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2020/03/30

PREMIERA: Jazzrausch Bigband "Beethoven's Breakdown"




Jazzrausch Bigband to założona przed w 2014 roku orkiestra jazzowa dająca rocznie ok. 120 koncertów na całym świecie.
Zespół grał w takich miejscach jak m.in. Lincoln Center w Nowym Jorku, JZ Festival Shanghai, Safaricom International Jazz Festival w Nairobi, Ural Music Night w Jekaterynburgu czy SXSW Music Festival w Austin, każdorazowo spotykając się z niezwykle gorącym przyjęciem publiczności.
Kompozytorem większości repertuaru Orkiestry jest odpowiedzialny za oprawę elektroniczną utworów Leonhard Kuhn, a grupę prowadzi prawdziwy muzyczny wizjoner, dyrygent i puzonista Roman Sladek.
Powołując do życia wieloosobową formację, muzyk postanowił udostępnić jazz, niesłusznie postrzegany jako muzyka elitarna, odbiorcom na co dzień go nie słuchającym. Stąd koncerty Jazzrausch Bigband w rozmaitych klubach tanecznych i nowoczesnych dyskotekach, jak choćby znany monachijski klub techno Harry Klein, w którym występy zespołu odbywają się regularnie co miesiąc, każdorazowo okazując się ogromnym sukcesem i przyciągając rzesze zarówno stałych bywalców klubu jak miłośników jazzu.
Nowoczesne brzmienie Big Bandu oparte jest na jazzowej tradycji połączonej z nowoczesną elektroniką, elementami techno i muzyką klubową. To zupełnie nowa muzyczna jakość, a zarazem styl bezproblemowo łączący gusta zarówno miłośników jazzu, jak entuzjastów nowoczesnej klubowej muzyki tanecznej.
Swój kolejny po "Dancing Wittgenstein" (2019) album, Jazzrausch Bigband zadedykowali muzyce Ludwiga van Beethovena, pomiędzy którego kompozycje wpleciona została 4-częściowa Sonata autorstwa Leonharda Kuhna, zainspirowana twórczością wielkiego kompozytora, a nagrana z gościnnym udziałem grającego na puzonie Nilsa Landgrena.
Płyta zatytułowana "Beethoven's Breakdown" ukazała się 27 marca nakładem wytwórni ACT.

Robert Ratajczak

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Jazzrausch Bigband: Beethoven's Breakdown
CD 2020, ACT 9898-2

program:

Ludwig van Beethoven:
1. Piano Sonata No.14 in C sharp minor Op.27 No.2 ‘Moonlight’
2. Symphony No.7 in A major Op.92: II. Allegretto

Leonhard Kuhn - Sonata:
3.   I. Allegro Spirituoso
4.  II. Scherzo
5. III. Largo
6. IV. Finale

Ludwig van Beethoven - String Quartet No.14 in C sharp minor Op.131:
7. Part I
8. Part II

personel:
Patricia Romer - wokal
Daniel Klingl, Frederik Mademann, Raphael Huber, Florian Leuschner - saksofony
Julis Braun, Angela Avetisyan - trąbki
Roman Sladek, Matthias Zeindlhofer, Carsten Fuss - puzony
Jutta Keess - tuba
Heinrich Wulff - gitara
Severin Krieger - instr.klawiszowe
Georg Stirnweiss - kontrabas
Silvan Strauss - perkusja
Leonhard Kuhn - elektronika
oraz:
Nils Landren - puzon
Andre Welch - instr.klawiszowe
___________________________________________

materiały prasowe:

The Beethoven 250th anniversary on 17 December 2020 is an event of national significance in Germany. It even finds its way into the text of the Federal Government's coalition agreement, where it is stated that the anniversary "offers outstanding opportunities for Germany as a cultural nation both at home and abroad. That is why the preparations for this important anniversary are task for the nation". Jazzrausch Bigband got the memo straight away. With their album "Beethoven's Breakdown" the band is honouring the pioneering composer in its own way. Not by being historically authentic or by preserving him in aspic, but in a manner that befits Beethoven the radical innovator. Just as he revolutionized the history of music, the equally forward-looking JRBB has pushed ahead with its bold concept of orchestral techno-jazz.


Just how superbly it works is clear from the first track of the album,"Moonlight Sonata": a firm beat propels the piece forward, the melodic theme is given to the trumpets in minimalist form and with altered rhythms, the woodwind players having plenty of room to be free with the theme and to improvise over it. Everything becomes part of the interplay, the awareness of musical time is razor-sharp, and vocalist Patricia Römer sings in an onomatopoeic way, all of which serves to build up the tension, to the point of tearing it apart. The second ‘allegretto’ movement of the Seventh Symphony is given a similar treatment and also emerges redefined: there is a fine trumpet solo and some lyrical singing, but the original delicate theme of this movement is given to contrabass clarinet and tuba, who assert it darkly and powerfully.
String Quartet No.14 also appears in a completely new light. Using strongly syncopated basic rhythms, melodic fragments are completely reinterpreted harmonically and formed into an original composition. This multi-faceted piece ranges from classical elements to dark German techno a la Ben Klock.
There is also a newly-composed sonata in four movements on "Beethoven's Breakdown". As special guest, the Jazzrausch Bigband was able to attract trombonist Nils Landgren who is featured in this work. Formally and harmonically, the sonata is strongly reminiscent of Beethoven. The melodies and the sound aesthetic, however, make use of a contemporary language that involves both the spectral music of Tristan Murail and the danceable grooves of modern house music.
Two creative minds are behind this bold homage: Leonhard Kuhn, who is the mastermind of the band both from the musical-aesthetic and the philosophical-scientific perspectives. He composed the sonata and wrote all the techno arrangements of the Beethoven pieces. Bandleader Roman Sladek was, as always, a source of important ideas, and also supervised the production. He is responsible for the way the ensemble functions and has had a major role in its success. The band has only existed for five years, but has established a major profile with its approach, a new, stylistically open kind of orchestral jazz, and is now in great demand internationally: the band now plays at least 120 concerts a year, most recently at major festivals in Europe, Asia, Africa and the USA, but also as resident big band in Munich’s Unterfahrt jazz club and techno club Harry Klein. The level of common understanding among the players that this regular performing has engendered, and the phenomenal tightness of ensemble among this elite of Southern German jazz instrumentalists is to be heard on "Beethoven's Breakdown".
What is happening here is a compelling rejuvenation cure not just for conventional styles of jazz, but also for the classical music of Beethoven. And it is also how Jazzrausch Bigband is reaching and winning over new and young audiences for both Beethoven's music and big band jazz. For traditions to be carried on there must be renewal. A torch is being carried from one generation to the next, and fires in new and unexpected places are being set alight.