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Silke Eberhard Trio: Being-A-Ning
BySilke Eberhard
saxophone
Jan Roder
bassKay Lübke
drumsSuch latitude is clear in the way the leader's shapely phrases dissolve into scrawling shrieks or jarring multiphonics, only to rebalance, reconsider and continue on their poised path. In her sometimes abrupt switches from sunshine to squall, she recalls saxophonist

Oliver Lake
saxophoneb.1942

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964
Roder and Lübke, veterans of Eberhard's other groups, embody the unit's inside/outside ethos with assurance. Lübke in particular amplifies the coloristic palette, whether rustling shells under Roder's wiry solo on "Golden Fish" or shifting his attack across different cymbals to signal transitions on the opening track, "What's In Your Bag," a tune that bursts from the gate with a bouncy

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
The program's concisionten cuts in just over 45 minutesadds to its impact. The title number rides a sinuous post-bop line, which veers between sprightly dash and retarded sway, punctuated by crisp drum breaks during the recapitulation. "Sao" frames exchanges of clanking metal, arco bass filigree and vaulting alto, while staggered interlocking parts launch the closing "Rubber Boots," which features Eberhard ramping up to a belligerent squawk. Each piece highlights the threesome's ability to balance precision with abandon, discipline with disruption.
Being-A-Ning confirms the Silke Eberhard Trio as an archetypal contemporary working outfit: one that tips its hat to its forebears while carving out its own niche in ingenious style. ">
Track Listing
What's In Your Bag; Golden Fish; Sao; Hans Im Glück; New Dance; Stranger Bossa; Being-A-Ning; Lake; Die Urwald II; Rubber Boots.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Being-A-Ning | Year Released: 2025 | Record Label: Intakt Records
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