Feel the Blues with all that Jazz
English (United Kingdom)Polish (Poland)
Home Jazz Till Brönner Till Bronner & Dieter Ilg - Nightfall (2018)

Till Bronner & Dieter Ilg - Nightfall (2018)

User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 

Till Bronner & Dieter Ilg - Nightfall (2018)

Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility.


01. А Тhоusаnd Кissеs Dеер
02. Тhе Fifth оf Вееthоvеn
03. Nightfаll
04. Nоbоdу Еlsе Вut Ме
05. Аir
06. Sсrеаm & Shоut
07. Wеttеrstеin
08. Еlеаnоr Rigbу
09. Реng! Реng!
10. Воdу & Sоul
11. Асh, blеib mit Dеinеr Gnаdе

Till Bronner - trumpet, flugelhorn
Dieter Ilg - bass

 

With only a single melody instrument and a bass, you’ve not only got instant minimalism but also the musical tension that is usually created by the absence of a harmony instrument: as a listener, with just the scales and the bottom notes to go on, you have to supply the implied harmony yourself. In short, it’s a challenge for both the players and the audience. This German duo – Till Brönner on trumpet/flugelhorn, Dieter Ilg, bass – make it work by drawing upon a range of techniques and a wide range of sources.

They wrote three of the tracks themselves. The rest range from standards (Body and Soul, Nobody Else But Me) to contemporary pop (will.i.am’s Scream and Shout), '60s pop (Eleanor Rigby) to classical (Bach’s Air) and even renaissance church music (Melchior Vulpius’s Ach bleib mit deiner Gnade – ‘Abide among us with your grace’).

Of course, in the space left where the harmony should go there’s room for thinking about other things, such as the groove and the dynamics. Take Ornette Coleman’s The Fifth of Beethoven, which starts with flugelhorn and bass playing the lines in unison, as on Coleman’s original, after which the two separate to play successive solos. But it works because of the impeccable groove established from the start. As for dynamics, these are present not so much within individual tunes as across the album as a whole, from the mellow Body and Soul to the neurotic Wetterstein to the austerity of Air.

On the Brönner/Ilg-penned title track, recording technology comes into it too, with both reverb and plate echo helping to make it less stark, along with Ilg playing bass chords here and there to lighten the mood.

Scream and Shout is perhaps the most accessible tune to modern ears. Here, they allow themselves some electronic pad sounds at the start, and Ilg’s bass has been double-tracked, whilst Brönner’s trumpet has been put through some sort of electric guitar emulator. On the gorgeous, evocative Ach bleib mit deiner Gnade serenity is achieved by laying sparse flugelhorn lines on top of a bowed bass and pad drone. By contrast, the self-written tracks Wetterstein and Peng! Peng! are avant-garde fragments, without melody or time.

Brönner has moved on a long way since the late '90s, when he was hailed as the feathery-toned reincarnation of Chet Baker. Nightfall is a darker, more mature and more experimental piece of work. ---Peter Jones, londonjazznews.com

download (mp3 @320 kbs):

yandex mediafire uloz.to gett

 

 

 

Before downloading any file you are required to read and accept the
Terms and Conditions.

If you are an artist or agent, and would like your music removed from this site,
please e-mail us on
abuse@theblues-thatjazz.com
and we will remove them as soon as possible.


Polls
What music genre would you like to find here the most?
 
Now onsite:
  • 840 guests
Content View Hits : 250116381