Home » Jazz Articles » Extended Analysis » Arve Henriksen: Arve Henriksen: The Nature of Connections
Arve Henriksen: Arve Henriksen: The Nature of Connections
By
Jan Bang
live samplingb.1968

Erik Honore
samples / effectsb.1966

Lars Danielsson
bassb.1958

Audun Kleive
drums
Supersilent
band / ensemble / orchestra
David Sylvian
vocalsb.1958

Trio Mediaeval
band / ensemble / orchestra
Eivind Aarset
guitar
Christian Wallumrod
pianob.1971

Laurie Anderson
violin
Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951

Jon Hassell
trumpetb.1937

Sinikka Langeland
vocals
Gavin Bryars
bass, acoustic
Jon Balke
pianob.1955
And so, an album with a title like The Nature of Connections has a special meaning for the increasingly in-demand but, more recently, career-focused Henriksen. While he has, over the past two decades, honed a most personal approach to his instrument that sings, at times, with the gentle breath of a shakuhachi and at other times the more assertive stance of an Alpine horn, the majority of his work has, in some way, shape or form, involved the use of electronics, whether it's live sampling, use of preexisting samples and programs, or the application of effects to his already distinctive sound. The Nature of Connections dispenses with all thatan all-acoustic album where, other than a little bit of piano, he focuses solely on trumpet and piccolo trumpet.
A first for Henriksen, the trumpeter collaborates with four string players of significance and note: violinist

Nils Okland
violin

Mats Eilertsen
bassb.1975


Wolfert Brederode
piano
Tord Gustavsen
pianob.1970
But The Nature of Connections is more than just about collaboration with performers; Henriksen also looks to others for compositional contribution. Everyone in the group with the exception of drummer Audun Kleive, who appears on a handful of tracks, delivers a piece (two, in the case of Eilertsen and Henryson), while on the gloriously delicate and appropriately titled "Arco Akropolis," the entire group is crediteda spontaneous composition that begins with one Hardanger fiddle but slowly picks up both momentum and thematic interaction as Henriksen adds a piano suspension over which a haunting trumpet line emerges, only briefly, as the four-minute miniature winds its way to a whisper-like conclusion.
The only non-performing compositional contributor is St?le Storl?kken, whose gently moving "Hymn" is yet one more revelation about a keyboardist, composer and arranger who, every time it appears that his upper limits have been found, surprises with yet another example of even great musical reach. It's a long distance from this music to his organ power trio

Elephant9
band / ensemble / orchestra
Henriksen's sole compositional contribution, the opening "Bl? Veg," gives credit to the entire group for its arrangement, which suggests that Henriksen may be responsible for its soft, Arcadian melody, but the way that the strings interactallowing the piece to ebb and flow dynamicallyis an in-the-moment construction that demonstrates, from the get-go, the trumpeter's astute instincts for bringing together a group of players with near-instantaneous chemistry.
The Nature of Connections also demonstrates the significance of context. Eilertsen's "Aceh" has been recorded before, first on his own Radio Yonder (Hubro, 2009) and then with Wolfert Brederode on Post- Scriptum, but here, with string lines moving from the background to full-on blending with Henriksen's tarter tone, and with delicately percussive arco evolving into soaring lines that converge into chordal support for the trumpeter, it's an interpretation few might have expected from this admittedly broad-scoped bassistbut upon hearing this vivid, classically informed version, perhaps not so surprising after all.
Larsen contributes the album's most unabashedly folkloric piece with "Hambopolskavalsen." Introduced with contrapuntal lines from Henryson and Eilertsen's pizzicati, over which Larsen and ?kland layer a theme gradually picked up by Henriksen until, with Kleive softly driving the pulse and Eilertsen switching to deeper, more robust support, everything converges into a passage of such gentle lyricism that it evokes both a feeling of antiquity and utterly timelessness, not to mention images of millennial forests and starker, windswept landscapes. ?kland's "Budbringeren" elicits similar imagery, but with deep, swelling, bowed strings in the lower register contrasting pizzicato in the upper, it's a more epic composition, even though it only lasts just over six minutes.
Henryson's "Seclusive Song" is filled with moments of significant silence, while the more song-like "Keen"its abstruse yet paradoxically singable melody doubled by trumpet and fiddlefeatures a cello solo that is one of the album's most dramatic high points, blending bow-struck strings, pedal tone-bolstered arco, and some unexpectedly bluesy phrasing.
Throughout, what is, perhaps, The Nature of Connections' greatest strength is Henriksen's generosity at sharing the entire 43-minute suite of nine compositions with his musical partners. In many ways a solo album in name only, The Nature of Connections says as much about Henriksen's collaborative nature as it does the strength of purpose and vision he has demonstrated in bringing this superlative collective together. An album that stands out in the trumpeter's discography for many reasons, perhaps the most important one is its fully egalitarian approach to everything from composition to collectively interpreted performance. Surprisingly all-acoustic but, unsurprisingly, entirely beautiful, The Nature of Connections is yet another milestone in the career of an artist who seems capable of nothing less, each and every time. ">
Track Listing
Bl? Veg; Hambopolskavalsen; Budbringeren; Seclusive Song; Hymn; Aceh; Keen; Arco Akropolis; Salm.
Personnel
Arve Henriksen
trumpetArve Henriksen: trumpet, piccolo trumpet, piano; Nils ?kland: violin, Hardanger fiddle, viola d;amore; Svante Henryson: cello; Gjermund Larsen: violin, Hardanger fiddle; Mats Eilertsen: double bass; Audun Kleive: drums.
Album information
Title: Arve Henriksen: The Nature of Connections | Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: Rune Grammofon
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz

Go Ad Free!
To maintain our platform while developing new means to foster jazz discovery and connectivity, we need your help. You can become a sustaining member for as little as $20 and in return, we'll immediately hide those pesky ads plus provide access to future articles for a full year. This winning combination vastly improves your AAJ experience and allow us to vigorously build on the pioneering work we first started in 1995. So enjoy an ad-free AAJ experience and help us remain a positive beacon for jazz by making a donation today.
Oslo
Concert Guide | Venue Guide | Local Businesses
| More...
