Title: Krakow Nights
By: Peter Brötzmann / Steve Swell / Paal Nilssen-Love
Released: 2015
Format: CD
Catalog No: MW 937-2
EAN: 5907589871845
Price: 12 EUR
Tracklist:
1. Oneiric Memories 13:44
2. Full Spectrum Response 37:36
3. Scotopia [skə-tō´pē-ə, n. The Ability To See In Darkness Or Dim Light] 12:48
4. Road Zipper 10:19
All music Paal Nilssen-Love, Peter Brötzmann, Steve Swell
Line-up:
Peter Brötzmann - Saxophone, Clarinet
Steve Swell - Trombone
Paal Nilssen-Love - Drums, Percussion
Recorded:
on February 24, 2015 at Alchemia, Krakow
Recorded, mixed and mastered by Rafał Drewniany, DTS Studio
What the critics say:
Trombonist Steve Swell faces up to what might be one of the toughest challenges in contemporary music on Krakow Nights: how to hold your own against the twin forces of nature represented by German reed iconoclast Peter Brötzmann and Norwegian drum dynamo Paal Nilssen-Love. Already a self-contained unit, the pair has toured and recorded frequently as a duet. With such powerful entities it can be hard to avoid being cast in a supportive role. Though Swell’s talents in such exposed situations have been honed through collaborations with the likes of reedplayers Daniel Carter and Sabir Mateen and trumpeter Roy Campbell, few are as uncompromising as present company.
Recorded in Klub Alchemia, one of Poland’s premier jazz venues, the concert captured here occurred early on during a 2015 European tour. Although Swell and Brötzmann work predominantly in broad primary hued smears and splatters, the former also delves deep into his bag of tricks. His lines dip and dive as he mixes heraldic fanfares with tightly nuanced bent pitches and muted yelps and whinnies. But it’s not all thunder and lightning. Swell seizes the opportunity to explore timbral possibilities at the start of “Full Spectrum Response” in consort with Nilssen-Love’s tone-color play on untethered cymbals. Furthermore, Brötzmann paraphrases his elegiac “Master of a Small House” theme at various points during the 37-minute cut, interpolating melodic fragments among his emotions drenched stratospheric wailing.
Shifts between the permutations inherent in the trio occur naturally throughout the four extended tracks. Evidence that awareness continues even in the midst of the maelstrom is furnished by the staccato sequence of spat-out notes in “Oneiric Memories”, which prompts a machine gun fusillade of clipped cymbal strikes. Further examples of collective endeavor come in a passage of joint riffing in “Scotopia”, followed by the two horns phrasing as one in an impromptu hymnal toward the conclusion of the same piece. A series of interwoven triumphal blasts bring “Road Zipper” to a close, eliciting well-deserved applause for what constitutes one of Brötzmann’s most successful recent releases.
(by John Sharpe, The New York City Jazz Record)