Tõnu Kaljuste Conductor
Tõnu Kaljuste Conductor
While Nik Bärtsch's 2006 ECM debut, Stoa, was a powerful first shot across the international bow, garnering a place on many journalists' "Best of" lists for the year, the Swiss pianist had, in fact, been honing his self-proclaimed "Zen Funk" since the beginning of the decade, starting with the equally descriptive Ritual Groove Music (Ronin Rhythm Records, 2001). Holon capitalizes on the success and innovation of Stoa, again featuring his Ronin quintet, proving the value of ongoing musical partnerships, especially when creating music that's paradoxically as rarified and visceral as Bärtsch's.
Plenty has been written about the undeniable influence of minimalism on Bärtsch's writing; so, too, the potent grooves that make his music unfold hypnotically; filled with minute detail that captures the attention while being so trance-inducing that it's equally easy to get lost in the music, only to find it come and gone, seemingly in an instant. With returning clarinetist/saxophonist Sha, bassist Björn Meyer, drummer Kaspar Rast and percussionist Andi Pupato—players who, in some cases date right back to Ritual Groove Music and have worked with Bärtsch for at least the past five years—the overall textures remain the same. Still, Holon finds Sha bringing back his alto saxophone, last heard on Aer (Ronin Rhythm Records, 2004), while Bärtsch stays strictly with acoustic piano, though that does nothing to reduce the sonic breadth as he explores not only the full range of the keyboard, but inside the box as well.
Delineated improvisation is still largely avoided, but equally it remains a component of Bärtsch's music, subsumed in much the same way as Norwegian saxophonist Trygve Seim's work on the outstanding Sangam (ECM, 2005), although that's about the only comparison that can be drawn between these two very different composers, other than their remarkable sophistication at such relatively young ages. Instead, Bäs quintet move, as the leader himself describes, like "a school of fish moving across a coral reef with lightning speed." The rhythmic and contrapuntal complexity of Bärtsch's "Moduls," a uniform, numbered way of titling his compositions that avoids creating any kind of preconception about the music, belies the way in which the music ebbs and flows in a purely natural and uncannily organic fashion.
Repetition may be a fundamental part of the music, but not in the coldly mathematical fashion of some early minimalism. Instead, there's a direct emotional resonance, as the group winds its way through the largely ethereal "Modul 42," where drums and percussion drop out at the three-minute mark for a delicate piano/clarinet/bass trio, and the longer, more potent "Modul 41_17," where Bärtsch meshes new music with existing repertoire from Live (Ronin Rhythm Records, 2003), and places Meyer in an uncharacteristically forward role before the entire band kicks in with its fiery pulse.
With Holon, Bärtsch and Ronin continue to hone an unmistakable music. Cerebral in conception it may be, but this is music that remains almost Jungian in its near-archetypal physicality.
Sha - Bass Clarinet, Contrabass Clarinet
Kaspar Rast - Drums
Andi Pupato - Percussion
Release date: 15.02.2008
ECM 2049
1
MODUL 42(Nik Bärtsch)
06:27
2
MODUL 41_17(Nik Bärtsch)
14:51
3
MODUL 39_8(Nik Bärtsch)
07:59
4
MODUL 46(Nik Bärtsch)
07:16
5
MODUL 45(Nik Bärtsch)
09:41
6
MODUL 44(Nik Bärtsch)
09:23