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Felix Henkelhausen

"Misanthropic Tendencies” is the debut album of the 26 year old double bass player Felix Henkelhausen as band leader and composer. His quintet includes Wanja Slavin (as, cl) Uli Kempendorff (ts, cl), Elias Stemeseder (p, synths) and Leif Berger (dr).

Henkelhausen had been preoccupied with the idea of ​​founding a quintet since 2016, when he began to write pieces for a five-piece band for a concert. The compositions contained on the album reflect the musical and compositional development that Henkelhausen has gone through since then, but at the same time allow a glimpse into the future.

Henkelhausen does not put himself in the foreground on this album, he is much more concerned with creating a musical figure, a body of sound that cannot be tied to an individual, but only comes about through the constellation of the five protagonists.

The album title aims at an offended relationship with humanity, at the atrocities that this species is able to commit. At the same time, Henkelhausen is also interested in the love for people and the potential of the creative power of each individual as well as the potential for a better society and non-violent, loving togetherness. He tries to convey this ambivalence in his pieces and to make it clear through the mixture of melody and rhythmic and harmonic rawness. A melancholy undertone runs through his pieces, a kind of veil or shadow that lies on or under the beauty but also the directness and honesty of the recordings.

Felix Henkelhausen, born in Oldenburg in 1995, received classical piano and cello lessons before he became interested in the double bass. At the age of 16 he began his early studies at the HfK Bremen with Prof. Detlev Beier. From 2014 to 2019 he studied at the Jazz Institute Berlin with Prof. Greg Cohen and Marc Muellbauer. Despite his young age, Henkelhausen already played with nationally and internationally known artists such as Andrea Parkins, Dave Liebmann, Eric McPherson, Gebhard Ullmann, Hubert Nuss, Jim Black, Jochen Rueckert, Kathrin Pechlof, Lotte Anker, Marc Copland, Nate Wooley, Oli Steidle, Pablo Held, Peter Schlamp, Philipp Gropper’s Philm, Toby Delius and many others.

Henkelhausen is part of numerous bands such as Jim Black Trio, Liun and the Science Fiction Orchestra, Lorenz Kellhuber Trio, Stefan Schultze Large, Jim and the Shrimps, Bram de Looze Trio feat. Eric McPherson, Nate Wooley’s Knknighgh and Mirna Bogdanovic Group.


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4
Radio & Podcasts

Armageddon Flower, Felix Henkelhausen Quintet & Darrifourcq/Hermia/Ceccaldi

Read "Armageddon Flower, Felix Henkelhausen Quintet & Darrifourcq/Hermia/Ceccaldi" reviewed by Maurice Hogue


It seems like everyone is talking or writing about Armageddon Flower, the excellent new album by Ivo Perelman and Matthew Shipp's String Trio. It may well be the pinnacle of the Perelman/Shipp musical relationship, and it will no doubt be one of the more highly regarded albums of 2025. But can I throw a little light on bassist Felix Henkelhausen's way too? His previous release got a German Jazz Prize nomination, and The Excruciating Pain Of Boredom, his latest, is ...

3
Radio & Podcasts

Felix Henkelhausen, Ochs / Morris / Downs & German Jazz Prize Nominees

Read "Felix Henkelhausen, Ochs / Morris / Downs & German Jazz Prize Nominees" reviewed by Maurice Hogue


Listening to a tune by German bassist Felix Henkelhausen while traveling in the car led me to check out what he was up to; I discovered he's been nominated for a 2025 German Jazz Prize in the Album of the Year category for Deranged Particles. Soon I was exploring other nominees and that led to incorporating a few other nominees into this playlist. Besides Henkelhausen's quintet, you'll hear the international quartet Økse (International Album of the Year), clarinetist Federico Calcagno ...

4
Album Review

Jim & the Schrimps: Ain't No Saint

Read "Ain't No Saint" reviewed by Troy Dostert


Although the group's name (and album title) sound like something one might associate with a second-rate bar band, there is nothing oafish or pedestrian about drummer Jim Black's latest outfit, a hard-hitting ensemble which channels the distinctive energies of Black and his well-chosen compatriots. With saxophonists Asger Nissen (alto) and Julius Gawlik (tenor) and bassist Felix Henkelhausen alongside him, Black brings his characteristic manic intensity and crafty songwriting to an album filled with interesting and engaging musical interactions.

5
Album Review

Mirna Bogdanovic: Confrontation

Read "Confrontation" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


Arrestingly postmodern and warmly familiar in the same space, Mirna Bogdanović's fourth release, Confrontation, stops just short of dismantling contemporary jazz and pop in favor of retaining those elements that tickle the memory's nostalgia receptors in such a way that the listener recognises the music as compelling, while at the same time not being able to explain why. This dichotomy represents a core intention of all art: the ability to evoke awe and confusion (manifested as sudden wonder). The Berlin-based ...

1
Album Review

Julius Windisch Quartet: Chaos

Read "Chaos" reviewed by Vitalijus Gailius


Berlin-based pianist and composer Julius Windisch may not be a household name but he is not a newcomer either. He is a member of the psychedelic electro / jazz / improvisational duo Caesarean Moons, and in 2017 released his debut album, Drama (QFTF), recorded with his quintet. He has also been playing with other musicians on various projects, which often cross jazz boundaries. Windisch's quartet retains no members from the 2017 quintet. Moreover, tenor sax has been ...

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Photos

Music

Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Deranged Particles

Self Produced
2024

buy

Ain't No Saint

Intakt Records
2023

buy

Awake

Berthold Records
2023

buy

Lily Of The Nile /...

Heartcore Records
2022

buy

Chaos

Hout Records
2020

buy

Confrontation

Klaeng Records
2020

buy

Easter

From: Chaos
By Felix Henkelhausen

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