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Olmedal/Falt/Aleklint/Milder: Silent Room
ByMost of the improvising here is thematic, using Monk and Ornette's melodies as points of departure, although on "Lorraine" and "Light Blue," the group more faithfully adheres to the compositional and harmonic structures. The musicians may solo individually or contrapuntally. Rather than keep straight time, bass and drums more often join in the melodic flow or comment on it. But swing is never far from anybody's mind. Bass lines and drum accents are dispensed in a manner suggesting swing and maintaining the tempo. Sometimes, as on the bridge to "Lorraine" or parts of "Turnaround," swinging time surges forward with every beat expressly stated rather than implied.
Among the horns, Milder emerges as a muscular tenor player who largely foreswears the reliance on noise effects that characterizes the work of many "avant-garde" saxophonists. He has a robust warm sound and he draws liberally on blues phrases. Aleklint is an expressive trombonist whose lines are filled with smears and groans. All four musicians engage in deeply empathetic improvisation. These players listen to each other, playing lines that interlock. They talk to each other rather than at each other.
Jazz outside the United States has matured. Musicians from other nations and cultures now create on a level commensurate with most American musicians, and Silent Room is yet another instructive example.
Track Listing
Lorraine, Light Blue, Congeniality/Turnaround, Sadness, Worry Later, Bla Anemoner, Played Twice, Peace, Silent Room, Evidence.
Personnel
Nils Olmedal, bass; Jon Falt, drums; Mats Aleklint, trombone; Joakim Milder, tenor saxophone.
Album information
Title: Silent Room | Year Released: 2004