Tomasz Dąbrowski - trumpet
Sven Dam Meinild - baritone saxophone
Simon Krebs - guitar
Kasper Tom Christiansen - drums
When I Come Across
AUDIO CAVE 2019/009
By Adam Baruch
This is the second album by Polish Jazz trumpeter/composer Tomasz Dąbrowski and his Danish quartet FREE4ARTS, which also includes baritone saxophonist Sven Dam Meinild, drummer Kasper Tom Christiansen and this time guitarist Simon Krebs, who replaced pianist Jacob Anderskov that played on the debut album. The album presents seven original compositions, all by Dąbrowski.
In many respects this album
continues the direction set by the debut, which moves completely into
Avant-Garde Jazz, far away from traditional, melody based Jazz, flirting also
with contemporary Chamber Music explorations. The music offers some melodic
motifs but those often get hidden to a less experienced listener by the group
improvisations. Without the presence of bass and now also the piano, there is
almost no conventional harmony and rhythmic continuity, which leaves it to the
listener to connect the dots. The sharp sound of the guitar is initially
somewhat weird and takes time to get used to within the otherwise acoustic environment.
The music is mostly very
subdued and delicate, low profile and quietly streaming, with long passages
that involve solos, duets and trios and rarely the entire quartet. It seems
Dąbrowski is trying to re-define the known parameters of Jazz and Improvised Music,
stretching the existing limits of these idioms. He uses the trumpet to produce
a plethora of unusual sound effects that often do not resemble the conventional
sound of the instrument. The same can be said about Christiansen, who again
proves to be one of the most creative European Jazz drummers, moving on a
completely unique acoustic parallax, again re-defining the role of drums in
contemporary music. Unexpectedly, it is the guitar which turns out to be the
most conventional factor of this music, playing at times long melodic strings
of notes.
In many respects this is the
boldest and most adventurous project Dąbrowski headed in the decade-long period
of his artistic development. It is completely uncompromising and boldly
unconventional, against all odds. Hopefully the music, despite its estranged
exterior, will find sympathetic, open-minded audience in time. Avant-Garde was
never a rewarding and smooth career choice and Dąbrowski and his cohorts deserve
our respect for pushing the boundaries time and again.
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