sun (Polar, 1967)
English vocals
International relevance: ***

The 'A' side is a slightly New Orleans tinged piano based track and not very good, but ”Hymn To The Sun” is nothing less than excellent hazy, UK styled psychedelia. The track is a real masterpiece unfairly overlooked even by connoisseurs, and impressively enough an original group composition. Never very expensive, but if people knew just how great it is, the prices would surely go up quickly. Piano player and singer Janne ”Lucas” Persson later joined Pugh Rogefeldt and Ola Magnell on the ”Ett steg till” tour which was documented on a double album in 1975. 


SLEEPSTONES – As The Night Comes To See / I Put A Spell On You
(Columbia, 1967)
English vocals
International relevance: **

The Sleepstones were Jan Schaffer's first proper band, going back to as early as 1962. They changed their name several times before settling for the name under which they recorded five singles between 1964 and 1967, with ”As The Night Comes To See” being their last. The 'A' side is a rather elegant, harmony-laiden moody ballad which is quite nice but with a cheesy chorus. The flipside is the old Screamin' Jay Hawkins standard, covered over and over again by uncountable bands over the years, most famously by Creedence Clearwater Revival. The Sleepstones go for an organ heavy arrangement that breathes Swedish folk jazz. A dynamic and driven take with vocalist Ted Åström at his most soulful. Not the best version I've heard, but definitely a very credible perfomance of an international stature.
 

 
ATTRACTIONS – Let Love Come Between Us / 5th February 1968 (Columbia, 1968)
English vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

It's not quite true that The Sleepstones only made five singles, because The Attractions were basically the same band and released two further 45s in 1968. ”Let Love Come Between Us” is a mediocre sunshine pop track with a steady beat, nothing special. But the 'B' side draws the lines of "I Put A Spell On You" further with a six and a half minutes instrumental workout in a psychy, progressive jazz vein, rich with organ and a proof that Schaffer was a force to be reckoned with already early on. 


CHEERS – Love Me Two Times / Somebody To Love (Decca, 1968)
English vocals
International relevance: **

A Stockholm band that was active a couple of years before they had this 45 out with two Summer of Love covers. ”Love Me Two Times” is a competent but redundant take on The Doors while Jefferson Airplane's ”Somebody To Love” gets an inspired and pretty intense treatment. Both tracks have been comped, ”Somebody To Love” even twice, on ”Who Will Buy These Wonderful Evils, Vol. III” and RPM's excellent survey of Swedish garage rock ”Svenska Shakers”.


MEMBERS BLUES BAND – One Night / P.S. Elic (Jacks Beat, 1968)
English vocals
International relevance: ***

Swedish band on a Danish label. ”One Night” is a completely pointless cover of the Elvis track while the flipside is one of the most fantastic psych tracks ever recorded in Sweden. Perhaps even in the world. Overflowing with backwards sounds and treated vocals, it could have been a highlight on Freak Scene's ”Psychedelic Psoul” album. An absolute masterpiece in perfect tune with the times. Thankfully included on ”Who Will Buy These Wonderful Evils, Vol. III” as originals are incredibly rare, changing hands for up to 500 dollars.


ZOOM – Coloured Rain / Ticket To Ride (RCA Victor, 1968)
English vocals
International relevance: **

When Members Blues Band broke up, two of their members went on to form Zoom. Again they had to approach a neighbouring country to secure a one-single deal, this time Norway. ”Coloured Rain” is the well-known Traffic number, here extended to twice its original length by a decidedly psychy and meritorious organ solo. The Beatles' ”Ticket To Ride” is slowed down to Vanilla Fudge tempo but the rendition is lightweight. 

ARDY THE PAINTER OF LOVE – Pregnant Rainbows For Colourblind Dreamers (Sonet, 1970)
English vocals, spoken word
International relevance: **

This ”painter of love's” real name was Ardy Strüwer and the same guy who made the ”Öronpaj” album in 1973 with actor, comedian and painter Lasse Åberg. Åberg's here too on bells and maracas. The idiotically titled ”Pregnant Rainbows For Colourblind Dreamers” was released in a single-sided edition of only 99 copies for an art exhibition, but has since been revived for the 4CD box set regrettably named after the single. Rare indeed, but also complete rubbish. It's basically an improvised drums and flute duet with Ardy babbling nonsense on top. 


AUNT SALLY – Shakin' All Over / She Left Me
(Green Light, 1970)
English vocals
International relevance: **

One of the singles on MNW's early subsidiary Green Light. The cover of Johnny Kidd chestnut ”Shakin' All Over” isn't anything special but the 'B' side, the original composition ”She Left Me” is quite a cool track with psychedelic overtones and a bass line slightly reminiscent of Red Crayola/Krayola's ”Hurricane Fighter Plane”. Not bad at all! Aunt Sally was a band from Lund in the south of Sweden and they had a four track EP ”Slabb” out on another label prior to this.


BJÖRN & BENNY – She's My Kind Of Girl / Inga Theme (Polar, 1970)
English vocals
International relevance: ***

I bet you didn't see this one coming! Yes, it is Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson, soon to be mega stars as 50% of ABBA. Let me say that not all Swedes like ABBA, and I'm the living proof of that. I hate their plastic sound, I hate their vocals, I hate (most) of their smarmy crap songs. But this is something else. Well, ”She's My Kind Of Girl” may not be the greatest song ever written, it's a OK in a in a Tages happy-go-lucky style, but once you flip the single over, you get ”Inga Theme”. The two Bs wrote the songs for Joe Sarno's sexploitation movie ”The Seduction of Inga” which in itself is a spectacular fact. But what's more spectacular is that "Inga Theme" it's a great fuzz-laiden track with hypnotic psychedelic qualities! There's absolutely nothing in the entire ABBA clan ouvre sounding like this or being this good. You want hidden gems? You've got it!


CANDLE – In A Vision / Matthew, Little Man (Mallwax, 1971)
English vocals
International relevance: **

”In A Vision” is a light harmony pop track with baroque shadings while ”Matthew, Little Man” loses the baroque-ness. Nice and sweet, not very exciting but nevertheless included on ”Who Will Buy These Wonderful Evils, Vol. III”. Songwriter, singer and guitarist Håkan Bryngelson later became CEO of one of Sweden's biggest real estate companies.


DON CURTIS
Men Of Dakota / Riding (GP, 1970)
Red Indian Brothers / In The Corners (GP, 1971)
English vocals
International relevance: **

Born as Kurt Arne Norman, then changing his surname to Nordlander but performing as Don Curtis since his 7” debut in 1966. He released several singles in the 60s, and his final two in the early 70s, both reflecting his strong passion for Native Americans and their culture. Sometimes dressing up as one, he may seem like a silly Billy, but these two singles are in fact fine examples of a garage rock sound akin to Kim Fowley's best moments. ”Men Of Dakota” is great with an overheated arrangement, but the hard driving ”In The Corners” is possibly even better. ”Riding” unfortunately reveals Curtis's Elvis fixation – he even became an Elvis impersonator later in the 80s. A curious character with an illustrious history.

"Red Indian Brothers" and "In The Corners" were recorded with Scoopes, a band that had one single on their own in 1970. Both Curtis singles were released with several different colour sleeves. Signed copies seem common.


RAUNCHY – Flygmaskinen / Orminge Centrum (Scam, 1974)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: ***

A very obscure band from Stockholm with only this one single in their discography. ”Flygmaskinen” is really lovely, moody, low-key track with flanged vocals creating a hazy, slightly disoriented atmosphere. Maybe a strike of luck, because the 'B' side is just a fast rock song with very little going for it. ”Flygmaskinen” was, thankfully, salvaged from obscurity on ”Who Will Buy These Wonderful Evils, Vol. 6” making it a lot easier to find. 

Members Blues Band full single playlist

Lucas:
Antisocial Season
 / Hymn To The Sun
Sleepstones:
As The Night Comes To See / I Put A Spell On You
Attractions:
Let Love Come Between Us
 / 5th February 1968 
Cheers:
Love Me Two Times
 / Somebody To Love
Zoom:
Coloured Rain
 / Ticket To Ride 
Ardy The Painter Of Love:
Pregnant Rainbows For Colourblind Dreamers
Aunt Sally:
Shakin' All Over / She Left Me
Björn & Benny:
She's My Kind Of Girl
 / Inga Theme
Candle:
In A Vision
 / Matthew, Little Man
Don Curtis:
Men Of Dakota
 / Riding / Red Indian Brothers / In The Corners
Raunchy:
Flygmaskinen
 / Orminge Centrum

Sunday, July 27, 2025

MIXTURE – Dreamland (Miss Mindy Music, 12”, 1982)


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

The release date on the cover says 1983 but the label states 1982 so I give Mixture the benefit of the doubt and include assuming the label date is correct.

This is not the same Mixture that had an LP on Coop in 1980. This five-piece came from Kalmar in the south east area of Sweden and recorded only the four tracks heard on this 12”. They gigged locally a fair bit and were highly regarded among their peers for their technical skills. Inspired by for instance American jazz guitarist Lee Ritenour they wanted an accomplished sound. The style isn't that exciting, somewhere between AOR and symphonic rock (especially on ”Preludium” by J.S. Bach obviously), but they were pretty good songwriters in their vein. They were skilled players especially for being only around 18 years old at the time. And I think Matz Larsson has a rather nice voice. 

I wouldn't call "Dreamland" great, but I've heard far worse examples of what music college students can cook up.

Back To Reality
Preludium
Mecanical [sic!]
Vem var hon

Saturday, July 26, 2025

BERNT ROSENGREN – Notes From Underground (Harvest, 1974)

 
Instrumental
International relevance: ***

Tenorist Bernt Rosengren is one of the major Swedish jazz musicians, and if you're at all into Swedish jazz, you neither should nor could pass him by. He played with so many, both domestically and internationally, from Sevda to Krzysztof Komeda, from Nature to Don Cherry, from later era Eldkvarn to George Russell. Not to mention his great albums as a leader of which ”Notes From Underground” stands out as his major opus. Yes, it is a jazz album, but it's so sprawling and free-spirited, spanning so many expressions that you soon just forget about genres and simply think of it as music delivered with an amazing joy of playing. And just look at the line-up: Maffy Falay, Okay Temiz, Salih Baysal, Gunnar Bergsten, Bengt Berger, Tommy Koverhult, Torbjörn Hultcrantz, Bobo Stenson, Björn Alke, Leif Wennerström, Bertil Strandberg and of course Bernt Rosengren himself. With such a heavy lot you just know that this can't go wrong. And of course it doesn't.

There's the bluesy lyricism of the short version of ”Markitta Blues”, there's the Pharoah Sanders permeated spirituality of ”Iana Has Been Surprised In The Night”, there's the 'free bop' of ”Gerda” and ”Splash”, there's ”Some Changes V” – almost a miniature throwback to Rosengren's participation with G.L. Unit. Not to mention the Turkish portions from the holy trinity of Falay/Temiz/Baysal that breaks through like sudden dreams from another world once on each of the two discs. ”Notes From Underground” is a double album, but never one to feel overstretched and presumptuous – itself an achievement. The whole album is so well composed, so sensitively balanced that it almost surprises you when it's already over.

I sometimes use the word 'monolithic' and I'm going to use it once again. This album is monolithic. And once you've got it, don't stop there – go on to 1971's splendid ”Fly Me To The Sun” and the two volumes of ”Live In Stockholm” recorded in 1974 and 1975 respectively – volume 1 is particularly powerful. And the continue.

Full album playlist
 minus first track
"Theme From Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 12" (first track)

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