Krzysztof Komeda - piano
Tomasz Stańko - trumpet
Zbigniew Namysłowski - saxophone
Roman Dyląg - bass
Janusz Kozłowski - bass
Rune Carlsson - drums
Krzysztof Komeda W Polskim Radiu Vol.06 – Muzyka Filmowa Oraz Jazz I Poezja
POLSKIE RADIO 1938
By Adam Baruch
This is the sixth installment in a new series of albums launched by the Polish Radio, which presents radio recordings by the Godfather of Polish Jazz, pianist/composer/bandleader Krzysztof Komeda. Komeda is of course the most familiar name associated with Polish Jazz and his legacy is of crucial importance to Polish and European Jazz. Considering the fact that Komeda's studio recordings are relatively scarce, the radio recordings are in fact the main source of his recorded legacy, as they include among others the Jazz Jamboree festival appearances by Komeda and his various ensembles over the years.
The first part of the music
included here originates in the Polish Radio recording session from 1967, which
presents the Komeda Quintet with trumpeter Tomasz Stańko, saxophonist Zbigniew
Namysłowski, bassist Roman Dyląg and Swedish drummer Rune Carlsson. The quintet
performs four original Komeda compositions. The second part was recorded live
during the 1965 Jazz Jamboree Festival and features the Komeda Quartet with
Stańko, bassist Janusz Kozłowski and Carlsson. The quartet performs two
original Komeda compositions. Three of the quintet tracks can be associated
with the Polish Jazz & Poetry movement, the last quintet track and the
first quartet track are both examples of cinematic music Komeda created for movie
soundtracks and the last bonus track is a live performance of Komeda's most
famous tune "Astigmatic", which gave the title to his groundbreaking
debut album.
The Komeda Quintet present on
this album recorded an entire album in the Jazz & Poetry idiom, which was
produced by the legendary Joachim Berendt. That album called "Meine Süsse Europäische Heimat" was released in West Germany and became in time one
of the most iconic Jazz & Poetry recordings in Polish and European Jazz.
All of the music on this album is of course some of the most prophetic and
revolutionary European Jazz ever recorded, and as such deserves to be a part of
every decent music library on this planet.
The recordings are splendidly
restored and remastered and nicely packaged in an elegant digipak/slipcase.
Dates, places and lineups are faithfully included and even personal liner notes
by Polish Jazz critic Roch Siciński are present, but there is no in-depth
background material about Komeda and his music, however considering the
plentitude of published material and several excellent books on the subject, an
intelligent listener can easily bridge the knowledge gap. The only small
reservation one might have is the fact that these recordings have been already
released many times, more or less legally on the somewhat untamed Polish music
market, which means they is already owned by the serious Polish Jazz
collectors, probably more than once.
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