Cantando

Bobo Stenson Trio

The reconfigured Bobo Stenson Trio in a performance of characteristically wide arc. Material this time includes original compositions, group improvising and pieces by Peter Eben, Alban Berg, Ornette Coleman, Don Cherry, and Silvio Rodriguez. Master pianist Stenson, long term bassist Anders Jormin and alertly responsive young drummer Jon Fält have developed a richly detailed sound-world like nothing else in modern jazz – at once an extension of the jazz piano tradition and, with its windows opening onto classical music and world folklore, a force apart from it.

Featured Artists Recorded

December 2007, Auditorio RSI - Radio Svizzera, Lugano

Original Release Date

29.08.2008

  • 1Olivia
    (Silvio Rodríguez)
    06:38
  • 2Song Of Ruth
    (Petr Eben, Traditional)
    06:42
  • 3Wooden Church
    (Anders Jormin)
    07:01
  • 4M
    (Anders Jormin)
    07:59
  • 5Chiquilin de Bachin
    (Astor Piazzolla, Horacio Ferrer)
    08:04
  • 6Pages
    (Anders Jormin, Bobo Stenson, Jon Fält)
    13:40
  • 7Don's Kora Song
    (Don Cherry)
    05:08
  • 8A Fixed Goal
    (Ornette Coleman)
    04:12
  • 9Love, I've Found You
    (Connie Moore, Danny Small)
    03:12
  • 10Liebesode
    (Alban Berg, Traditional)
    08:36
  • 11Song Of Ruth, var.
    (Petr Eben, Traditional)
    06:47


“Cantando”, from the Spanish word for “singing”, is the title of a characteristically far-ranging programme by the resourceful Bobo Stenson Trio. Alongside group improvisation and new compositions (including two tunes by bassist Anders Jormin), the Swedish trio play “Love, I’ve Found You”, a standard which Stenson has loved in both Miles Davis and Wynton Kelly versions, back to back with the 1907 “Liebesode” of Alban Berg. Unexpected juxtapositions belong to this group’s methodology: on the “Serenity” album of 1999, Stenson already performed “Die Nachtigall”, also from Berg’s “Sieben frühe Lieder” cycle.

The trio plays, twice, “Song of Ruth” by Czech composer Petr Eben, who died just a few weeks before this session. A piece originally scored for soprano and organ, it is transformed here. Astor Piazzolla’s intensely expressive tango “Chiqulin de Bachin”, dances at a sultry slow pace. Also from the Latin American corner: the supple “Olivia”, by Cuban songwriter and folk/protest singer Silvio Rodriguez, another Stenson Trio favourite.

The lilting “Don’s Kora Song” is a tune Bobo often played during his long association with the late Don Cherry: “Don had a real affinity for West African music and was strongly inspired by it. When we travelled, there would often be tapes of music from Mali playing in the bus: the sound of that has been in my ears for years.” Cherry also used to tip Stenson off to rarer Ornette Coleman tunes, but the uncommon “A Fixed Goal” reached the pianist by another route. It is one of the pieces Ornette played during his latter day association with Joachim Kuhn, relayed to Bobo by French bassist Jean-Paul Celea. No other pianist plays Coleman like Bobo does, however, with the darting horn-like figures in the right hand, and an exultant feeling of freedom in the melodies. “Well, the beauty of Ornette is that the goals are really not so fixed! The fact that his pieces are very rarely chordally-based gives you this wonderful sense of openness, the feeling you can take the music anywhere.”

“Pages”, fourteen minutes of spontaneously composed material, is actually four separate group improvisations. Selected by Manfred Eicher from seven free pieces the group played in the studio, they eloquently demonstrate how form may be found in the moment. The whole sequence makes astute use of space: this is free chamber music. “Space is important,” Bobo Stenson told JazzTimes, “to create an atmosphere is important, to keep a whole thing around it,” journalist Tom Conrad maintained that, “in terms of atmosphere few pianists ‘keep a whole thing around it’ like Stenson. In all tempos, in all keys, in all musical situations, his notes hang in the air like what Wordsworth called ‘thoughts too deep for tears’.”

“I have always been interested in classical music and folk music,” Stenson told All About Jazz L.A. “You like a melody, and you play it. You have to be open to what happens around you.” And of course, you have to choose your material carefully, and respect it. If Stenson has long integrated his knowledge of the genres – jazz, classical, folk and more - into a coherent and unified style, critical awareness of his achievement continues to grow steadily. In 2006 he won the European Jazz Prize as Musician of the Year. The “Reflections” album won both a Swedish Grammy and the Golden Record Award of Orkester Journalen, and “Serenity” and “Goodbye” were albums of the month in publications around the world.

“Cantando” was recorded in December 2007 at the Auditorium Radio Svizzera Italiana, Lugano, a recital space increasingly valued as an ECM recording location. (Other albums recorded there in recent seasons include “The Third Man” by Enrico Rava/Stefano Bollani, “Le Voyage de Sahar” by Anouar Brahem, “Vignettes” by Marilyn Crispell, and “Nostalghia” by François Couturier.)