Natalia Kordiak - voice
Przemysław Chmiel - tenor & soprano saxophones
Mateusz Kołakowski - piano, rhodes
Alan Wykpisz - bass
Grzegorz Pałka - drums
Bajka
HEVHETIA 0194
By Adam Baruch
This is the debut album by Polish Jazz vocalist Natalia Kordiak recorded in a quintet setting with saxophonist Przemysław Chmiel, pianist Mateusz Kołakowski, bassist Alan Wykpisz and drummer Grzegorz Pałka. The album presents seven original compositions, all by Kordiak, two of which feature lyrics (one by Polish poetess/playwright Maria Pawlikowska-Jasnorzewska and the other by Kordiak) and the rest feature wordless vocalese. The album was recorded at the RecPublica Studios and engineered by Michal Wasyl, and offers a superb sound quality.
A couple of weeks ago I had the
opportunity to hear Kordiak sing live in Katowice as a member of the First Was
The Voice vocal ensemble conducted and directed by my friend the fabulous Anna
Gadt, which should have prepared me for what I was about to hear on this album,
but now I have to admit that probably nothing could have really prepared
anybody for what this album offers. This is simply the Polish Jazz vocal album
I have been dreaming about for the last half a Century, since Urszula Dudziak
appeared on the Polish Jazz scene and revolutionized the approach to vocal Jazz
not only in Poland but worldwide.
Kordiak treats her voice as an
instrument and her vocalese explorations are simply unbounded by any previously
set limitations, conventions or boundaries. Her singing is completely intuitive
and her sense of melody is so open and free that the music becomes completely
boundless and unconventional. Each of the tunes offers a melodic theme, but the
vocal and instrumental improvisations move freely beyond the sketched horizons
into the unknown and unexpected, which happens extremely rarely and immediately
pushes this music into the "high sphere" of Jazz aesthetics.
The instrumentalists do a magnificent
job on this album, with the most important task always before their eyes: do
not disturb the vocals. Each of these players is able to play exquisitely as a
soloist but this album sets a textbook example of respect and supportive role
by the instrumentalists, who are clearly heard within the delicate fabric of
the music, but never overshadow the vocal parts even for one moment. The rhythm
section of Wykpisz and Palka, which is certainly phenomenal on its own, offers
here a magnificent assistance to the vocals, often just in a trio settings.
Kołakowski, who deserves a much wider recognition that he enjoys in Poland at the
moment, is a key element which makes this music what it is, playing absolutely
stunningly and beautifully free, which is amazing considering his Classical
Music upbringing and education. Chmiel, also relatively anonymous, offers some
stunning saxophone parts, which immediately put him alongside the most
respected names on the Polish scene. In short this is a true dream team and
Kordiak was extremely fortunate to record this album with these magnificent
musicians at her side.
Polish vocal Jazz has been
struggling in the last decades to produce anything as artistically and
aesthetically valuable as the output it managed to offer time after time in
modern instrumental European Jazz, which won it an international acclaim. Sadly
Polish vocal Jazz got stuck mostly in imitating rather that inventing, with the
ever present obsession of singing English lyrics, more often than not with
appalling results. Therefore, although obviously hardly politically correct,
the most accurate compliment I can think of under these circumstances is to say
that Kordiak emerged here as someone with truly "big-balls", setting
everything aside and doing her own thing. I am not surprised that Kordiak comes
from under the wings of the above mentioned Anna Gadt, who is a true
revolutionary Artist and obviously also and Educator.
Considering the fact that
Kordiak is still a student, God only knows what she is capable of in the future
and I can’t wait to find out. And yes, now I know what my best Polish Jazz
album for 2019 will be on my list. ;) Thank you for a true fairytale
my Dear!