Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Reto Anneler: Stille Post
Reto Anneler: Stille Post
ByReto Anneler
saxophoneb.1977

Lukas Traxel
bassThe horns invoke the ghosts of

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Don Cherry
trumpet1936 - 1995

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Paul Desmond
saxophone, alto1924 - 1977
He does venture upwards. Moving into freer, screeching territory for a thrilling moment on "1&3 Neineineinein" and punching a hole in the heavens on "Befreiungsschlag." Traxel and Strüby stay out of the horns' way. As on "Befreiungsschlag," where Traxel plays a sole, low note beneath the smoky saxophones while Strüby punctuates the beat with sharp smacks on the snare, instead of intruding upon it with fills. As if he were stabbing exclamation points onto a page.
Stille Post is refined and unabashed. It is not ashamed to emote, but does so in an articulate and clear voice. At its wildest the record rushes like whitewater, or bubbles like boiling mercury. As it does on the three tracks titled after the album"Stille Post 1," "Stille Post 4," and "Stille Post 3." When they descend into weirdness.
Many lesser players would cram this record's space with ideas and hope that some are good. But Reto Anneler's Stille Post are an inspired quartet. So even when they do open the floodgates, their ideas are all excellent. Supposedly,

Chet Baker
trumpet and vocals1929 - 1988
Track Listing
Cuche; Etwas Kuerzer; Nurnshgel; 1&3 Neineineinein; Stille Post 1; Wurzelbehandlung; Stille Post 4; Befreiungschlagg; Stille Post 3; Erziehungsraetsel.
Personnel
Reto Anneler
saxophoneReto Anneler: saxophone; Christoph Grab: saxophone; Lukas Traxel: bass; Claudio Strüby: drums.
Album information
Title: Stille Post | Year Released: 2018 | Record Label: QFTF
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
