Maria Kannegaard Trio
Jazz / Minimalist / Regional Mexican
|
|
 |
All
Norway
Profile Views:
5701
Last Login:
11/20/2008
|
|
View My:
Pics
| Videos
|
|
 |
|
|
http://www.myspace.com/mariakannegaardtrio |
|
 |
| Maria Kannegaard Trio: General Info
|
|
|
|
![]() |
Maria Kannegaard Trio's Latest Blog Entry
[Subscribe to this Blog]
|
| [View All Blog Entries] |
| About Maria Kannegaard Trio |
|
“Camel Walk” (Jazzland, 2008) is pianist Maria Kannegaard’s third album, recorded as a trio together with Ole Morten Vågan on contra bass, and Thomas Strønen on drums. After her initial releases of 2000’s “Breaking the Surface” (Act), and her second studio album of 2005, “Quiet Joy” (Jazzland), we are again warmly welcomed into Kannegaard’s exquisite style.
Consisting of ten songs composed by Kannegaard, we are taken on something of a musical journey. “Drifting Down the Nile” opens the album, followed by the irking “Haunted”. You may notice that this time, Kannegaard’s usually developed soloing is on this album is placed within the context of a collective sound. We pause briefly to reflect over “A Cup of Coffee and Some Danish Pastries” before we embark on the title track, “Camel Walk”. You may also notice the cross-cultural pollination of jazz, singer/songwriter style, avant garde and indie rock flavorings. Further on, we are introduced to Kannegaard’s impeccable technique and expressiveness, as well as through “Sliding Doors”, “Traveling Pass” and finally, “We Interrupt for a Short Commercial”. It is the welcoming tone of the album overall which places it firmly in one of the most intriguing chamber jazz recordings of the year.
We can hear touches of Kannegaard’s influences, such as the music of Keith Jarret and Bill Evans in her improvisational skills, and in the disjointed melodic structures of Geri Allen and Herbie Nichols, two composers and performers very near to her heart. However, it is her own style that breaks through, and fused with Thomas Strønen’s always perceptive percussion and Ole Morten Vågan’s artfully syncopated bass, it all comes together as an organic whole, a true hallmark of Norwegian jazz.
The piano trio never sounded so modern, yet respectfully pays tribute to the traditions of the past, however enveloping them in Kannegaard’s forward-looking style. Produced by the trio themselves, “Camel Walk” places them firmly in a new direction, more immediate and powerful, and marks Maria Kannegaard as a vibrant force within the jazz arena.
Rondomagazine raves about the music with words much like these: At one moment it sounds like Bill Evans having the hiccups, at another like Thelonious Monk in Morse code (...) or like gumbo-backbeat when the drums peu à peu are losing all of their metal parts. That's one of many ways to describe the incredibly surprising style and positive craziness in the music of the Maria Kanneegaard Trio.
Quote:
“I immediately sat up and noticed Maria Kannegaard the first time I heard her … She was playing beautiful tunes, and then there was something about the way she was improvising. Something well defined, conscious, well-thought through: … she speaks to me with music so soulful it leaves one with a massive impression, but at the same time this music possesses an inner calm. … the most original trio-debut in Norwegian jazz for a long time.” - Roald Helgheim
|
|
| Maria Kannegaard Trio's Friend Space (Top 8) |
|
Maria Kannegaard Trio has 227 friends.
|
|
|
|
|
|