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Three Short Trips with Torben Westergaard
By
Torben Westergaard
bass, electricb.1960

Dialogues
Self Produced
2024

Helio Alves
pianob.1966
The quick session keeps a touch of tango running steadily throughout; the pair step slinky lines around each other like a pair of dancers through the snappy noir of "Minor Me," break into actual capering with the sunny "Den F?rste Gang Jeg S? Dig," and then cross the two to make "Ab Ovo" into a sort of charming nocturne. When

Rogerio Boccato
percussionb.1967

Hjerteuglen (The Heart Owl)
Self Produced
2025
Insert other cliche here about never being too old to be childlike. This one follows on from 2019's Kirseb?rsne (Self Produced), an outlier in the Westergaard catalogue that mixed kids' rhymes with a soundtrack perfectly sweet and wholesome. While a sunny streak seems to run through almost all his music, these are spots where it shines with pure innocence. His co-writer this time is another children's-book authorlongtime collaborator Marianne Iben Hansen, whose poetry glides with a rhythm that is easy to follow even if you don't speak a word of Danishand they produce another helping of musical candy bordering on adorable.
Whether or not you understand the fairy-tale stories themselves, Hjerteuglen is an unmistakable shot of whimsy straight from the jaunty opening singalong. "Flyvefisken og Grisen" is even more sugary, spinning a cutesy polka dance with catchy "aah"s and handclaps. Alternating with these is a pair of sedate sambas less bouncy but every bit as sunny, where the fanciful singing floats over piano and trombone, all drifting without a care in the world. The EP ends up feeling like a sort of aural cartoon special, albeit at half the length. It may be best to give this one a miss if your saccharine tolerance is low on a given day, but the spirit is perfectly sincere and there for anyone who can appreciate it.

Calmful Transitions
Self Produced
2024
As simple as the setup istwo players, minimal gimmicksthe point here is to try to make things even simpler. Westergaard's extended pieces here are again shaped by the hectic world, specifically by a research study on school children with their days packed with regimented time slots, and it was composed to create soothing music for the spaces between. He and flautist
Toshiyuki Shibata
fluteWestergaard provides a perfectly organic pulse, floating along in mantric patterns steady enough to half-hypnotize or actually lull a person to sleep. While the bass and Shibata's flute could make a pleasant enough trance on their own, there are enough dashes of tonal variety to keep things far away from static. Subtle loops, light bleeps and simple vocal croons come and go on the fringes, while the players slide into the occasional brief solo and just as gently slide back into the groove. Staying in place does not mean staying motionless, merely ebbing and shifting with deep patience until it feels like sliding out of time completely.
Tracks and Personnel
DialoguesTracks: Higher Minds; Minor Me; Den F?rste Gang Jeg S? Dig; Ab Ovo; Sempre.
Personnel: Helio Alves: piano, Rhodes, Wurlitzer; Torben Westergaard: bass, additional keyboards, voice; Rogério Boccato: percussion (selected tracks).
Hjerteuglen (The Heart Owl)
Tracks: Otte Sm? Fidumseditter (Eight Little Whatchamacallits); Hjerteuglen (The Heart Owl); Flyvefisken og Grisen (The Flying Fish and the Pig); ?nskesedlen (The Wish List).
Personnel: Torben Westergaard: vocal, bass, keyboards, kor;
Ernesto Snajer
guitarMariano Tiki Cantero
percussionSophie Ziedoy
vocalsCalmful Transitions
Tracks: Quiet Music; Calm Music; Quiet Music (radio edit); Calm Music (radio edit).
Personnel: Toshiyuki Shibata: transverse flute, baroque flute; Torben Westergaard: bass, keyboards, voice.
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