Cartography

Arve Henriksen

CD18,90 out of print
2-LP37,90 out of print

A shifting cast of characters, with live sampling man and album co-producer Jan Bang at the centre, provides a series of soundscapes, an ambient-experimental map of moods, for the uniquely liquid, singing trumpet lines of Arve Henriksen to scale and explore. Some tracks are recorded live in concert, others are studio creations. Singer David Sylvian reads his own poetry on two cuts.

Featured Artists Recorded

2005-2007

Original Release Date

07.11.2008

  • 1Poverty And Its Opposite
    (Arve Henriksen, Audun Kleive, Jan Bang)
    05:35
  • 2Before And Afterlife
    (Arve Henriksen, David Sylvian, Jan Bang)
    06:43
  • 3Migration
    (Arve Henriksen, Jan Bang)
    05:41
  • 4From Birth
    (Arve Henriksen, Audun Kleive, Jan Bang)
    02:44
  • 5Ouija
    (Arve Henriksen, Erik Honoré, Jan Bang)
    02:40
  • 6Recording Angel
    (Arve Henriksen, Jan Bang)
    06:23
  • 7Assembly
    (Arve Henriksen, Erik Honoré, Jan Bang)
    03:55
  • 8Loved One
    (Arve Henriksen, Jan Bang)
    04:04
  • 9The Unremarkable Child
    (Arve Henriksen, Jan Bang)
    02:04
  • 10Famine's Ghost: Part One - Part Two
    (Arve Henriksen, Audun Kleive, Erik Honoré, Jan Bang, Ståle Storløkken, William Brooks)
    04:28
  • 11Thermal
    (Arve Henriksen, Audun Kleive, Jan Bang, David Sylvian)
    02:27
  • 12Sorrow And Its Opposite
    (Arve Henriksen, Asbjørn Arntsen, Jan Bang, Eivind Skeie)
    04:29
Die CD enthält vor allem Produkte der Zusammenarbeit des Trompeters Henriksen mit dem Elektroniker Jan Band. Beider musikalische Produktionsweisen passen auf ganz überraschende Weise zueinander. Henriksen nimmt seiner Trompete oft jeglichen metallischen Klang und macht aus ihr ein unspezifisches Blasinstrument, das mal an eine Shakuhatchi erinnern, mal an ein Horn oder eine Oboe, und seine Phrasierung ist keine Jazztrompeter-Phrasierung. Er lässt sich weit hinaus tragen, hält das metrische Fundament elastisch und meist implizit, singt zuweilen auch und klingt mehrdeutig und rätselhaft.
Jan Bang, der elektronische Bearbeiter, setzt keine Eindeutigkeiten daneben, allenfalls Kontraste und kleine, schnelle Einsprengsel, so dass nicht alles in eine Richtung läuft, sondern einen leicht nervösen Untergrund bekommt. So erhält die Musik zu ihrem meditativen Grundton ein Spannungsmoment, die sie mit der Nervosität der Gegenwart verbindet. Die profilierten Beiträge von Gastmusikern lüften manchmal die Decke des weiten Klangdoms und geben der Musik einen anderen Horizont.
Hans-Jürgen Linke, Frankfurter Rundschau
 
Henriksen has always been able to tap the deepest of emotions in the subtlest of ways, creating overarching narratives that go far beyond mere collections of discrete pieces. With reference points ranging from Jon Hassell to Brian Eno’s ambient works and the neo-classical, Henriksen uses sound as much as melody to create a series of tone poems where virtuosity is irrelevant and the vast, resonant potential of texture is paramount.
John Kelman, All About Jazz
 
Electronic experimenters, Jan Bang and Erik Honoré, are perhaps the key collaborators here with other performers and contributors being used as much for their colouration and textural qualities. Music like this seems to suspend time, moving slowly across the landscape with cautious grace. … The tracks that use voices are most effective but then it’s Henriksen’s vocalised trumpet that leaves the dominant impression in one’s mind on this fine album. Excellent.
Duncan Heining, Jazzwise
 
Norwegian trumpeter Arve Henriksen is a brilliant, versatile improviser whose language spans electronica, jazz and contemporary classical, and the best moments on this new album transport the listener to a land beyond borders of country or genre. Long-time cohorts Jan Bang and Erik Honoré contribute synths and samples, creating a subtle, sonorous concerto for trumpet and electronics, while snatches of vocals, including Henriksen’s own, add human warmth to this spacious, transparent music.
John L Walters, The Guardian
 
Trumpeter Henriksen – whose playing invokes the breathy whisper of a Japanese flute – confirms his status as the most compelling improviser on the planet with 12 tracks recorded in Kristiansand. This is edgily ambient mood music conceived on a grand scale, where the gobsmackingly sublime is almost a minimum requirement. … All you can do is gape.
Phil Johnson, Independent on Sunday
 
Henriksen is now one of Norway’s most sought after musicians, not just for his solo appearances but also for his work with Supersilent. And his musical field has widened in recent years through collaborations with ensembles like the London Sinfonietta. … But Henriksen can be assured that he is now recognised for his own very individual approach to music-making and Cartography is an important landmark in his deservedly praised career.
Fiona Talkington, BBC Music Magazine
 
Nach vielen Kollaborationen mit illustren Größen des skandinavischen Jazz und bahnbrechenden Alben … ist Henriksen mit seinen vierzig Jahren heute eine Zentralfigur des Electronica-Jazz, in dessen so emotionalem wie intellektuell kühnen Musizieren sich mustergültig eine feine Synthese aus klangarchivarischem Humanismus, virtuoser Spielkunst und idiosynkratischer Sensibilität materialisiert. … Die Verjazzung der Technik, so lehrt uns Arve Henriksen, ist stets und überall ein weitaus edleres Ansinnen als die Technologisierung des Jazz.
Alessandro Topa, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
 
Reduzierte Formen, komplexe Miniaturen, zurückgenommene Emotionen, virtuoser Umgang mit Elektronik und ein japanischer Einfluss – das sind die Eckpfeiler von Cartography. Beim Hören kommen unweigerlich Assoziationen an Zen. Electronic Zen? Henriksen lädt den Hörer ein zu einer gleichsam spirituellen Reise, die sich in der Ambivalenz von Sinnsuche und postmoderner Wirklichkeit spiegelt. … Das Eindeutige wird in Vieldeutiges verwandelt. Henriksen spielt häufig mit halbgedrückten Ventilen. Er entlockt seinem Instrument höchst ungewöhnliche Klänge und Sounds, macht den Atem hörbar, geht immer wieder in Falsett und spielt verschliffene Vierteltöne, die an die japanische Shakuhachiflöte erinnern.
Herbert Federsel, Jazzpodium
 
Arve Henriksen may play the trumpet, but in reality he is what the late Gil Evans once called Miles Davis – a „sound innovator“. Not only does the Norwegian extract sounds that are quite unlike anything you’ve ever heard from his instrument – one moment a Japanese shakuhachi flute, the next plumbing the depths of Middle Earth with a basso profundo rumble… What makes him special is that he is able to create his own world in which his haunting, often ethereal sounds are put together in what seem like musical postcards from some far-off galaxy.
Stuart Nicholson, The Observer
The uniquely lyrical, liquid and mellifluous sound of Arve Henriksen’s trumpet has had an important supportive role to play on a number of ECM recordings of the last decade. Amongst them – Christian Wallumrød’s “No Birch”, “Sofienberg Variations”, “A Year from Easter” and “The Zoo is Far”, Trygve Seim’s “Different Rivers”, “The Source and Different Cikadas” and “Sangam” , Jon Balke’s “Kyanos”, Sinikka Langeland’s “Starflowers”, Frode Haltli’s “Passing Images”, Arild Andersen’s “Elektra” ... albums which between them represent a very broad range of musical possibilities. In each context, however, Henriksen has proven to be both a highly-distinctive and uncommonly adaptive player. This versatility provides a subtext for the present disc, which pools a shifting cast of creative musicians from diverse genres including jazz, electronica, ambient and classical music and the world of the remix. Singer David Sylvian makes two appearances reading his own texts, Ana Maria Friman sings fragments of William Brooks’s “Anima Mea” and the voices of the Trio Mediaeval emerge, sampled, on “Recording Angel”. Guitarist Eivind Aarset, and drummer Audun Kleive loom out of the mix, and Ståle Storløkken, Arve’s colleague from noise/rock/improv band Supersilent, has a cameo on “Famine’s Ghost”.

“Cartography”, the art of making maps, is an apt title. Recorded in the studio and in concert in Kristiansand, Oslo, Cologne and London it is almost a map of moods, of landscapes and soundscapes for Henriksen to explore. His trumpet floats and hovers over ever-changing territory.

“Over the last few years, “ says Henriksen, “I’ve been trying to find ways of playing that feel right for me and areas of music that interest me enough to keep returning to them. And I’ve been feeling uncomfortable with the idea of ending up playing ‘improvised jazz’. This album is part of a process of going back to go further. For more than twenty years electronics have been part of what I do, and the collaboration with Jan Bang and Erik Honoré has been inspirational. I like very much their way of bringing together acoustic instrument and electronics, their way of building and combining elements, sometimes from different places and times.” He points out that Bang and Honoré draw inspiration from the work of Jon Hassell, who is also a primary influence on Arve’s ‘vocal’ trumpet sound. There is a sense of a cycle of history completing itself - especially with Hassell, Eno and others now contributing to the Punkt festival curated by Bang and Honoré, where ‘live remixing’ is a standard part of the programming. In that sense, “Cartography” belongs to an alternative tradition of music making that includes improvisation and sound-sculpturing, dubs and remixing and awareness of ambience.
It’s also clearly in line with Arve’s own history. The early interest in far eastern sound and the shakuhachi which triggered investigation into new means of tone-production is reflected once more in pieces like “From Birth”. The work methods employed also extend experiments Henriksen and Bang had begun on the album “Chiaraoscuro” issued by Rune Grammofon in 2004.

The association with David Sylvian has been percolating for a few years. Arve has contributed to some of the singer’s work, including his “Nine Horses” project, and Sylvian has utilised samples of Arve’s trumpet in a Japanese art museum installation piece, “When Loud Weather Buffeted Naoshima”. Material from this source was refashioned into “Before and Afterlife, Part 1”: “The first part of this piece is really David’s production: then Jan Bang began adding material.” (As “Cartography”’s associate wordsmith, Sylvian also provided titles for the tracks here).

Several of the pieces began life as improvisations, “but there were many ways of working. There are also layers of composed music... including sketches Jan Bang sent me as computer file back at the beginning of the project.” Being open to contingency was part of the plan; the work, Henriksen figured, should develop organically. “Recording Angel” is one such instance. Bang had been working with arranger Vytas Sondeckis on another project and began to develop it experimentally. Having recently recorded the Trio Mediaeval (the three singers are also part of a new quintet with Henriksen and Bang), he integrated the voices singing the mediaeval song “Oi me lasso” into his mix. “It fit perfectly into this new soundscape,” Henriksen says.

Currently Henriksen, Bang and friends are exploring ways to bring this music to the stage.
“Cartography” was launched with a release concert in Oslo on October 17 2008.

Arve Henriksen studied at the Trondheim Conservatory from 1987-1991, and has worked as a freelance musician since 1989. “Cartography” is his first recording as a leader for ECM.
YEAR DATE VENUE LOCATION
2026 March 19 AMR Genève, Switzerland
2026 March 20 CC De Bogaard- Academiezaal Sint-Truiden, Belgium