Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Vossa Jazz Festival at 52, with New Blood
Vossa Jazz Festival at 52, with New Blood

Courtesy Josef Woodard
Vossa Jazz festival is the kickoff event in Norway's formidable jazz festival season, highlighted by newly commissioned works and a dense, Norwegian music-focused schedule . The 2025 edition, the 52nd anniversary year, also earns distinction as the maiden voyage for a new director, Roger Urhaug, who achieved a measure of triumph on the job.
Each year around Easter, the lovely and smallish lakeside city of Voss, Norway springs to musical life for a weekend. Voss is a go-to destination for skiers flocking to the snowy slopes high above the town, and host to an extreme sports festival come summer. But the legendary Vossa Jazz festival, which staged an especially luminous 52nd anniversary edition in April, is a well-known cultural treasureespecially as a showcase for Norwegian jazz and jazz- adjacent artists.
Vossa Jazz also earns specialty points as the kickoff event in Norway's formidable jazz festival season, highlighted by newly commissioned works, a dense schedule and a ceremonial sheepshead dinner in the margins (more on that later). The 2025 edition also earns distinction as the maiden voyage for a new director, Roger Urhaug, who achieved a measure of triumph on the job, in the wake of the long fruitful tenure of Trude Storheim (2008-2023) and a transition year directed by Laila Melkevoll, which also lived up to the festival's considerable legacy.
As a testament to adapting to unexpected pressure in the festival machinery, one of this year's highlights arrived early, and in the form of a late- breaking surprise. The grand opening concert was originally slated as a showcase for veteran Danish-born, Norwegian-based pianist

Nils Petter Molvaer
trumpetb.1960

Thomas Strønen
drumsb.1972
Ståle Storløkken
multi-instrumentalistThe resulting almost-brand-new hybrid band proved something unique, worthy of further exploration. Molvaer, it should be noted, presented his landmark work Khmer as the commissioned work of a Vossa Jazz festivalrecorded for an ECM album which helped launch his international profile and reprised the piece for Vossa Jazz' 50th anniversary two years ago. Here, he relied less on electronic effects than usual and wove beautifully into the ensemble fabric taking off on material by members and also Kannegaard. The performance proved a felicitous mix of moods, of freedom abutting and wrapping around structures, and a general quality of collective energy wave-riding. More, please.
Speaking of ECM connections, this is a festival whose artists have often been featured on the ECM roster, a tendency well-tended in this edition. On the Friday program alone, we heard the melodic, lyrical and spidery charms of guitarist

Jacob Young
guitarb.1970

Mats Eilertsen
bassb.1975
That night, across the street in the 13th century church, the Vangskyrke, the sound of the refined new duet ECM album Our Time, by saxophonist

Trygve Seim
saxophone(On a personal note, the one downside of basking in the Seim/Haltli set was missing the concurrent show by

Eirik Hegdal
saxophone, sopranoHaltli made a quick change and crossed another Voss street to join in a very different ensemble, in scale and focus, as part of the 11-piece

Erlend Apneseth
violinHardingfele and ECM-ishness returned in full force early on Saturday afternoon in the intimate Osasalen performance space of the Ole Bull Academy (specializing in Norwegian folk music), with highly respected fiddler

Nils Okland
violin
Sigbjorn Apeland
keyboards
Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
A double-header highlight on Saturday was the two-pronged focus on the important and restlessly creative British pianist

Kit Downes
keyboardsb.1986

Camila Nebbia
saxophone, tenorLate on Saturday night, Downes returned in the decidedly more formal and controlled format of accompanist/partner with inspired British veteran vocalist

Norma Winstone
vocalsb.1941

Jimmy Rowles
piano1918 - 1996
There were plenty of other treats in the festival line-up, in a dense schedule making us long for the ability to be in two (or three) places at once. Young pianist Sondre Moshagen, with his empathic Lightning Trio, impressed with his technical and conceptual strengths. He's a new Norwegian piano voice worth keeping tabs on. The young but popular Kjetil Mulelide's Agoja band, late on Saturday night, accentuated the leader's melodic designs and flavors, in an all-star band featuring such well-known and loved Norwegian players as lyrical trumpeter

Mathias Eick
trumpetb.1979

Lars Horntveth
keyboardsOne of the surprise treats of the festival arrived on Sunday at noon in the lobby of the Gamlekinoen with the young trio called Himmelfarten sans p.a. and with the audience in the round, encircling Vemund Styve on harmonium (this was a festival which thankfully mostly avoided digital keyboards), guitarist Trygve Tronstad and Martin Borge on tenor guitar and banjo. All sing at times, together and in wandering mode. Their music defies easy description, a blend of ambient qualities, fake folk, gentle absurdism, vague echoes of Pentangle and that British folk scene, and an all-around hypnotic collective sound on tap.
Adjustments is the name of a powerful and unpretentious mainstream piano trio based in Trondheim, a snugly integrated threesome of bassist Svein Folkvord, nimble drummer H?kon Mj?set Johansen and the dazzling pianist

Vigleik Storaas
pianob.1963
In larger ensemble news, the literal first concert featured Room Service, a tentet of gifted young musicians, in shifting genre modes and sometimes with an artful spin reminiscent of Annette Peacock, on vocal spotlight moments featuring Alma Wikstrom. Sunday afternoon brought along the fiery fine " data-original-title="" title="">Bergen Big Banda tradition at the festivalthis year giving tight, resonant form to the diverse charts of boldly talented Australian big band composer-bandleader

Vanessa Perica
composer / conductorb.1982
Each year in Voss, all eyes, ears and hopes are on the unknown commodity known as the Tingingsverk, a large commissioned work by a carefully- selected artist capable of rising to the task. Each piece is unveiled in the prime time Saturday night slot of the festival program. This year's model, saxophonist and eclectic project-maker

Kjetil Møster
saxophone, tenorFor his 75-minute magnum opus, M?ster swerves through elements of hard bop, free jazz, rock-infused energy blasts and lyrical eddies, with touches of Norwegian folk in the mix, courtesy of another hardingfele sighting, courtesy of the fine and flexible player " data-original-title="" title="">Benedicte Maurseth. Also in the diverse ten-piece ensemble was the always impressive trumpeter

Eivind Lønning
trumpetb.1983

Sofia Jernberg
vocals
Gard Nilssen
drumsb.1983
And then it was time for sheep's head. As is the festival tradition, a select group of VIPs, local dignitaries and press stragglers (ahem) join in paying tribute to the Tingingsverk musicians in the ceremonial banquet known as "Smalahove." This Hardanger region and generally Norwegian feast involves the serving of a half sheep's head on a plate, with potatoes, mashed rutabaga, beer and the indigenous caraway-spiced liqueur Aquavit.
Some are squeamish at the prospect of dining on the cheeks, eyeballs and other head-related parts. I always say "bring it on," citing the moral imperative of respecting the killed animal by not letting it go to waste. Deeper down, though, I just enjoy the savory and ceremonial experience. It's part of the ample deposits of in-house Vossa Jazz charm. Said charm, and cultural worth, is fully intact at 52.
Tags
Festivals Talking
Kjetil M?ster
Josef Woodard
Norway
Roger Urhaug
Trude Storheim
Leila Melkevoll
Maria Kannegaard and trio. Her short notice cancellation caused a scramble with a week's notice, and Urhaug put in a call to invite famed trumpeter/spellbinder {{m: Nils Petter Molvaer
Thomas Str?nen
Ole Morten V?gan
St?le Storl?kken
Anja Lauvda
Jacob Young
Mats Eilertsen
Veslemey Narvesen
Trygve Seim
Frode Haltli
Eirik Hegdal
Erlend Apneseth
Nils Okland
Sigbjorn Apeland
H?kon March Stene
Rolf-Erik Nystrom
Rahsan Roland Kirk
Bill Evans
Kit Downes
Camila Nebbia
Loe Bj?rnstad
norma winstone
Jimmy Rowles
Sondre Moshagen
Kjetil Mulelide
Matthias Eick
lars horntveth
Vemund Styve
Trygve Tronstad
Martin Borge
Svein Folkvord
Hakon Mjaset Johansen
Vigleik Storas
Annette Peacock
Alma Wikstrom
Bergen Big Band
Vanessa Perica
Benedicte Maurseth
Eivind L?nning
Sofia Jernberg
Gard Nilssen
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
