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Samo Salamon & The Slovene Philharmonic String Chamber Orchestra: Free Strings: Orchestrology
ByCharlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Art Pepper
saxophone, alto1925 - 1982
Some might say that part of the attraction of the use of strings is the credibility it brings from classical music, but it could be argued that classical music needs jazz just as much as jazz needs classical music. The sometimes dusty conservatism of classical music is faced with new challenges when meeting the language of improvisation that is jazz. The merging of the two worlds is the chance to create a whole new sound, a Third Stream as the composer

Gunther Schuller
composer / conductor1925 - 2015
However, there have always been jazz musicians who have tried to expand the use of strings beyond the safe and conventional. For instance, trombonist

Nils Wogram
trombone
Samo Salamon
guitar, electricb.1978
What Wogram and Salamon share is a non-hierarchical approach to the strings. They play on equal terms with the other musicians. As Salamon says in a movie about the project: "Usually the strings function as background to the soloists. In Free Strings I tried to use my own compositions, which have extremely complex rhythm and harmonies. The orchestra is not there as a mere backdrop, but it performs all rhythmical patterns and harmonies and is an equal partner in a fascinating sound picture."
The record is indeed fascinating and the orchestra in question is the adapt Slovene Philharmonic String Chamber Orchestra. Together with Salamon, the orchestra embraces a wide variety of moods, ranging from the pastoral beauty of opener "Hebe" to the explosive "Miss Sarcasm," with Salamon's vitriolic outburst on guitar.
While Salamon isn't afraid to show his teeth end employ distortion, it is the gentle side of the music that lingers. The album's greatest revelation is how it emphasizes Salamon's ability to write melodies whose intricate motifs blossom in the string setting. An old composition like "Kei's Secret" gains new layers of emotional complexity while "Rhapsody," a fresh composition written only for strings, shows his ability to think in polyphonic patterns that are united like threads in a finely woven carpet.
Another important player is drummer

Roberto Dani
drumsTrack Listing
Hebe; Seagulls in Maine; Three Stories; Dutilleux; White Herons on Green Meadows; Miss Sarcasm; Rhapsody; Moonless; Number of Circles; Fall Memories; Mea Culpa; Kei's Secret; Devil's Darling.
Personnel
Samo Salamon
guitar, electricSamo Salamon: guitar; Roberto Dani: drums; Janez Podlesek: solo violin; Vera Belic: first violin; Monika Ivancev: first violin; Matic Anzej: first violin; Oliver Dizdarevic Skrabar: second violin; Ziga Cerar: second violin; Rado Steharnik: second violin; Bojan Erjavec: second violin; Maja Rome: viola; Maja Babnik Ravnikar: viola; Tomaz Malej: viola; Igor Skerjanec: cello; Klemen Hvala: cello; Petar Brcarevic: double bass.
Album information
Title: Free Strings: Orchestrology | Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: Kgosf
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