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Jan Garbarek, Keith Jarrett and Azimuth light up ECM Luminessence reissues
By
Jan Garbarek
saxophoneb.1947

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945

Afric Pepperbird
(1971) 2024
The backstory... When producer Bob Thiele left Impulse! in 1969 to set up Flying Dutchman, his label notched up some historic firsts, including debut albums from

Horace Tapscott
piano1934 - 1999

Leon Thomas
vocals1937 - 1999

Gil Scott-Heron
vocals1949 - 2011

George Russell
composer / conductor1923 - 2009

Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
It has been suggested that Garbarek's later use of Nordic folk-song material was inspired by Ayler's use of Americana. But in several interviews, Garbarek has said he was given the idea by another US expat,

Don Cherry
trumpet1936 - 1995
If Thiele's reputation is affirmed by the release of Esoteric Circle, so is Manfred Eicher's enhanced by Afric Pepperbird. Recorded almost exactly a year later than Esoteric Circle, in September 1970, it features the same quartet of soon-to-be starsGarbarek on tenor with guitarist

Terje Rypdal
guitarb.1947
Arild Anderson
bass, acoustic
Jon Christensen
drums1943 - 2020

Luminessence
(1975) 2024
There are two sorts of with-strings albums by jazz musicians. The first is of the type recorded by

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Clifford Brown
trumpetb.1930

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959
As time rolled by, and jazz became more sure of itself, a second type of strings-heavy orchestral album emerged, wherein simple backgrounds were replaced by more assertive arrangements. Crucially, these were written by musicians who did not feel compelled to conform to classical conventions. The first was

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Eddie Sauter
composer / conductor1914 - 1981

Alice Coltrane
piano1937 - 2007

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Palle Mikkelborg
trumpetb.1941

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
Keith Jarrett and Jan Garbarek's Luminessence is firmly among this second category of with-strings projects. Garbarek, playing tenor and soprano saxophones, is supported by the strings of the Suedfunk Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mladen Gutesha. Jarrett does not perform on the recording, but the compositions and arrangements are his. Luminessence succeeds because Jarrett and Garbarek's musical sensibilities were at the time so closely aligned: indeed, Jarrett's top lines often sound like improvisations by Garbarek. The music has an intensity equal to that on Focus and covers similar emotional terrain, from melancholic to full-blown passion.

Azimuth
(1977) 2024
Wife and husband team

Norma Winstone
vocalsb.1941

John Taylor
piano1942 - 2015

Kenny Wheeler
flugelhorn1930 - 2014
"John Taylor had just bought a synthesiser and on the night before he went [to meet Manfred Eicher] he came up with a loop and asked me to improvise over it and he recorded it," said Winstone. "When he met Manfred Eicher he played some of the studio recordings we had made and he seemed to like them but when he played him the little recording with synthesiser Manfred said, 'I can hear a flugel with the voice. Let's involve Kenny Wheeler also in the recording.' So really Azimuth was Manfred Eicher's creation.
"We didn't have a name then of course but we recorded the synthesiser piece in the studio and had to find a title for it. Manfred said that it sounded to him like a journey. So when John Taylor went through the Thesaurus looking for words connected with journey / direction, he found the word azimuth. So the synth piece was called 'Azimuth' and that became the name of the group." In the same interview, Winstone said: "It was on listening to the playbacks [of Azimuth] that I realised that I could bear to listen to my voice! I had never liked the sound I made and I think that this was the first time I had been recorded sympathetically and was aware of Kenny Wheeler's influence on my sound."
The album is perhaps the most singular of the three discs in this batch of Luminessence releases, which is a high bar to top. It is, anyway, as important as any of the members' individual early period landmarks, and while the group scaled similar Misty Mountains heights on subsequent releases, they never got higher. Azimuth's closest present-day comparator is the British bassist/singer/composer

Ruth Goller
bassTracks and Personnel
Afric PepperbirdTracks: Scarabee; Mah-Jong; Beast Of Kommodo; Blow Away Zone; MYB; Concentus; Afric Pepperbird; Blupp.
Personnel: Jan Garbarek: tenor saxophone, bass saxophone, clarinet, flutes, percussion; Terje Rypdal: guitar, bugle; Arild Andersen: bass, African thumb piano, xylophone; Jon Christensen: percussion.
Luminessence
Tracks: Numinor; Windsong; Luminessence.
Personnel: Jan Garbarek: tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone; Strings Of Sudfunk Symphony Orchestra.
Azimuth
Tracks: Sirens' Song; O; Azimuth; The Tunnel; Greek Triangle; Jacob.
Personnel: John Taylor: piano, synthesizer; Norma Winstone: voice; Kenny Wheeler: trumpet, flugelhorn.
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