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Pokazywanie postów oznaczonych etykietą Mitan Andrzej. Pokaż wszystkie posty
Pokazywanie postów oznaczonych etykietą Mitan Andrzej. Pokaż wszystkie posty

piątek, 7 lipca 2017

Tadeusz Sudnik - Tadeusz Sudnik & His Friends In Art (2017)

Tadeusz Sudnik

Tadeusz Sudnik - synthi AKS, electronics, computers
Tomasz Stańko - trumpet
Adam Pierończyk - saxophone
Aleksander Korecki - saxophone
Tomasz Duda - saxophone
Janusz Skowron - keyboards
Witold Szczurek - bass guitar
Zbigniew Wegehaupt - double bass

Andrzej Mitan - sound poetry
and others

Tadeusz Sudnik & His Friends In Art 

AUDIO CAVE 001 2017

By Robert Ratajczak

Płyta "Tadeusz Sudnik & His Friends In Art" to zbiór nagrań mistrza instrumentów elektronicznych z lat 1986-2005, dokonanych z udziałem takich znakomitości, jak m.in. Tomasz Stańko, Adam Pierończyk, Witold Szczurek, Janusz Skowron czy Zbigniew Wegehaupt. Tadeusz Sudnik to działający od wielu lat muzyk, kompozytor i realizator dźwięku, założyciel historycznego już Studia Dźwięków Niemożliwych. Artysta przez kilkanaście lat związany był ze Studiem Eksperymentalnym Polskiego Radia, gdzie realizował nagrania dla potrzeb teatru, filmu i baletu oraz współpracował z festiwalem Warszawska Jesień.

Zawartość niniejszej płyty to sięgnięcie do archiwum nagrań muzyka kryjącego w sobie nieocenione muzyczne skarby. Już 10 lat temu nakładem wytwórni Polonia Records w cyklu "The Best Of Polish Smooth Jazz" ukazała się płyta firmowana szyldem Tadeusz Sudnik & His Friends In Art. Tym razem jednak mamy do czynienia z wyborem bardziej wyszukanym i bliższym miłośnikom polskiego jazzu. 

Mimo nagrań pochodzących z różnych sesji realizowanych na przestrzeni blisko 20 lat, album robi wrażenie spójnej i zamkniętej całości. Wszystkie utwory łączy wyjątkowa fantazja i zmysł głównego bohatera płyty, eksponującego brzmienie analogowych syntezatorów, elektronicznych przetworników i efektów natury. Mimo przyprawiających o zawrót głowy nazwisk muzyków, jacy pojawiają się na płycie, jej prawdziwym bohaterem są bity, efekty dźwiękowe i ambientowe brzmienie, za którymi stoi Mistrz Ceremonii, Tadeusz Sudnik.

Generowane przez artystę efekty i rozwiązania, zarówno rytmiczne, jak i harmoniczne, to efekt improwizacji. Sudnik doskonale potrafi trafić z pętlą czy samplami zarówno w przypadku trąbki Tomasza Stańki, saksofonu Adama Pierończyka, czy wreszcie nadać wyjątkowego brzmienia recytacjom Andrzeja Mitana. Zgromadzone nagrania prezentują szeroki wachlarz stylistyczny - od elektroniczno-jazzowych dokonań formacji Stańki Freelectronic, poprzez nasycone rytmem transowe utwory w rodzaju "Canadada", aż do awangardowych rejestracji, jak kończące płytę "Symphonix", "Cats In Space" i zrealizowane w ramach Studia Dźwięków Niemożliwych "7'37".

Wydawnictwo będące rodzajem starannie przygotowanej antologii Tadeusza Sudnika, ukazującej rozmaite etapy jego działalności, stanowi prawdziwą gratkę zarówno dla miłośników muzyki elektronicznej, jak i zwolenników jazzu.

www.longplayrecenzje.blox.pl

czwartek, 5 lutego 2015

Andrzej Mitan/Grzegorz Rogala – Kiedy Umiera Czlowiek/Podniesienie (2013)

Andrzej Mitan/Grzegorz Rogala

Andrzej Mitan - vocals
Andrzej Bieżan - piano
Andrzej Przybielski - trumpet
Helmut Nadolski - bass
and others

Kiedy Umiera Człowiek/Podniesienie


TRZECIA FALA 001

By Adam Baruch

This DVD is another reminder of the fact that Polish Avant-Garde is alive and kicking and from time to time also takes a look back at its fascinating roots. The legendary figure of Andrzej Mitan, which re-appears in the limelight from time to time, mostly completely unexpectedly, is always full of surprises. This time Mitan produces a multi-media project combining music and cinematography (or video-art), resulting in this debut release on a new Polish label called Trzecia Fala, headed by a young Art enthusiast Łukasz Strzelczyk.

Back in the mid-1980s, when Poland was in its most depressing period, both politically and culturally, Polish Avant-Garde was enjoying a renaissance of sorts, taking advantage of the state of confusion that the Socialistic Regime was in due to the eminent collapse of the system already clearly apparent and as a result with a laxer censorship in place. Andrzej Mitan, who always believed in doing things rather than talking about them, released in 1984 a series of very bold musical statements by avant-garde musicians as five independently pressed LPs under the Alma Art moniker, which also presented outrageous and innovative packaging designed by avant-garde artists, including for example a barb-wired LP sleeve. Those five albums have become record collector's Holy Grail due to the fact that only 1000 copies of each album were pressed, reaching today astronomical prices on the collector's market. In 1987 four more albums appeared in a similar effort.

This DVD uses part of the first of these legendary album as the musical layer, combining it with a video-art by Polish experimental artists Grzegorz Rogala, who utilizes a technique called time stretching, which in this case takes a 3 seconds long fragment of video and stretches it to last for about seven minutes, which produces an almost still like picture with barely visible change. The combination of the tension induced by the video and the dramatic musical background produce together a powerful statement, which is also quite unique.

The music, which was recorded during the 1983 Jazz Jamboree in Warsaw (organized shortly after the Martial Law in Poland was lifted and obviously symbolizing an eruption of liberty), is performed by many Polish Avant-Garde legends, like bassist/leader Helmut Nadolski, vocalist Andrzej Mitan, pianist Andrzej Bieżan (who died shortly after the recording), trumpeter Andrzej Przybielski and others, appearing under the moniker of Jubileuszowa Orkiestra Helmuta Nadolskiego.

In retrospect it becomes clearly evident that these nine albums released by Mitan in the 1980s are extremely important documents of Polish Jazz and Polish Avant-Garde and absolutely have to be made available again, the sooner the better. Considering the fact that this DVD was also released as a numbered limited edition of 100 copies, it is by now as impossible to get as those legendary albums.

poniedziałek, 12 września 2011

Janusz Trzcinski - The Book Of Job (1985-2007)

Krzysztof Zgraja (flute and piano)
Andrzej Przybielski (trumpet)
Zbigniew Wegehaupt (bass)
Janusz Trzcinski (drums)
Mieczyslaw Litwinski (sitar)
Milo Kurtis (percussion, Jew’s harp and trombita)
Andrzej Mitan (vocals)
Adam Baruch (narrator hebrew)
Juliusz Berger (narrator hebrew)
Ignacy Machowski (narrator german)
Jerzy Radziwiłowicz (narrator english)
Zdzisław Wardejn (narrator polish)


(Editor) This special recording is as interesting from musical as from historical point of view because its story is reflecting dramatic events in Poland after Solidarity movement became subdued through imposing martial law in 1981. All this in fascinating narration by Adam Baruch (his musique boutique www.jazzis.com):  

The tale of The Book Of Job project originates in 1981, when a group of Polish jazz musicians, actors and other intellectuals decided to stage a production based on one of the most dramatic biblical stories – the story of the sufferings God decided to put on Job to test his faith. To understand the context, one has to remember that at that time Poland was being torn apart by political and social upheaval, led by the “Solidarnosc” movement, in protest against the socialist regime. The political struggle included many strikes and demonstrations, some of which led to violent clashes with the police and people being shot or beaten to death. The biblical story of Job’s suffering seemed to many Poles as an allegory reflecting their situation. 

The project involved a musical suite written especially for the project and performed by top Polish jazz musicians, with fragments of text from the Book of Job being recited by actors. The premiere performance was presented during the 1981 Jazz Jamboree Festival in Warsaw, with further performances scheduled all over Poland. However, on December 13, 1981 the Martial Law was announced in Poland as a last resort to save the regime from crumbling and all art activities were put on hold, with tanks occupying the streets of Warsaw. It seemed that the project was dead after just one performance. The Martial Law was finally lifted in 1983 and it was only a question of time when the Soviet Block was about to disintegrate, but the socialist government stayed in power till the end of the decade. 

In 1985 I received a call from some musician friends in Warsaw, inviting me to come over and co-produce a recording of “The Book Of Job” as well as take part in the expanded multi-lingual version of the project, by reciting the text in Hebrew (in addition to Polish, German and English). As much as I understood the Polish background and circumstances surrounding the project, my interior motives to take part in the project were quite different. I always considered the Book of Job as the closest biblical allegory to the fate of the Jewish People with the Holocaust symbolizing Job’s sufferings and the birth of the State of Israel as the outcome. Therefore realizing this project in Poland, where most of the Holocaust took place seemed more that appropriate to me. I was very excited by the prospect, but the possibility to actually undertake the venture seemed utterly impossible. I left Poland in 1967 and never visited the country since. My Polish citizenship was taken away when I left Poland, and at the time (1985) Poland and Israel had no diplomatic relationships. Poland and all other Socialist countries severed they diplomatic ties with Israel following the 1967 Six Days War, which meant there was no Polish Embassy in Israel, where I could get a Polish visa. In general no Polish visas were issued to Israeli citizens, especially those of Polish origin. My Polish friends started to thread the winding path of Polish bureaucracy and for some strange and completely incomprehensive reasons the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs decided to grant me a visa for a few days, which I had to collect in Germany, something that was completely unheard off at the time. 

Finally in the bitterly cold late autumn (October) of 1985 I made the trip to Warsaw via Frankfurt and stepped on Polish soil for the first time in 18 years. I still remember the face of the Polish border police officer when I presented my Israeli passport at the Warsaw airport. I was of course a total nerve wreck, considering the fact that Poland was still very much a police state at that time, and constantly imagined that I could get arrested under any pretext at any given moment. For a few days I never stopped looking around trying to figure out if I’m being followed. Eventually the nervousness disappeared, mostly due to the warm reception I received from my friends, old and new alike. I flew to Krakow, where the production team and the musicians and actors assembled and we started rehearsing and then recording the music and the recitations. The recordings were done in a well-equipped studio, which was located behind the stage of the “Teatr Stu”. Everything went pretty smoothly and I stayed on for a couple of days to mix the tapes for the final master. After the production was over I went for a few days to visit Silesia, the southern, coal-mining part of Poland were I was born, and later on returned to Warsaw. I couldn’t take the master tapes with me, as these would surely be confiscated as illegal political unauthorized contraband, but I was promised they would be sent to me, as I planned to release them on my own Jazzis label, which I planned to start soon after. The producers also promised to release the album in Poland. 

A few days later I was back home in Israel and although I visited Poland many times later, I never heard about the project again. I lost contact with my Polish co-producers and although the tapes did land in my lap many years later, I left them untouched. Imagine my surprise when upon my recent visit to Poland a friend told me that the album was finally released just a few days before I arrived and even some reviews appeared in Polish papers (mentioning me) on the day I arrived. I was flabbergasted, angry for about 10 seconds (for not being consulted about this) and of course ecstatically happy to see this baby finally being born, after a 22 years long pregnancy. Especially so when I saw that the album was beautifully packaged in book format with splendid historical photographs (mine included, looking much younger of course). So much about the background of this album, and as to the contents, listening to it for the first time in so many years I must admit I’m more than proud to be associated with its creation. The music, performed by a wonderful septet of Polish jazz musicians, including Krzysztof Zgraja – flute and piano, Andrzej Przybielski – trumpet, Zbigniew Wegehaupt – bass, Janusz Trzcinski – drums, Mieczyslaw Litwinski – sitar, Milo Kurtis – percussion, Jew’s harp and trombita and Andrzej Mitan – vocals, resembles in spirit the Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew sessions, with plenty of space for solos performed over spacey / funky rhythmic patterns. The recitations are used as overlays, switching between the various languages, creating a dramatic collage effect over the music. Quite ambitious and far reaching in any respect and considering the fact that it was done 22 years ago, I’d say it was well ahead of its time. I suppose not everybody can enjoy this kind of creation as much as I do, but nevertheless it is a momentous piece of intellectual significance, cutting deeply into the listener’s soul, if listened to carefully and attentively.

Check music from this album:


Author of text: Adam Baruch

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