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Espen Berg Trio: Free To Play
By
Erroll Garner
piano1921 - 1977

Ahmad Jamal
piano1930 - 2023

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945

Brad Mehldau
pianob.1970

Esbjorn Svensson
piano1964 - 2008

Svein Finnerud
piano1945 - 2000
Since Finnerud's masterpiece, there have been a handful of other Norwegian piano-trio discs of similar stature. 2019 sees another. Step forward the

Espen Berg
pianob.1983
From the trippy high-end keyboard and percussion tones which light up the first moments of opening track "Monolitt," one's instincts suggest that Free To Play is going to be specialand those instincts are right. "Monolitt" is wholly improvised. It came about by chance, on an impulse, before the session proper had started. Berg, heard elsewhere on piano, plays celesta. Bassist

When Berg began taking piano lessons, aged 16, his teacher steered him straight into free improvisation. "I got the young

Helge Lien
pianoInspired by Lien, Berg began studying other jazz pianists. "I loved Helge and

Christian Wallumrod
pianob.1971
Berg has recorded in the full spectrum of lineups, from solo to the Trondheim Jazzorkester with

Marius Neset
saxophoneb.1985
In its entirety, Berg's style is evolutionary rather than revolutionary, a mix of learnt playing and composing traditions and his own venturesome imagination. His use of through composition employing linked but more or less discrete sections, for example, is in the lineage of

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
As Berg acknowledges, his style also evokes romantic and impressionist classical music. But the connection is coincidental rather than considered. "People often think I'm deeply into the classics," he says. "And I have played some pieces by Ravel and Chopin. But not much more than that. My musical memory retains what I play, so the few classical pieces I have played have become a part of my playing and suggest a broader influence than is really the case."
Ultimately, Berg's music is beyond category. As Ellington said, there are two kinds of music: great music and not great music. Berg's is great music. But he is happy enough with the label jazz. "I've grown accustomed to it, though I never think that I have to write 'jazz' for this trio or for any band that I'm playing in," he says. "I just write what I feel is nice at the moment. I'm on an endless journey without frontiers, searching for new moods, new chord combinations and heartfelt melodies."
With Free To Play, Berg's journey has reached previously uncharted territory. The album is certain to make the best-of-year lists of many who hear it. It deserves to make the greatest-ever lists, too.
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 Chris May.
Free to Play can be purchased here.
Contact Chris May at All About Jazz.
Chris May is a senior editor of All About Jazz. He was previously the editor of the pioneering magazine Black Music & Jazz Review, and more recently editor of the style / culture / history magazine Jocks & Nerds.
Track Listing
Monolitt; Skrivarneset; Kestrel; Camillas Sang; Gossipel; Episk-Aggressiv Syndrom; ‘Oumuamua; Meanwhile in Armenia; Furuberget
Personnel
Album information
Title: Free to Play | Year Released: 2019 | Record Label: Odin Records
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