Arcanum

Arve Henriksen, Trygve Seim, Anders Jormin, Markku Ounaskari


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The Scandinavian project Arcanum brings together four artists all well-known to followers of directions in music at ECM: Arve Henriksen, Trygve Seim, Anders Jormin and Markku Ounaskari.  They’ve played together in many permutations over the years, but this is their first album as a quartet.  Compositions by Anders Jormin and Trygve Seim, the Finnish traditional “Armon Lapset” (Children of Mercy), and Jormin’s arrangement of Ornette Coleman’s “What Reason Could I Give” are slotted into a programme of graceful collective improvisations distinguished by lyrical imagination, reflective soloing and sensitive group interaction. Arcanum, recorded at Village Recording Studio, Copenhagen, and mixed in Munich in January 2025, was produced by Manfred Eicher.
 
Das skandinavische Projekt Arcanum bringt vier Künstler zusammen, die eine langjährige Zusammenarbeit mit ECM verbindet: Arve Henriksen, Trygve Seim, Anders Jormin und Markku Ounaskari.  Sie haben im Laufe der Jahre in verschiedenen Kontexten zusammengespielt, aber dies ist ihr erstes Album als Quartett.  Kompositionen von Anders Jormin und Trygve Seim, das finnische Lied „Armon Lapset“ und Jormins Arrangement von Ornette Colemans „What Reason Could I Give“ sind in ein Programm anmutiger kollektiver Improvisationen eingebettet, die sich durch große lyrische Fantasie, nachdenkliche Soli und einfühlsames Zusammenspiel auszeichnen. Arcanum, im Village Recording Studio, Kopenhagen aufgenommen und im Januar 2025 in München gemischt, wurde von Manfred Eicher produziert.
 
Featured Artists Recorded

March 2023, The Village Recording, Copenhagen

Original Release Date

02.05.2025

  • 1Nokitpyrt
    (Trygve Seim)
    02:57
  • 2Blib A
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    01:31
  • 3Armon Lapset 
    (Traditional)
    03:47
  • 4Folkesong
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    04:06
  • 5Trofast
    (Trygve Seim)
    04:41
  • 6Lost in Vanløse 
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    05:16
  • 7Old Dreams
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    03:48
  • 8Koto
    (Anders Jormin)
    05:08
  • 9Polvere Uno
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    03:37
  • 10Pharao
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    04:32
  • 11Morning Meditation
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    01:41
  • 12Elegy
    (Anders Jormin)
    04:14
  • 13What Reason Could I Give
    (Ornette Coleman)
    01:35
  • 14La Fontaine
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    02:47
  • 15Shadow Trail
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    02:46
  • 16Fata Morgana
    (Anders Jormin, Arve Henriksen, Markku Ounaskari, Trygve Seim)
    02:28
The Scandinavian project Arcanum brings together four artists all well-known to followers of music at ECM: Arve Henriksen, Trygve Seim, Anders Jormin and Markku Ounaskari.  They’ve played together in many permutations over the years, but this is their first album as a quartet.  Already hailed as a “Nordic supergroup” in some quarters, the designation hardly conveys the thoughtful, reflective quality of the improvising and the sensitivity of the interaction here, whether playing music composed in real time or taking a written theme to new places.
 
Ounaksari, Jormin and Seim were all working with folksinger and kantele player Sinikka Langeland when the idea of a new band was first raised: “We’d often play as a trio during soundchecks, which was always very enjoyable, so I proposed booking a couple of concerts in Finland….”, Markku recalls.  Trygve felt Arve Henriksen also had to be in the line-up, a suggestion easily agreed to.  All four of the musicians had played together on Langeland’s Starflowers album in 2006 and on her later recordings including The Land That Is Not and The Magical Forest, and the Seim/Henriksen association stretched back still further, with Arve already a significant presence on Trygve’s ECM debut Different Rivers, recorded in 1998 and 1999. From the earliest days it was evident that there was something special in the way that Seim and Henriksen were able to bend and intertwine their sounds on saxophone and trumpet.
 
What, then, are the roots of Arcanum’s approach to music-making? Tryge Seim’s opening composition “Nokitpyrt” offers one clue.  Anders Jormin calls it “a respectful bow to Scandinavian role models.” Read the song title backwards and you get close to Triptykon, Jan Garbarek’s seminal 1972 recording with Arild Andersen and Edward Vesala, which opened new perspectives for free balladry and found a spiritual affinity between post-Ayler improvising and Norwegian traditional music. The Arcanum quartet are similarly looking, through the prism of jazz creativity, at a broader scope of music and meaning.
 
This is evidenced in, for instance, their interpretation of the Finnish traditional tune “Armon Lapset”. Arve Henriksen: “This western Læstadian hymn was widely used in North Troms, Norway in the past. It helped to keep the Kven language alive, as a part of the Tornedal dialect and Finnish church language from the 1860s. We used this psalm as a starting point for a very free interpretation, quite far away from the original habitat.”
 
Anders Jormin’s tune “Koto” was composed in 1999 as part of a commission for Swedish Radio originally featuring Arve Henriksen and guitarist Marc Ducret, among others. Jormin’s fascination for Japanese traditional music was later intensified through his work with koto player Karin Nakagawa on albums including Trees of Light and Pasado en claro.
 
Jormin wrote “Elegy” with Arve, Trygve and Markku in mind “on the first day of the war in Ukraine”. It leads into a brief account of “What Reason Could I Give”, which Anders describes as “my favourite of Ornette Coleman’s many expressive and iconic pieces”. The beautiful ballad was included on Dona Nostra, Don Cherry’s final album – and the first ECM album on which Jormin appeared – in 1993, where it was played as a duet by Cherry and Bobo Stenson.
 
Collectively improvised pieces on Arcanum reveal an uncommon feeling for form.  Exploration here is always highly focused, the musicians keeping things concise and to the point.
 
The band takes its musical concept to the road this autumn with concerts including Krokus Jazz Festival, Poland (October 23), Jazz In Bess, Lugano, Switzerland (November 27), Paradox, Tilburg, Netherlands (November 28), Bimhuis, Amsterdam, Netherlands, (November 29), LantarenVenster, Rotterdam, Netherlands (November 30).
 
Recorded at Village Recording Studio, Copenhagen, and mixed in Munich in January 2025, the album was produced by Manfred Eicher.
YEAR DATE VENUE LOCATION
2025 April 28 Kemptener Jazzfrühling Kempten, Germany
2025 August 15 Jazz Festival Oslo, Norway
2025 October 23 Krokus Jazz Festival Jelenia Góra, Poland
2025 November 27 Jazz In. Bess Lugano, Switzerland
2025 November 28 Paradox Tilburg, Netherlands
2025 November 29 Bimhuis Amsterdam, Netherlands
2025 November 30 Lantaren/Venster Rotterdam, Netherlands