Melanoia & Quatuor iXi Red – Music by Luzia von Wyl
Save the Elephants. Down with ivory towers. Dejan Terzic’s Quartet Melanoia has always been a fount of empathy become sound. Four musicians – saxophonist Hayden Chisholm, pianist Achim Kaufmann, guitarist Ronny Graupe and drummer Dejan Terzic – who unfold jazz from the other side. The premise is mutual listening, catching each other, and responding to each other. Against this background solos never sound like solos, but are always part of a spontaneous or calculated composition. The borders of the moment open up, with those of other moments in a chain of unavoidable impulses toward a living process. Making music without vanity: four individual voices which in this context are derived from the togetherness of Us.
Artists
MELANOIA
Hayden Chisholm – saxophone
Ronny Graupe – guitar
Achim Kaufmann – piano
Dejan Terzic – drums, percussion
QUATUOR iXi
Régis Huby – violin
Théo Ceccaldi – violin
Guillaume Roy – viola
Atsushi Sakaï – violoncello
About the album
The recording was produced by Peter Buerli for Radio SRF 2 Kultur
Recorded at Bauer Studios, Ludwigsburg on 1-2, March, 2015
Sound engineer: Johannes Wohlleben
Edited by Martin Ruch
Mixed by Johannes Wohlleben at Bauer Studio
Mastered by Viktor Szabó at BMC Studio, Budapest
Artwork: László Huszár / Greenroom
Produced by László Gőz
Label manager: Tamás Bognár
Supported by Initiative Musik, Swisslos/Kultur Kanton Bern and Kultur Stadt Bern
Reviews
Achim Doppler - Concerto **** (de)
Sven Thielmann - Hifi & Records Magazine (de)
Thierry Giard - CultureJazz (oui) (fr)
Franpi Barriaux - Citizenjazz (élu) (fr)
Franpi Barriaux (Luzia von Wyl interview) - Citizenjazz (fr)
Franck Bergerot - Jazz Magazine (fr)
Jean-Jacques Birgé - Mediapart (fr)
Jan Granlie - Salt Peanuts (no)
Robert Ratajczak - Long Play (pl)
Z.K. Slabý - His Voice (cz)
Peter Dobšinský - skJazz.sk ***** (sk)
Dr. Nagy Sándor - Jazzma.hu (hu)
Turi Gábor - Gramofon **** (hu)
Czékus Mihály - Hangzásvilág Magazin (hu)
Komlós József JR - Alföldi Régió Magazin (hu)
Turi Gábor - Magyar Nemzet (label profile) (hu)
Melanoia & Quatuor iXi: Red – Music by Luzia von Wyl
The album is available in digital form at our retail partners
(find the original German text below)
Of course, all these claims could be made by any other jazz formation, but Melanoia manages not only without empty phrases and slogans but also without the usual jazz reflexes. The result is an extremely gentle music, which is immediately incorporated into the sound mass of the listener’s emotional consciousness. Because bandleader Dejan Terzic allows feelings to come through. It is never about originality, but always rather authenticity. The original, the unique, is derived, as it were, automatically.
Melanoia is a group of storytellers. In contemporary jazz this is an extreme rarity. For their new stories they have been looking for a new public. “For a long time now I’ve had the idea of making music with a string quartet,” says the drummer. “I met the musicians of the Quatuor iXi, and my contact with them became more intense. In Bern I met the young, very talented composer Luzia von Wyl, and I found the idea of working with an external composer interesting. The music she wrote for us was tailor-made. The condition was that it had to leave plenty of space for improvisation. I knew the music of Quatuor iXi, but I didn’t know what had been written, and what was improvised. Then when they began to improvise in the rehearsals, my jaw dropped. I hadn’t heard anything like it before.”
The Quatuor iXi is made up of violinists Régis Huby and Théo Ceccaldi, violist Guillaume Roy and cellist Atsushi Sakaï. The name iXi stands for interpretation through improvisation. The four string players know their way around jazz, and have an utterly direct access not only to improvisation, but also to playing with the nuances, the mood, and the solid state of the moment. While Melanoia provides the colours and surfaces, the Quatuor iXi takes care of the contours and shadings. And yet at no point are these roles rigidly distributed, but here they flow together into a watercolour, where they are turned completely upside down.
The way that the Swiss composer Luzia von Wyl divides the functions of string quartet and jazz quartet attests to a mystical perceptiveness. Alongside her own pieces she has also arranged two of Terzic’s compositions for the production, though the intentions overlap so much that it intuitively becomes a common language. The songs are created with a true knowledge of the strength of each of the individuals, and yet in the music the desire is constantly apparent to take somebody out of their comfort zone and lead them somewhere else. The jazz quartet, who by nature act very gently and emotionally, become a chamber ensemble, and meanwhile the string players, with all their pregnancy, are transmuted into a jazz combo. The result of this creation can be described by the phrase true to life. Nothing happens as we expect it to, and yet the possibility always remains for the ear to find refuge in the familiar.
None of the nine musicians shrinks from clichés, but the treatment and the commitment to interrelated playing with the traditional raise them beyond anything conventional. Both composer and players relish the melodies; they delight in music-making even in quiet passages of unabashed expressivity. “It’s important for me” says Terzic “that improvisation arises from out of a homogeneous context. I myself am a melodist. For me, things mustn’t be too abstract, because then melody often gets a rough deal. My pieces always have a simple melodic character, which for all that is rhythmically complex. Out of this situation I seek space to make improvisation. Until now, that has always worked well. Whether the listener can always tell what is composed and what is improvised is thus of secondary importance. I find improvisation without a compositional foundation less stimulating.”
The integrity of the new Melanoia CD Red, and the contrast between its components and approach is astonishing. In each individual moment there is present the story that wants to be told. Eight musicians and a composer completely in the service of the music. What more could you want?
Wolf Kampmann
Translated by Richard Robinson