Import LP – FYR 042 LP – Bells and whistles – STHLM Svaga

スティーヴ・スワローをして<衝撃>と言わしめた、音数少なく沈黙にも似た音楽。
そう聞くとミニマルかアンビエントな音を想像してしまいますが、実際はしっかりとリズムとハーモニーに基づいた、温度感としては<ほど良く常温>程度の、丁寧に作り上げられた稀にみる美しい作品です。

Description

Cat#:

LABEL: Found You Recordings, Sweden
Format: LP / FYR 042 LP
ARTIST: STHLM Svaga
TITLE: Bells and whistles
EAN: 7320470245941

Lineup:

Linda Oláh (vocals)
Niklas Barnö (trumpet)
Gustav Rådström (alto sax)
Johan Jutterström (tenor sax)
Rasmus Borg (piano)
Elsa Bergman (double bass)
Andreas Hiroui Larsson (drums)

Rec data:

Produced by Johan Jutterström and Patric Thorman
Recorded by Petter Hölaas, Patric Thorman and Åke Nimrell at Bergastudion, Åkersberga on July 2nd & 3rd, 2019
Mixed by Petter Hölaas and Patric Thorman at Intelligent Sound, Kungsängen
Mastered by Jon Fält
Art direction and executive production by Patric Thorman

Tracks

Side A

  1. Tålamod (2:42)
  2. Bells & whistles (A) (17:07)

Side B

  1. Bells & whistles (B) (16:45)
  2. Triple Tropical Bull (to Carla Bley) (2:46)

A1 composed by Johan Jutterström (Stim/ncb).
A2 & B1 composed by Carla Bley (Alrac Music/BMI).
B2 composed by Rasmus Borg (Stim/ncb).

Album preview

Notes

Carla Bley and I remember with great intensity a night in San Francisco, in 1968, when we witnessed the loudest music we’d ever heard. It happened at a venue called The Filmore, and the band responsible for the colossal noise was Cream –Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker. They played very well, and this wasn’t lost on us, but what we recall most vividly is the shocking shift in scale music at such volume generated, and the recalibration of our senses that shift provoked.

We were reminded of that night when we first heard STHLM Svaga. It’s a mystery that improvisers have ignored the opposite extreme – to play as softly as possible – but here you have it, and it is no less shocking. The psychological effect of STHLM Svaga’s music is a delight: first there’s disorientation, but then there’s reorientation, as you hear that there is, paradoxically, great power in reticence. This is something martial arts masters have long known, and musicians of various sorts, from Morton Feldman to Joao Gilberto, have known about it too, but STHLM Svaga brings this powerful force to jazz, where it hasn’t been before. A corner is turned within the music – the softer the band plays, the more force it generates. As near-silence exerts its powerful effect on the musicians they play less, and what they play assumes startling prominence. A well-placed note speaks volumes.

This music requires intense focus. You’ll need to lean into it, to pay heightened attention. But it simultaneously gives as it makes its demands, offering a trip into a world you haven’t known before, a world of small things made large by a simple but profound shift in perception.
– Steve Swallow