» » Ketil Bjørnstad - La Notte
Ketil Bjørnstad - La Notteh1
Jazz
Performer: Ketil Bjørnstad
Title: La Notte
Style: Contemporary Jazz
Year 2013
Genre: Jazz
Rating: 4.8
Votes: 377
MP3 size: 1346 mb
FLAC size: 1637 mb
WMA size: 1974 mb
Other formats: DXD MPC MP4 MIDI AHX VOX DMF

Ketil Bjørnstad - La Notte mp3 album


Ketil Bjørnstad - La Notte mp3 album

Tracklist

1 I 6:53
2 Il 8:23
3 Ill 4:36
4 IV 5:27
5 V 8:31
6 Vl 6:44
7 Vll 7:04
8 Vlll 7:00

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – ECM Records GmbH
  • Copyright (c) – ECM Records GmbH
  • Made By – EDC, Germany – 53244916
  • Recorded At – Molde International Jazz Festival
  • Mixed At – Rainbow Studio

Credits

  • Cover [Image From The Film "La Notte" By] – Michelangelo Antonioni
  • Design – Sascha Kleis
  • Double Bass – Arild Andersen
  • Engineer – Jan Erik Kongshaug
  • Guitar [Guitars], Electronics – Eivind Aarset
  • Mixed By – Jan Erik Kongshaug, Ketil Bjørnstad, Manfred Eicher
  • Percussion, Drums – Marilyn Mazur
  • Photography By [Liner Photo (Booklet Page 3)] – Hans Fredrik Asbjørnsen
  • Photography By [Liner Photos] – John Kelman
  • Piano, Music By – Ketil Bjørnstad
  • Producer [Album Produced By] – Manfred Eicher
  • Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Andy Sheppard
  • Violoncello – Anja Lechner

Notes

Recorded live July 21, 2010 at Molde International Jazz Festival

Cover image: Jeanne Moreau and Marcello Mastroianni from the film "La notte" by Michelangelo Antonioni

An ECM Production

℗ 2013 ECM Records GmbH
© 2013 ECM Records GmbH

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 602537245536
  • Label Code: LC 02516
  • Rights Society: GEMA
  • SPARS Code: DDD
WtePSeLNaGAyko
Review by Thom JurekThe title of Ketil Bjørnstad's La Notte is taken directly from Italian director Michelangelo Antonioni's film of the same name -- the cover photo is a still from it. This labyrinthine suite, a tribute to the filmmaker's formative influence on the composer, was recorded live at the Molde International Jazz Festival in 2010. Bjørnstad chose his players -- all of them closely associated with ECM -- carefully: Anja Lechner, violoncello; Marilyn Mazur, drums and percussion; Arild Andersen, bass; Eivind Aarset, guitars and electronics, and Andy Sheppard, saxophones. The composer is well known for his unhurried approach to thematic development, exploring both lush and minimal harmonies with the same attention to detail and sense of flow. There's plenty of that here, but given that this is a tribute to a filmmaker, the slow unfolding of the movements here carries within it drama, shifting dynamics, and even some sly humor. Check the melodic interplay between Lechner and Sheppard's soprano, akin to both folk and cafe music in "Part 3." In "Part 2," Bjørnstad's crystalline theme gives way to a graceful yet brooding turbulence from Sheppard's tenor, Aarset's electronics, and the low register of Lechner's instrument. While limpid, almost languid beauty can be heard between the pianist and Lechner as they move through the cyclic, restrained harmonics and dynamics on "Part 6"; dissonance, by way of Aarset's heavily treated, screaming guitar and Sheppard's insistent soprano decorate "Part 7." Mazur and Andersen drive them both toward a collision point. It's breathtaking. It would have been thrilling to be in the audience for this performance. Bjørnstad has always valued subtlety and suggestion over frenetic engagement on his recordings. That is certainly true here, but he is also a wise bandleader: he chose these players for their myriad abilities to dialogue kinetically, listen deeply, and respond powerfully whenever the music dictated, and he was correct in doing so across the board. La Notte is rich, deep, and wonderful.