Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Christoph Irniger / Pilgrim: Mt. Tongariro
Christoph Irniger / Pilgrim: Mt. Tongariro
ByFeaturing bassist

Christian Weber
bassOn "Chasing Dreams of Mt. Tongariro," a staggered rhythm creates an unsettling ambiance, gelled by the saxophonist's yearning notes, although the band switches gears on the rather stoic and moody "Dead Man." In other regions of sound and scope, the quartet kicks it up a few notches via flourishing melodies, amid Irniger's brawny extended note forays and soul-stirring thematic incursions, often reinforced by drummer Michael Stulz's punchy grooves.
Mt. Tongariro tenders a poetic string of musical events. Unhurried, climactic in scope, and largely designed with memorable harmonic material, the music often takes on an appearance of a cherished shrine. Yet the differentiator relates to the musicians' openness and subtly articulated movements that surge onward with buoyant ebbs and flows. It all translates into a broadly entertaining forum that seeds the antithesis to more familiar modern-jazz passageways.
Track Listing
The New World; Pathfinder; Chasing Dreams of Mt. Tongariro; Dead Man; Mt. Tongariro; Moving Moment (for Katrin).
Personnel
Christoph Irniger
saxophone, tenorChristoph Irniger: tenor saxophone; Vera Kappeler: piano; Christian Weber: bass; Michael Stulz: drums.
Album information
Title: Mt. Tongariro | Year Released: 2012 | Record Label: Between the Lines
Tags
Comments
About Christoph Irniger
Instrument: Saxophone, tenor
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
