Albert Mangelsdorff: Live At Audimax Freiburg, June 22, 1964
Live At Audimax Freiburg, June 22, 1964
CD
CD (Compact Disc)
Herkömmliche CD, die mit allen CD-Playern und Computerlaufwerken, aber auch mit den meisten SACD- oder Multiplayern abspielbar ist.
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- Label: Jazzhaus
- Erscheinungstermin: 30.10.2012
- Serie: Legends Live
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Kaum zu glauben, dass dieses Konzert fast 50 Jahre im Archiv lag markiert es doch den Durchbruch von Albert Mangelsdorff zu Deutschlands einzigem Weltstar des Jazz. Auf Drängen von Joachim-Ernst Berendt, dem Leiter der SWFJazzredaktion, schickt das Goethe-Institut
Mangelsdorff und sein Quintett 1964 auf Tour nach Asien. Niemand hatte mit ausverkauften Konzerten, Medienrummel und großen Ehrungen gerechnet. Zurück und „beswingt“ aus der Begegnung mit asiatischer Volks- und Tanzmusik gastiert das Ensemble in Freiburg mit Avantgarde pur: nervöser rasender Bop, der sich malaiische (Burungkaka), thailändische (Ramwong),
japanische Musik (Sakura Waltz) spielend anverwandelt und an eine Schwelle zum Free Jazz führt.
It is hard to believe this concert lay all but forgotten in the archives for almost 50 years – particularly as it marks the breakthrough of Albert Mangelsdorff as Germany’s one true international jazz star.
At the insistence of Joachim-Ernst Berendt, head of SWF’s jazz department, the Goethe Institut dispatched Mangelsdorff and his quintet on a tour of Asia in 1964. Nobody had reckoned on concert sell-outs, a frenzied media circus and prestigious honours. Back home and swinging from their encounters with Asian folk and dance music, the Quintet guested in Freiburg with a performance of pure avant-garde: a tense, frantic bop, shifting playfully between musical styles from Mali (“Burungkaka”), Thailand (“Ramwong”) and Japan (“Sakura Waltz”) and ultimately reaching the point of entry to free jazz.
For fi ve soloists at the top of their game the formula was a simple one: Heinz Sauer’s tenor is Trane-like in quality (“Pater Panchali”); Günter Kronberg’s alto (“Set ‚em Up”) develops rugged, edgy figures in the style of a young Wayne Shorter; Günter Lenz on bass and Ralf Hübner on drums combine to form a heart-lung machine that provides oxygen for the horns and oceans of space for improvisation. This material later gave rise to Now Jazz Ramwong, the Quintet’s best known recording. It would launch the ensemble to the top of the “downbeat” polls (“Talent Deserving Wider Recognition”). It also assured Albert Mangelsdorff a place in the pantheon of jazz greats.
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It is hard to believe this concert lay all but forgotten in the archives for almost 50 years – particularly as it marks the breakthrough of Albert Mangelsdorff as Germany’s one true international jazz star.
At the insistence of Joachim-Ernst Berendt, head of SWF’s jazz department, the Goethe Institut dispatched Mangelsdorff and his quintet on a tour of Asia in 1964. Nobody had reckoned on concert sell-outs, a frenzied media circus and prestigious honours. Back home and swinging from their encounters with Asian folk and dance music, the Quintet guested in Freiburg with a performance of pure avant-garde: a tense, frantic bop, shifting playfully between musical styles from Mali (“Burungkaka”), Thailand (“Ramwong”) and Japan (“Sakura Waltz”) and ultimately reaching the point of entry to free jazz.
For fi ve soloists at the top of their game the formula was a simple one: Heinz Sauer’s tenor is Trane-like in quality (“Pater Panchali”); Günter Kronberg’s alto (“Set ‚em Up”) develops rugged, edgy figures in the style of a young Wayne Shorter; Günter Lenz on bass and Ralf Hübner on drums combine to form a heart-lung machine that provides oxygen for the horns and oceans of space for improvisation. This material later gave rise to Now Jazz Ramwong, the Quintet’s best known recording. It would launch the ensemble to the top of the “downbeat” polls (“Talent Deserving Wider Recognition”). It also assured Albert Mangelsdorff a place in the pantheon of jazz greats.
- Tracklisting
Disk 1 von 1 (CD)
- 1 Now jazz ramwong
- 2 Set em up
- 3 Raknahs
- 4 Sakura waltz
- 5 Burungkaka
- 6 Tehme from Pather Panchali
- 7 Far out far east
- 8 Okaka
- 9 Es sungen drei Engel