Advanced search
Artist
2024 0-9 z y x w v u t s r q p o n m l k j i h g f e d c b a

Martin Sasse - Longing '2023

24bit
Longing
ArtistMartin Sasse Related artists
Album name Longing
Country
Date 2023
GenreJazz
Play time 58 min
Format / Bitrate 24 BIT FLAC Stereo 1566 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
Media CD
Size 651.95 Mb
Price$5.95
Add to cart

Play List

 
  • Quality
  • Hi-Res 24-bit | upto 44.1 kHz
Hi-Res 24-bit | upto 44.1 kHz
1. For more beautiful, for greater things." Sehnsucht is called "Longing" in English, and "Longing" is the title of pianist 's new album, which he recorded with bassist Martin Gjakonovski and drummer Joost van Schaik
2. At last there is another trio album by , in that concentrated, intimate formation that makes so many melodic and rhythmic expressions, variations, moods, atmospheres and emotions possible. And exploits them all, profoundly, elegantly and with an incredible lightness, as if it were not the slightest effort to make all the wonderful sounds, melodies and harmonies swing, sing, pearl and dance so lightly as a feather
3. For more than 25 years Martins Sasse's trio has existed in changing formations, the first trio album was released in 2000 under the programmatic title "Here We Come". Since then, the trio has not disappeared from Sasse's creative work: In the current line-up of , Martin Gjakonovski and Joost van Schaik, it has been playing together for quite some time now. Clearly one feels and hears: Something has grown together here in the most beautiful way, so close, so trusting, so friendly is the musical approach. Nothing at all sounds like saturated routine, on the contrary: Everything grooves and swings so freshly, as if the musicians had just discovered their own "longing"!
4. What "Longing" demonstrates no less impressively: is not only an outstanding, internationally acclaimed musician, but an equally extraordinary composer. As a fabulatory sound-novelist, he tells his memorable stories and embellishes them with melodic and improvisational finesses. Eight original compositions characterize Sasse's trio album, complemented by the standards "How Little We Know" and "Lover Man". Longing" is not yet a concept album, but it follows its own inner logic: Each piece has its dramaturgically cleverly chosen place, none could have unfolded more convincingly in another place. While each piece tells its own story, the chronological order establishes a larger, no less fascinating arc of tension. Thus, "Longing" with all its rhythms, melodies and harmonies is worth experiencing just in its entirety!
5. What chemical forces flow from lover to lover!"
6. Indeed: the chemistry flows as powerfully as it does delicately, and there is much to discover on the album. "Groovy Waltz," for example, juggles rhythmic and melodic overlays, occasionally faltering with a wink, only to present Sasse's brilliant, blues- and soul-saturated improvisation all the more palatable. This is taken over by Martin Gjakonovski with an elegant solo, which Sasse in turn underlines with subtly dabbed interjections - just as intelligently as he accentuates Joost van Schaik's fine drum solo shortly thereafter. And there is a method to it: Every now and then, Sasse's piano shapes rhythmically driving parts and uses them to make the soloistic thoughts of his fellow players shine. Joost van Schaik and Martin Gjakonovski thank him with a soulfully punctuated rhythm over which Sasse's thoughtful, improvisationally richly varied melodies literally float
7. About the double bass: listen carefully to Martin Gjakonovski's solo contributions on this album. His singing, swinging, indulgent passages set striking highlights and yet are always embedded in the overall dramaturgy of the album, which includes several exciting dialogues between Sasse and Gjakonovski. The piece "Longing" ennobles Gjakonovski introductory and introductory with a wonderful, second melody, which lets Sasse's main theme really shine. The title track, which comes along elegantly with a lot of bossa charm, is one of the highlights of the album, which is certainly not lacking in highlights
8. Another gem is without a doubt the ballad "Green and Blue", Sasse's atmospheric-romantic answer to "Blue in Green" by Miles Davis. Strategically placed, probably not by accident, between the concise straight-ahead bangers "The Soul of Jazz" and "Swing, Swing, Swing," "Green and Blue" once again changes the album's sense of space and time from the ground up. The beguiling theme, drenched in deep melancholy, could have been borrowed from an atmospheric film noir from 1940s Hollywood, so that one feels as if one is strolling through a rain-drenched big city night with the melody as well as the improvisational excursions of bass and piano. Raymond Chandler's disillusioned private detective Philip Marlowe greets us from afar, roaming the urban silence with his coat collar turned up, only to get stranded in a tiny bar: "I poured myself so much until my drink was a drink," it says in the novel "The High Window"
9. for more beautiful, for greater things."
10. – Piano
11. Martin Gjakonovski – Bass
12. Joost van Schaik – Drums
13. Tracklist:
14. 1.01 - - How Little We Know
15. 1.02 - - Groovy Waltz
16. 1.03 - - Longing
17. 1.04 - - Never to Return
18. 1.05 - - The Soul of Jazz
19. 1.06 - - Green and Blue
20. 1.07 - - Swing, Swing, Swing
21. 1.08 - - Bennetts Blues
22. 1.09 - - Lover Man
23. 1.10 - - With You

Archive content

Related artists

Start radio

Martin Sasse


Album