Home » Jazz Articles » Multiple Reviews » Sven-?ke Johansson's Blue For A Moment
Sven-?ke Johansson's Blue For A Moment
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Blue for a Moment
NI VU NI CONNU
2017
In conjunction with the film of the same name, the LP boxset Blue for a Moment was prepared as a limited release (250 signed copies) of Swedish musician

Sven-Åke Johansson
drumsb.1943

Alexander von Schlippenbach
pianob.1938

Axel Dorner
trumpetb.1964
Born in Sweden 1943 Johansson, like

Peter Brötzmann
woodwinds1941 - 2023
Hans Reichel
b.1949
Peter Kowald
bass, acoustic1944 - 2002
There has been a kind of rediscovery of Johansson lately. Now living in Berlin, he can be heard on the trio recordings by Neuk?llner Modelle with

Bertrand Denzler
saxophone
Joel Grip
bass, acousticBengt Nordstrom
saxophone
Bobo Stenson
pianob.1944

Ken Vandermark
saxophoneb.1964

Otomo Yoshihide
guitarThe Trio's free improvisations, heard here on two LPs, were recorded in 2013. This is a rejoinder to their efforts from the 1990s that produced Barcelona Series (Hatology, 2001) and Gro?e Gartenbauausstellung (Olof Bright, 2012). What has changed, maybe better stated, ripened, in this more recent recording, is less hesitation between the players. As with any minimalist improvisation, less is (quite often) more. Certainly, but what happens when three humans occupy that Mies van der Rohe construction for a lengthy period? Souvenirs are kept and maybe a familiarity between players allows for one performer to finish another's thought. What is evident here is that the three musicians are quite comfortable making sounds together. Each extends the limitations of their instrument with trumpet growls, percussive snarls, and the twang of strings and metal. If the purpose here is musique mécanique, then the result is a glorious failure. The sounds (I didn't say music) are continually compelling.

Fallstudien
After a thorough search through the AllAboutJazz.com library a request to Mr. Google, I cannot find where these three musicians have performed as a trio before this recording. Johansson recorded
The instrumentation, percussion/harp/percussion, yields something one might mistake for laptop and percussion excursion. That said, each player is expanding the possibilities of their instruments. The 18-minute "For Harp And Percussion" can sound as if a jet engine is being fired or a storm has blown apart a sheet metal factory. The players are fond of juxtaposing the machine noise with the near silence of still chimes. Of the three pieces heard here, this track shows the most range.
Davies' solo piece "For Harp, Black Beans, Rice, Red Lentils And Gunpowder Tea" (as pictured on the LP) plays with the sound made when the above mentioned items are applied to his harp. He can make it sound like a Japanese koto or a summer's rain storm. It is easy to imagine these are the sounds heard inside an hourglass. The shortest piece, "For Percussion," bangs and roils a swirling turbulence of scrapes and pulled/bowed strings. If sound can also be visual, this definitely is.

Das Marschorchester
As the classic Monty Python series proclaimed, "and now for something completely different." Indeed. Sven-?ke Johansson assembles a fourteen-piece band to cover classic marches, and does so without a hint of irony. Except, of course, they don't actually march. Nonetheless, listening to these twelve classic pieces makes you want to walk in a military manner with a regular measured tread, i.e. march (minus the military implications, of course).
Beyond the obvious smile material, there's history here. New Orleans musicians created jass from these marches some 125 years ago. As long as the second line parade was performing a march and they had you moving, why not also make you shake your ass. Johansson applies the shake, the shiver, and plenty of shudder to these marches. It is probably the closest he comes to the philosophy of his brethren

Han Bennink
drumsb.1942
The music is joyous and triumphant in the naive manner marches were intended. Johansson and his cast, we have Rüdiger Carl on clarinet and Alexander von Schlippenbach trading his piano for trumpet, wiggle a few wink and nod mawkish notes on the edges to let us know they are beating their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruninghooks.

Frost
If you seek the ineffable, then maybe free improvisation is your thing. If not, you may perceive it, and its instant creation, to be without meter and rhythm. Those two elements either define you as an adventurist or a listener who requires some structure. In other words, you want your surprises to be a bit predictable. Frost by Liz Allbee, Annette Krebs, and Sven-?ke Johansson is that beyond description performance. One that finds fascinating rhythm in its (un)pulse. Or maybe better stated, in its new-pulse.
Johansson, American-born Berlin resident trumperer Liz Allbee, and German guitarist Annette Krebs create the musical equivalent of James Joyce's Ulysses. By that I mean, everything happens here on one day -one recording session, yet the experience is immense. Although, Krebs and Johansson released the duo Peashot (Olof Bright, 2011), this appears to be the first occasion the three have worked together. As Berliners, these musicians certainly travel the same circuit and are quite comfortable performing together here.
In the hands of Allbee, the trumpet is a wind machine or a train whistle. She can turn an acoustic instrument into a machine. Likewise, Krebs' electronics and guitar often appear as a ghostly chimera, haunting the ticks, rubs, and sandpaper sounds of Johansson. Our hero often attempts to jettison rhythm here, but it leaks out of the crevices of his performance.

Ein Abend in P?seldorf
The historical document in this LP boxset is Ein Abend in P?seldorf (An evening in P?seldorf). Recorded in March 1978, this previously unreleased session follows the now out-of-print LP Kung Bore (FMP, 1978), as well as the subsequent and now long out-of-print FMP titles Live At The Quartier Latin (1976), Drive (1981), Kalfaktor A. Falke Und Andere Lieder (1983), and Blind Aber HungrigNorddeutsche Ges?nge (1986). The significance here is that we can grasp the development of both musicians and their concepts.
The pair had made a connection in Paris 1964, and collaborated as a duo beginning in 1974. Besides their duo sessions, they can be heard on Peter Br?tzmann's 1979 Up And Down The Lion (Olof Bright, 2012) and also on the small wonder of a boxset Night And Day Plays Them All (Edition Artelier Graz, 2003) playing 156 standards with bassist Jay Oliver and saxophonist Rüdiger Carl.
The three tracks totaling 35 minutes evidence Schlippenbach and Johansson registering, then discarding, the music of

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Sunny Murray
drums1937 - 2017

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Hudson Songs
Alone at a piano, Sven-?ke Johansson is all-at-once, a poet, a tone generator, a percussionist, and an encrypting vocoder. His performance here from 2007 proffers his stories spoken/sung in English. That last point is important; his presentation is not in his native language, nor his adopted tongue of German, but in a more conscious (for him) language. What we hear is a clear pronunciation of the words, often nonsense or found poetry. Johansson's delivery causes the listener to alternately focus between sound and meaning. Here meaning can be both literal and aural.
The closest comparison here is the music of

Alessandro Bosetti
composer / conductor
Lind
Any retrospective of Sven-?ke Johansson's music requires a solo performance. Lind, recorded in 2010, some 38 years after his self-produced free jazz solo recording Schlingerland (Atavistic/Unheard Music Series, 2000), doesn't so much revisit Schlingerland as it directs a micro view on his previous macro work.
These fifteen, all very brief, snapshots of Johansson display his arsenal of technique. He can swing as he has on his reinventions of jazz standards or, as he does here, coax extraordinary sounds from his very simple kit. He plays with pitch on "Lindgren," scraping drumstick across cymbals in a most delicate manner. Then there's the tortured anguish of "Lindholm," performed as sort of an exorcism of sound. In between, we get the hippest swing on "Lindsj?," mastered with brushes and bass drum, a succession of nonpareil drum rolls on "Lindrot," and a meditative cymbal symphony "Lindman." As an artist, he works in a painterly manner focusing on color and texture rather than time. This must be attributed to his contributions to the minimalist improvisation movement of Berlin in the 1990s. It might be easier to revel in the roar of early free jazz, but Johansson succeeds in going deeper with an often quieter, insightful approach.
Tracks and Personnel
Berolina Suite
Tracks: LP1: NO 92; O 94; NW 87; S 84; LP2: W 80; S 59; SW 61; SO 36; NO 55.
Personnel: Andrea Neumann: inside piano, electronics; Axel D?rner: trumpet; Sven-?ke Johansson: percussion.
Fallstudien
Tracks: For Harp And Percussion; For Harp, Black Beans, Rice, Red Lentils And Gunpowder Tea (solo performance by Rhodri Davies); For Percussion.
Personnel: Burkhard Beins: percussion; Rhodri Davies: harp; Sven-?ke Johansson: percussion.
Das Marschorchester
Tracks: Finnl?ndischer Reitermarsch; Der J?ger aus Kurpfalz; Washington Post March; Thunder and Blazes; Easter Monday on the White House Lane; Venezia March; The Corcoran Cadets March; The High School Cadets; The Gladiator March; Treue Knappen; Hands across the Sea; Florentiner March.
Personnel: Erik Drescher: flutes; Rüdiger Carl: clarinet; Theo Nabicht: clarinet; Florian Bergmann: clarinet; Liz Allbee: trumpet; Richard Koch: trumpet; Christian Magnusson: trumpet; Alexander von Schlippenbach: trumpet; Alistair Duncan: bass trumpet; Hilary Jeffery: trombone; Martin Klingeberg: baritone horn; Pauline Boeykens: tuba; Hannes Lingens: bass drum; Sven-?ke Johansson: snare drum.
Frost
Tracks: Nachts; Im Nebel; In Der Ferne; Im Winter; In Holunderbüschen; Aus Einem Spalt; In Einem Hinterhof.
Personnel: Liz Allbee: trumpet, seashell; Annette Krebs: e-guitar, electronics; Sven-?ke Johansson: percussion.
Ein Abend in P?seldorf
Tracks: Opfsteinpflaster (Muster); Schnelle Boote Auf Der Alster; ... Abends Geht Man Gern An Die Luft.
Personnel: Alexander von Schlippenbach: piano; Sven-?ke Johansson: accordion, voice, drums.
Hudson Songs
Tracks: Fun And Games; Ajax; Flat Is The Head Of The Louse; The Transmission(ary) Society's Belt; The Fox Lets Go; The Ant-Eater's Visit.
Personnel: Sven-?ke Johansson: voice, piano.
Lind
Tracks: Lindgren; Lindblom; Lindquist; Lindstr?m; Lindrot; Lindblad; Lindberg; Lindman; Linddahl: Lindmark; Lindskog; Lind?; Lindfors; Llindsj?; Lindholm.
Personnel: Sven-?ke Johansson: percussion.
Tags
Multiple Reviews
Mark Corroto
Germany
Berlin
Sven-Ake Johansson
Alexander von Schlippenbach
Axel Dorner
Peter Brotzmann
Hans Reichel
Peter Kowald
Bertrand Denzler
Joel Grip
Bengt Nordstrom
Bobo Stenson
Per Henrik Wallin
otomo yoshihide
Han Bennink
Cecil Taylor
Sunny Murray
Thelonious Monk
Alessandro Bosetti
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