Misha Alperin - North Story (1997)

  • 02 Apr, 10:10
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Artist:
Title: North Story
Year Of Release: 1997
Label: ECM
Genre: Contemporary Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 01:00:01
Total Size: 244 Mb / 154 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Morning 6:39
2. Psalm No.1 7:33
3. Ironical Evening 8:02
4. Alone 4:42
5. Afternoon 9:19
6. Psalm No.2 6:58
7. North Story 5:26
8. Etude 6:31
9. Kristi-Blodsdråper (Fucsia) 4:35

Personnel:
Misha Alperin, piano
Arkady Shilkloper, French horn, flugelhorn
Tore Brunborg, tenor saxophone
Terje Gewelt, double-bass
Jon Christensen, drums

Simultaneously drawing on his folk roots and paying homage to European jazz music’s openness to cross-cultural dialogue, Ukraine-born pianist and composer Misha Alperin gives us North Story, his paean to the selfsame region where fermented the vivid contributions already so well documented on ECM. Classically trained brass player Arkady Shilkloper, who became acquainted after hearing snatches of Alperin at practice from an open apartment window, joins the group on French horn and flugelhorn. Saxophonist Tore Brunborg, bassist Terje Gewelt, and drummer Jon Christensen round out the quintet. And what a quintet it is, for it is quite clear that this set of eight originals positively glistens under the breath, feet, and fingers of master craftsmen. That being said, the rewards require patience and an invested heart. Alperin’s painterly ways move as if in slow motion, taking in details and finding even more within them. Everything in the light of “Morning” takes shape by contrast, so that what may seem at first sluggish blossoms in hindsight of Alperin’s delicate fortitude. Shilkloper follows similarly delicate arcs in the two-part “Psalm” and “Ironical Evening,” each a prize of organic denouement so fine that it passes through fishermen’s nets unnoticed. The title track gives us a deeper version of the same, Christensen building his tracings into full-blown sketches as Brunborg’s erases in swaths of negative space. “Alone” finds Alperin just so in a lulling piano solo, providing reprieve from fitful slumber on the way to “Etude,” a lovely duet with Shilkloper that sounds like a lost track from Wave Of Sorrow. Its skittering lines and virtuosic doubling concretize the storytelling. This leaves only an arrangement of “Kristi Blodsdråper (Fucsia)” by Norwegian composer Harald Sæverud (1897-1992). It is a fitting epilogue to an album of ever-growing detail, which like the whole becomes a mirror as we back away from it, sounds blending into an all-encompassing hush of existence.