International relevance: ***
Tenorist Bernt Rosengren is one of the major Swedish jazz musicians, and if you're at all into Swedish jazz, you neither should nor could pass him by. He played with so many, both domestically and internationally, from Sevda to Krzysztof Komeda, from Nature to Don Cherry, from later era Eldkvarn to George Russell. Not to mention his great albums as a leader of which ”Notes From Underground” stands out as his major opus. Yes, it is a jazz album, but it's so sprawling and free-spirited, spanning so many expressions that you soon just forget about genres and simply think of it as music delivered with an amazing joy of playing. And just look at the line-up: Maffy Falay, Okay Temiz, Salih Baysal, Gunnar Bergsten, Bengt Berger, Tommy Koverhult, Torbjörn Hultcrantz, Bobo Stenson, Björn Alke, Leif Wennerström, Bertil Strandberg and of course Bernt Rosengren himself. With such a heavy lot you just know that this can't go wrong. And of course it doesn't.
There's the bluesy lyricism of the short version of ”Markitta Blues”, there's the Pharoah Sanders permeated spirituality of ”Iana Has Been Surprised In The Night”, there's the 'free bop' of ”Gerda” and ”Splash”, there's ”Some Changes V” – almost a miniature throwback to Rosengren's participation with G.L. Unit. Not to mention the Turkish portions from the holy trinity of Falay/Temiz/Baysal that breaks through like sudden dreams from another world once on each of the two discs. ”Notes From Underground” is a double album, but never one to feel overstretched and presumptuous – itself an achievement. The whole album is so well composed, so sensitively balanced that it almost surprises you when it's already over.
I sometimes use the word 'monolithic'
and I'm going to use it once again. This album is monolithic.
And once you've got it, don't stop there – go on to 1971's splendid
”Fly Me To The Sun” and the two volumes of ”Live In Stockholm”
recorded in 1974 and 1975 respectively – volume 1 is particularly
powerful. And the continue.
Full album playlist minus first track
"Theme From Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 12" (first track)
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