Wednesday, 29 April 2015

Jazzahead! 2015, April 23rd - April 26th


My first time in Jazzahead coincided with the exhibition's tenth year. Started with just a fair where mostly European jazz professionals were meeting each other in 2005, Jazzahead has become a 4 day jazz medley of conferences, showcases and exhibitions in these last 10 years. Although European dominance is still obvious, as far as I can see it's on its way to become more global. 

To start with, Jazzahead 2015 was between 23rd and 26th of April - from Thursday to Sunday as always. The location has always been Messe Bremen but the place allocated in Messe for Jazzahead has been changed this year and it is moved into a bigger hall. The fair area was full of booths for exhibitors who are mostly representing a label, a booking agency, a musician or a country. Besides, there were many attendees who have no booths but are reprensenting themselves using many public areas supplied to them by the organisation. For the showcases of 30 minutes short concerts, which were taking places in first three days starting at approximately between 2 pm and 3 pm and going on till midnight, two dedicated areas in the Halle 7 were turned into a concert hall with the names Halle 7.1 and Halle 7.2. Besides, Kulturzentrum Schlachthof, which is the nearest building to the hall, was used as the third performance area of showcases. The bands for showcases are chosen among many applicants with a jury composed of many experienced jazz people all around Europe. Jazzahead Clubnight is a concept existing since 2011 and it is held on Saturday nights with many concerts in several places all around Bremen with a single ticket or the full pass. The first day of Jazzahead starts at 3 pm while the others start at 10 am. Each year there is a partner country for whom a day, a big stand and an individual concert in Die Glocke, Bremen is dedicated. It was France this year and Switzerland was announced as the one for 2016 on the last day of the fair.



Considering the location, the best place to stay seemed to be Maritime Hotel on the map which is said to be linked to the exhibition hall by a dedicated aisle (this is said to be changed this year). In my opinion the hotel B&B Bremen -which I also stayed in- is a very optimum choice considering also it's not-so-expensive prices. Since, Messe is closely located to main train station, it is also feasible to use many other hotels which are near to this taking even late night and rainy day walks into consideration. If seeing city center or joining the Die Glocke concert are among what are planned, we can say that Messe's jazzahead side to the station takes 5 minute walk whereas it takes 10 more minutes to reach city center. If a direct transfer with heavy luggage from airport to the hall is needed, it takes almost 15 Euros with the taxi. The weather seems to be fine throughout the exhibition except some rain and this can only be a problem while you are travelling for Jazzahead Clubnight or walking back and forth on the 100 metres between Kulturzentrum Schlachthof and Messe. 

My first day was mostly about trade fair and meetings and I started by taking my badge from the first entrance which includes many informative sheets as well as my card and wristlet. I was registered as a freelance journalist. As a reminder, carry the card and the wristlet all the time with you and be careful about the card, because the mechanism was a loose one which can make you collect it from the ground many times. Besides, since the wristlet can be an all days one make sure that it is not so much tightened in order to let you live with it for four days. There is an additional wristlet you have to wear on Saturday for Jazzahead Clubnight. For the Die Glocke concert buy your ticket in advance -at least on the first morning- and do not buy it from the far back seats in the gallery where the place is almost completely merged underneath the balcony. The acoustic is still nice enough in here but it feels like you are watching the concert from an LCD screen. 

Being an inexperienced attendee in my first musically professional environment, although I have contacted to many of my friends in advance to meet there, I did not make any plan based on strict times. So, frankly, I lived some problems for that reason while meeting people. It is strongly recommended you stick to a well prepared plan including all showcases, places for clubnight and meeting hours/spots. 

There was a restaurant in Messe as well as a wine & cheese bar and a sandwich cafe. Besides, mostly booths were supplying nice aperitifs and wonderful wine (mostly thanks to France this year) that helps you to get what you lost while walking around and spend your whole day only with a small breakfast and a light dinner. 

The first day's showcases were presented within the title French Night. Among the ones I could join, Vincent Peirani & Emilie Parisien concert in Halle 7.2 at 8 pm (an energetic saxophone and accordeon duo) and Sylvain Rifflet Alphabet Quartet in Halle 7.1 at around 9 pm (the flute player Joce Mienniel was the highlight) were special ones and I could catch some performances of Orchestre National de Jazz which was impressive too. Theo Ceccaldi Trio, Donkey Monkey and the Supersonic project of Thomas De Pourquery were unique projects and they sounded very differently giving some clues to us for the next generation's jazz music.

The second day was including German Jazz Expo as well as Overseas Night and Julia Kadel Trio (Halle 7.1 3.30 pm) was my choice as the best. Having been playing together for a long time this promising trio sounds really amazing even in their debut album. Thanks to the nice compositions, structures and a very qualified drummer they will surely be very successful in future. Andromeda Mega Express Orchestra (Kulturzentrum Schlachthof 3 pm) was another highlight with their complex structured orchestral compositions and interesting band leader who is responsible for their interesting compositions. Sebastian Studnitzky's new project Memento in Kulturzentrum Schlachthof at around 4 pm was also impressive especially with catchy melodies and string orchestra accompaniment to Sebastian's piano and trumpet. When it was 8 pm we were at Die Glocke for two successive concerts: Vincent Peirani's Living Being Quintet and Richard Gallliano feat. Sylvain Luc. The dialogues between Peirani and Parisien in the first concert were really worth listening and the performance was appreciated a lot, as easily can be seen from the long autograph signing queue. Richard Galliano's heavenly tone created an amazing atmosphere in Die Glocke merging with Sylvain Luc's unique guitar sound. When I was back at Kulturzentrum Schlachthof there was an almost full house Ed Motta, the Brazilian soul singer. 

The third day was consisted of European Jazz Meeting and Jazzahead Clubnight. There were amazing performances again starting from a really strong Estonian trio, Peedu Kass Momentum. Led by the bass player the band was awesome mostly for the talented jazz pianist Kristjan Randalu. The clubnight started in Haus im Park for me. There was Makiko Hiyabayashi Trio at 5 pm and it was possible to listen to amazing Marilyn Mazur on percussion and drums. Haus im Park was some 10 km away from Messe and listeners could use a bus travel of about 20 minutes to reach there. Even if I found the signs on the street for "jazzahead" a little bit invisible and I roamed around, I was really impressed with the nice acoustic and amazing performance of the musicians. It was my first time for Marilyn Mazur and it was worth leaving all the other stuff in the fair hall.

When it was time for ECM night in the historical place Sendesaal Bremen, I was still trying to find the hall in the lonely, green and wet streets of the city. Even I passed by the hall in advance, I could not see it since there was no sign of jazzahead and in the end I could reach the door only 15 minutes after the performance started. Sendesaal rules did not let me in for the first performance of Jakob Bro, Thomas Morgan and Jon Christensen and I could not accept the situation. There was a queue of people there but I was the Turkish guy and could find the alternative way for sure to see at least two performances. Jakob Bro's new project from ECM was amazingly soft and touchy and Thomas Morgan on bass was a wonderful match for the sound. There is no need to say that Jon Christensen was like playing the drums behind some holy curtains between heaven and earth. Mathias Eick Quintet seemed to change the style in the new album Midwest a lot. The violin has softened the sound and the compositions were much more melodic compared to previous ones. Even I found it a little bit lacking in improvisation, the overall performance was really impressive. Giovanni Guidi Trio's new yellow covered ECM album - which is rare in the label - seems to be also different in the pianist's style. The structures of the pieces were toggling between fully improvisational difficult ones and easily followed catchy melodies based ones. The day ended with Andy Sheppard Quartet which includes Eivind Aarset on guitar and honestly most of the listeners were wondering about this guitarist, who has very high reputation in last years. The performance was enchanting but the problem was that three full time concerts of ECM sound -no I'm not trying to say anything- made the fourth one almost a sleeping session for the listeners, who were passionately there for the musicians. Same place, less air each minute even there were breaks... It could have been three concerts at most. 

Exhausted at around 2 am also because of the taxi crisis in front of Sendesaal, I could barely found myself at bed missing many jam sessions and other stuff about which I heard a lot on Sunday morning: Søren Bebe in Courtyard by Marriott Hotel at 8.30 pm, ADHD in Halle 7.2 at 10 pm, Louis Sclavis in Halle 7.2 at 10.30 pm, Omer Klein Trio in Hall 7.2 at 4.30 pm, Atom String Quartet in Kulturzentrum Schlachthof at 3.30 pm... These are all I missed and added to the to-be-seen list. (You can see many jazzahead showcases from arte tv website: http://concert.arte.tv/fr/jazzahead)

The fourth day was almost empty with some French breakfast (as it was mentioned in the programme but unfortunately I coud not join) and some farewell speeches as well as next year's partner country announcement. 

Jazzahead is surely a jazz exhibiton and a jazz network meeting more than a traditional European jazz festival but with just some improvements it can easily include one for new sounds. For instance, considering also that the Halle 7.1 and Halle 7.2 were almost never full for any concerts, the space can be used to create a three hall which are sonically isolated from each other so that parallel concerts can be held in order to present much more bands to jazz professionals. Since the weather is not so bad at the end of Aprils some places in the parking area can easily be used as an outdoor stage where people can also hang out. This way also the entrance of a public exhibition can be seen much more attractive than what it is now (just a yellow jazzahead flag). Besides, with the almost empty schedule, Sunday can be removed from the programme letting exhibitors and attendees to save a day in their schedule.

Some further improvements can start with adding shuttles for jazzclub nights from Messe at least for the distant ones. Besides, instead of distributing this much musicians around the city, the capacity of the Halle 7 can be used more efficiently as I mentioned above. Even though Sendesaal and Haus Im Park are amazing places, scheduling comparisingly famous jazz musicians all together to these distant areas may result in less attendance to the other places' performances. By the way, as far as I have heard, the Jazzahead Clubnight bookings are made by musicians or managers themselves and jazzahead is not involved with it.

Jazzahead became very beneficial and entertaining for me since it let me see many labels, musicians, booking agencies and distributors all together some of which I have been following for years and decide on what I can do professionally in the jazz business. The most important outcomes for me are the new musicians and albums I learned during these four days and they inspired me to write more and more reviews. I will also try to promote many of them in my own country. Jazz is some kind of a special music genre whose boundaries are updated with each passing day and new trial. So being up to date is important whatever you are doing for it. You can compose, play, review, book, manage, release or listen. You are free to do anything with it but in order to contribute to what you make, you have to be passionate about it as well. Hardworking, following, staying updated are necessary but not sufficient conditions. Wherever I go, whatever I do, jazz will be there staying as my passion. Whenever she calls me I'll be there with my ears, heart and brain.

Saturday, 28 March 2015

Magnus Öström Interview Before His Ankara Concert on November 2014


We could create a little time with Magnus Öström to make an interview just before his band's unforgettable Ankara Concert in last November in Nordic Music Festival. The drummer was on the same stage that he played on 9 years ago with Esbjörn Svensson Trio and he was so excited to be there again at that night.

Fatih: Hi Magnus, welcome to Ankara.

Magnus: Thank you.

Fatih: I think the first time was in 2005 with Esbjörn Svensson Trio with an amazing concert. For most of the jazz listeners here, it was certainly a memorable concert. After Esbjörn's passing away you have recorded two albums with your quartet. We all can guess that life is changed a lot for you and (Berglund) after Esbjörn but here I want to ask you this: What has changed in your musical style? Can you compare E.S.T. albums with Thread of Life and Searching for Jupiter considering musical styles and the sound?

Magnus: I was one third of the trio. I think I still brought my sound and my playing to my own band. So that part of the trio is still with me. I think you can hear some connections with the trio and my music but though, it's much more electrified and maybe more in jazz-rock or something. The trio was more -maybe- jazz and it was more acoustic as well. 

Fatih: What is new and different in Searching for Jupiter compared to the first album?

Magnus: One thing is the keyboard player. Gustaf Karlof was a little bit more into the keyboards and synthesizers and he worked in those kind of things. Daniel Karlsson is more focused on the piano, more of a real piano player. Of course he plays a little bit other stuff but his focus and playing are more jazzy. I think that changed the whole sound a bit. The compositions... I don't know if it's changed.

Fatih: More hopeful maybe?

Magnus: Yeah, a little bit lighter.

Fatih: As time passes...

Magnus: think so. Maybe that's the difference.

Fatih: Besides your own band, you are playing in different projects and some albums: E.S.T. Symphony is one of these. You have given many concerts in 2013 and 2014. How did it feel like going back to the compositions with the symphonic arrangements?

Magnus: First it was of course strange. The thought of playing that music again was a little bit... I don't know - it was a mixed feeling. But how the music has been interpreted for the symphony orchestra and how Hans Ek has arranged the music... I think he has done a fantastic job with it. This is one of the only ways to let this music live on. Becasue it is very hard to play this music ever in a trio setting. It will be many years I think (to do this). Ok it's already many years, but it's still too close. I think it's a beautiful way...

Fatih: Maybe -in other words- this is the best way to keep on playing E.S.T. 

Magnus: Yeah, I think so. Especially for the moment... But, there is also many positive thoughts coming up when you play this music. You played it so much before and you remember all the good things. You are already very thankful for the travel with the trio but it is even more when you revisit them. It's been amazing to do it.

Fatih: Will you continue giving other E.S.T. Symphony concerts in future?

Magnus: Yes.

Fatih: Will any of these concerts be recorded for the album?

Magnus: We'll see. We have been discussing it but we haven't really found the right setting and the right solution yet.

Fatih: Can we say that any previous concerts will not be recorded for the album - which means you are waiting for a future concert to record? 

Magnus: We don't have any really good recording yet. I think we need to find another one. 

Fatih: We are familiar with live recorded albums of E.S.T. Are you planning a live album with your own band?

Magnus: I've been thinking about it but I think it's good for the band to make at least one more studio album to build the song list. 

Fatih: You have worked with Lars Danielsson and Tigran Hamasyan in Lars' last albums Liberetto and Liberetto II. How was it playing with them?

Magnus: think it's amazing. I think it's reallly really fun. It is also great to be a sideman because it's putting you in another position - you don't have all the responsibilities. In a way sometimes you can relax in another way. Coming there and playing his music is very very nice. I think Lars is an amazing bass and cello player and compositions are very very nice - very lyrical, nearly romantic. Tigran is another universe, he is so free rhythmically and he is in another dimension.

Fatih: Especially in Liberetto II, I have heard nice trio performances which excited my mind to think about a new trio including you. Lately I also saw that you played in Jan Lundgren Trio. 

Magnus: Yeah, it was just a concert.

Fatih: Is it any possible that we will see you in a new trio format as the main project?

Magnus: don't know - it might happen because I love the setting. No doubt about that. Piano, bass and drums... Very organic, very easy to work... It is very fast changing the development musically. If you are getting four, five and six, it is hard to turn the ship fast. I love the space. It might happen, it might not.

Fatih: I think many European jazz followers agree on it if I say E.S.T. changed the way jazz is following in Europe. In my humble opinion, there were not so many jazz trios sounding like you when you were on the scene. However, after 2008 we started to see many bands which are compared to E.S.T. and most of the time they are defined by a new term called E.S.T. sound. What do you think was this E.S.T. sound? How can you define it?

Magnus: Wow - that's a tough question. I think it was like a mix of our different backgrounds and our different preferences about music. One of those things that happen sometimes is when you get certain amount of people and sum, the total energy mass gets bigger than each seperate. I think it was the mixture of Esbjörn's fantastic compositions that is kind of jazz but still a lot of pop hits - they are easily accesible for anyone - you don't have to be a jazz nerd. Dan comes from a rock background. I think the combination of the energy of us three together was something special. It's really really hard to explain when you had been there. It's sometimes easier for people outside. But now after few years, you can hear "yeah we got something unique together - the sound" somehow. Also a very important thing is that especially during the late years, everybody really could open up and take their place - you know everyone got space.

Fatih: Maybe it is not something to be defined but something to be listened. If you can tell in words you won't play music maybe?

Magnus: Maybe, maybe... It's always hard to put words on music.

Fatih: Could you please give some names that you find successful and promising on European Jazz Scene? Especially among the trios...

Magnus: Problem with me is that I don't really follow. I have never been that kind of a guy that really checking out stuff all the time. It is hard to tell. I am trying to find any names but... For me, of course Tigran was one thing that strike me when I heard it first time. Tigran is kind of a big name but he is still very young. I think it is very interesting what he has been doing and his projects.

Fatih: You are giving a name from East not from Europe. Interesting?

Magnus: No, but he is kind of mixed. He is coming from Armenia but he has been living in LA for many years. Then he has been staying in France. I think the music is getting more and more like that - it is like a music from world - global. 

Fatih: Progressive rock was always an implicit part of E.S.T. music I think. In my opinion, in your new albums these progressive rock influences are much more than before. Have you listened to progressive rock bands a lot? 

Magnus: No I haven't, not really actually. My background is when I went from pop or something -when I was 12,13 years old - the first thing I heard... There was Billy Cobham. I was very deep into jazz rock for a long time when I was between thirteen to sixteen.

Fatih: Between 70's and 80's?

Magnus: This was from 1978 to 1981.

Fatih: When rock jazz and fusion was very dominant... 

Magnus: For me what is important is jazz-rock not fusion because fusion is even more sleek for me. Jazz-rock has some kind of rough edges. That's my background actually before I went into play in more acoustic and traditional jazz. So it's a mix from that. The only progressive rock band I listened a little bit is Meshuggah - Swedish progressive metal band. I think there is a lot of interesting things happening in metal.

Fatih: What do you currently listen at home when you find time?

Magnus: For me it is sometimes hard to really concentrate and listen. Just the other day, I found this beautiful beautiful record with Stan Getz and Strings. It is called Cool Velvet - maybe from 60's or something. Really really beautiful music - very soft and gentle. He also had this great album called Focus that I listened a lot to when I was like in my twenties. The last really big thing was Laura Mvula from Birmingham I think - an English girl. She sings, writes and arranges.

Fatih: How do you compose? I mean besides the drum-set are you using any other instruments while composing?

Magnus: Yes I compose by the piano. I am not a piano player at all but know enough to compose.

Fatih: Can you compare jazz made in Europe with the jazz made in United States nowadays? 

Magnus: As I said before, I am not familiar really with what is happening both on the Europe scene and the scene in States but I think, of course you have this long long tradition in States. It's actually in a way music coming from blues and all the traditions. They really see the big names before them in the tradition they are carrying and they are still carrying that tradition. That's very important. Maybe you sometimes have more music from the States that are in the vein of the traditional jazz but still you have a lot of other things happening over there as well. But in Europe you might have a more free attitude toward jazz. 

Fatih: No pressure?

Magnus: Maybe a little bit less pressure. But we are also standing on the shoulders of giants. You have to understand.

Fatih: You have to know the alphabet, then you can produce the words?

Magnus: In a way, but I think it's openning up everywhere, it is coming very experimental and very open stuff also from States and Europe. Also the free format and avant-garde style is very big nowadays. Both in Sweden, in States and in Canada. That has a revival recently. 

Fatih: Do you know any Turkish jazz musicians?

Magnus: Of course I know Okay Temiz because he was in Sweden and I know Oriental Wind. İlhan Erşahin. Sarp Maden after EST Symphony in İstanbul and Mehmet İkiz - Swedish/Turkish drummer.

Fatih: Well with all your experiences how do you see the future of jazz and music in general?

Magnus: If you are talking about the business, I don't know where it goes. It is very very difficult times for people in it. There are more people than ever playing music and wanting to be musician but the scene is not growing as much. Also recording side is of course very problematic because people think that music is free nowadays - you can use spotify and whatever.

Fatih: And you are caring about album sales?

Magnus: It might never been that important for jazz musicians. You never sell millions for most part but still you have to get money to do the recording at least because it costs money to do a good recording. Even though you can do a lot more at home nowadays but it is not the same as to work with really professionals in a studio. That's gonna be problem in music industry and it will also hit film industry. 

Fatih: Yeah, it's a general problem. People can be careless about art.

Magnus: The money needs to come from somewhere. It's very easy to just to think that "Ah I can get this for free." Then it starts to be a rule and it is hard to go back. 

Fatih: Do you like to teach playing drums to students? Are you planning to open a school or join a conservatory to give lectures on that in future?

Magnus: Actually I've been to conservatory for a year now. There is a guy who was away from the school and I am asked to get his job for a while. I have five-six students. I think it is interesting.

Fatih: Will you continue?

Magnus: We'll see. It's interesting though it also takes a lot of energy and also a lot of planning - you know we have just twenty four hours per day. My focus is on playing and trying to compose more music. But it is very interesting to meet young students. They have the energy.

Fatih: Like Curly Camel maybe - you are the producer for them. I donated for them, for the album.

Magnus: appreciate that. The older you get the more interesting it is to work with young people. When you are younger you have a certain amount of energy. 

Fatih: Are you planning to release a new album with the band?

Magnus: Hopefully, I will release a new album next year. Probably not before Autumn.

Fatih: I am looking forward to listening to it. Thank you Magnus, it happened to be a great interview. It is great to see you here at last. 

Magnus: Thank you I am glad to be here. 

Nils Petter Molvaer & Eivind Aarset & Jan Bang - Ankara Concert, March 26th 2015


Three prominent musicians of Norwegian contemporary scene, trumpet player Nils Petter Molvaer, guitarist Eivind Aarset and live sampler Jan Bang gave the first concert of first Ankara World Music Festival in Ankara Palace on last Thursday. Actually, the members of this trio have played together for many live performances as well as many pieces of some albums in Nils Petter Molvaer's discography but this trio configuration was something new especially for Turkish followers.  

The performance consisted of two sets: The first one was the main body with 65-70 minutes and the second one was the closing song of about 10 minutes. Although the main themes were based on Molvaer's previous compositions from albums such as Hamada and Er, the musicians were mostly improvising - sometimes individually, sometimes collaboratively. The level of complexity in these improvisations was so high that just a 10 seconds of concentration lose may cause a listener to be detached from the performance's impressive atmosphere. It was a stimulating concert not only both with the energetic rhythms mostly carried by Jan Bang and the mystic tone of Molvaer's trumpet but also with the special light show. Adding Eivind Aarset's minimal touches and extraordinary sound from electric guitar to these, the overall performance was like spending a night on the limits of jazz, avant-garde, new age, contemporary and even trance music. The impressive vocal sounds created by Molvaer with the microphone of the trumpet and the surprising shifts in tension achieved by Jan Bang are highlights of the performance. The sound design and acoustic conditions were nice too but I think some bass portions of the performance were too heavy for the palace, shaking the ceiling.

In my humble opinion, musical performance may sometimes be for musicians themselves or -let me say- for some qualified listeners who have the necessary patience and open-minded musical ideas. For me, such performances are special ones in which you -as a listener- have a chance to put yourself into the position of the performer. In that case, you are not a mere listener caught by the well known melodies and forms. Instead, you become the one who is responsible to get the idea and if you can make it you leave the venue as someone more experienced instead of a someone entartained. I left the venue as a more qualified listener thanks to three free, creative and innovative musicians last Thursday. If you like to get such an experience catch them for their next performance. 

Saturday, 13 December 2014

My Choices Among European Jazz Releases in 2014

This is my list for best 9 European Jazz albums I have chosen among the releases in 2014. It is not a best 10 list because I am waiting for your contribution. If you can't see one of your bests, please mention -as a comment- the name of the album which -you think- should take place in such a list.

For your information, there is no rank or priority level in my list. They are all written down as they came into my mind when I was blogging. 

1 - Life To Everything, Phronesis, Edition Records












2 - Outrush, Kekko Fornarelli Trio, Abeat Records











3 - Extended Circle, Tord Gustavsen Quartet, ECM











4 - Beat, Tingvall Trio, Skip Records











5 - Anyone With A Heart, Iiro Rantala String Trio, ACT












6 - Jerry Léonide, The Key, ACT












7 - Michael Wollny Trio, Weltentraum, ACT











8 - Helge Lien Trio, Badgers and Others Beings, Ozella Music












9- Claudio Filippini Trio, Breathing In Unison, CAM Jazz

Saturday, 1 November 2014

Please Support Freelance Music Writers

This is my blog. For October, I published 3 posts: a concert review for Leszek Mozdzer and an interview with İbrahim Maalouf (English/Turkish). Blogger statistics tell me that I have written 117 posts including articles, reviews, interviews, pre-views and music travel notes for 2,5 years. Considering that I am writing long, it seems that there is smth like a book out there of more than 500 pages. The same statistics show almost 45000 clicks on the page. However, as most of you know being freelance is not easy and we all need support and promotion. I need this support especially from my musician friends. I can understand that famous jazz pages, newspapers and critics are more important for you but please do not forget that we -freelance bloggers- are producing prints for you when you are looked for online. As far as I have noticed I could take place only in my 4 or 5 musician friends webpage or social network walls. Most of you are already familiar with the fact that I am advising names to festivals in my country and I am inserting more and more musicians into the lists each day. I am doing what I do just to answer what is coming from my heart. I am sure that you all can understand that our hearts need love and respect to keep on talking to us. Thanks for the support. 

Monday, 27 October 2014

Interview With Ibrahim Maalouf Before Ankara Concert - 2014


We talked with Ibrahim Maalouf just before his Ankara concert on October 24th.

F.E: First of all, welcome to Ankara, it is good to see you once again after the concert you gave here more than a year ago. You have released a new album meanwhile in 2013. What is new and different for you in Illusions compared to the previous ones?

I.M: So many things... First of all, Illusions is the only album I recorded with my band. It is the first time I do this. The four albums that we are in before, I did not record with my band. I used to record in studio some other things and then I was touring with my band - something completely different - you know...

F.E: A complete album from beginning to end with the same band with one shot or two shots in the studio...

I.M: Yeah, two shots maximum. And it was really new for me because it was really the first time I do such an album. I knew the band because we've been playing together for many years but that was the first time we recorded something, which is completely different. There was also something very new. It's that I added to the band three trumpet players. Three of them... I taught them how to play the quarter tones and the maqamat. They are not Arabic, they don't come from the East World, they come from the West World so it was really a challenge to teach them those things. Those are basically the two really important differences.

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F.E: In my opinion, European Jazz listeners are getting more and more interested in jazz influenced by eastern or -let me say oriental- cultures and nowadays you are one of the prominent names in this genre with Dhafer Youssef and Tigran Hamasyan I think. As far as I can remember, in North Sea Jazz Festival 2013, the doors of Hudson were closed during your concert since there were no space left in the hall. That's why I could not see your performance. Why do you think listeners are attracted so much by the sound of the East in jazz? 

I.M: I think that Western musician has always been interested in egzotic colors. Salsa at some point had a period. Everybody was on salsa. Everybody was on African music at some period also and mixing with jazz.  

F.E:...and this is your time?

I.M: I think now especially with the problem that is happening between the Western world and the orient there is a clash. I think that people are starting to understand that maybe music and art in general might be a solution to avoid this clash. The conflicts that are happening always as West against East. It's not anymore South against North.

F.E: Maybe we have no hope rather than music.

I.M: Arts, freedom, freedom through arts in general. So since jazz is an alive music -it is not a classical music like somebody would like it to be- it is still changing...

F.E: Progressing in time. It's being affected.

I.M: Exactly. It's taking the influences of hip hop, of electronics, of everything...

F.E: Creating itself like an organism.

I.M: Exactly! It is still alive. It is not like some old music that are like in boxes and in the libraries. You know there are some music you open like an old book like baroque music. It is like a very old book that you take its dust off you know, you open and listen to the music. Jazz is not like this. There is pre-history, there is history, there is pre-present and future. Now we are building the present. I am very happy and proud of being here now and being participating to this. We are so many there. The guys you just said but there are many many others that we don't know - people that we don't hear about, that are great musicians. Everyday I discover great guys in music that are mixing all those things. 

F.E: Unknown heroes of jazz...

I.M: In Turkey there are so many guys, so many guys... It is really impressive.

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F.E: Fortunately I could listen to you with E.S.T. Symphony project in the same festival with the piece Behind The Yashmak. We, as Esbjörn Svensson Trio fans, were really impressed by what you did in the solo. 

I.M: They gave me some space - not so much but they gave me some space and I used it.

F.E: Was it just on-the-fly?

I.M: Oh yeah.

F.E: How did you feel about playing with Magnus and Dan in an E.S.T. composition?

I.M: It was an honour to be associated to this great team and all the big band that was made for them with the great guitar player... What was his name? Yaron Herman on the piano... There was this guitar...

F.E: Kurt Rosenwinkel.

I.M: Oh, Kurt Rosenwinkel. Oh my God. He is a genius.

F.E: His own concert was also fantastic.

I.M: He is a genius guy. I was really proud to be a part of this huge project

F.E: It was an amazing performance. Behind The Yashmak solo is getting viral among E.S.T. fans. Do you listen to jazz made in Northern countries in general?

I.M: I have listened. Not anymore so much, because I don't have so much time. I work so much on music. It is not easy to get this point but when you compose a lot (this is difficult)... I compose a lot for cinema, for singers, I compose a lot for me, for my albums, for other projects and I work so much.

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F.E: Yeah, there is the last soundtrack album. How was it like working for the last soundtrack album for Yves Saint Laurant?

I.M: It was great because the movie was very beautiful - really the image was really really great. I had to find the music that is very delicate and fragile because Yves Saint Laurant is very fragile and very delicate - you know. I had to find something like this and also something that had to be powerful because he was a big name and very powerful. The interesting point - I mean my point - was to find a combination of these things and be myself but also not completely myself because it was for the movie. It's not only about me.

F.E: There were trade-offs maybe?

I.M: Yeah

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F.E: Although your sound is always carrying an oriental flavour, considering some names you have given to your pieces in the album, I felt like your music is very well related also with your current experiences and what you have been living at the moment. We see some modern connotations. Can we say that you are merging the inspiration coming from your hometown with what you have been currently facing?

I.M: I think that my music is the reflection of what I am and what I am is... I am Lebanese and I come from Arab culture but I have been raised in Western Europe. I remember and I know very much where I come from and it is very important for me where I come from. My culture is very important for me but as much important for me is who I am living with and the society I am trying to live in. So my music is the same - you know. As much close to my origins and my culture but also very much including the life of today. 

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F.E: Now I'd like to come to one of your masterpieces: Beirut. I hear a deep melancholy and sad memories behind this composition. It should be about the problematic and harsh conditions of the city. Can we say that an artist with difficult experiences, sad memories and a troubled life are closer to the light of creativity compared to the others?

I.M: I don't know but for sure in my case, the fact of growing up with a fear of death and destruction makes me love life so much. This is probably the center of everything I do, because I love to be alive so much and love the world so much even with all the problems existing and we know how many they are - all the troubles that are happening all around the world. I love being alive. 

F.E: You know the value of living now.

I.M: I think so -yes- and music for me is the expression of being happy of being alive. I really fear death. I am really scared of this. Everything I do is made to remind me that I am alive. 

F.E: Maybe you are running away from death.

I.M: Yes, running away from this and trying to go as far as possible and this is a some kind of light.

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F.E: We all know that your father is the inventor of quarter tones in the trumpet. In the documentary Souffle you say that the quarter tone trumpet is something that enables you to talk musically both in Arabic and French. 

I.M: Not Arabic and French but let's say Arabic culture and Western culture. 

F.E: I am understanding from these words that you can play Arab maqams with the quarter tone trumpet. If your father had not invented the quarter tone trumpet would you be still playing the trumpet? 

I.M: I wouldn't be a musician. He is the one who made me love music. I would probably enjoy listening to music.

F.E: Did he push you to play?

I.M: He did not push me to play but he was really a very strong teacher and he made it as if it was the most important thing in life.

F.E: It is a very strong lesson. 

I.M: Music made him escape his misery. He is still alive but he had a crazy life.

F.E: Maybe he was trying to take words from Nietzsche "Without music, life would be a mistake."

I.M: Maybe but for sure, music and especially trumpet made him escape misery and it completely changed his life. He was somebody else and thanks to trumpet and thanks to music he became somebody else. I am not talking about being famous, I am talking about what is in your mind and who your are inside.

F.E: You will be surprised but same applies to me. I am not playing music and I was just an electronics engineer when I started to listen to jazz almost 10 years ago. My life has changed totally from bottom to top. 

I.M: So you understand what it means. 

F.E: Yes. I started to travel for music, I started to meet people, I started to be a person full-of-life - a better person. 

I.M: You see...

F.E: Yes. I started to try to merge West and East like you.

I.M: But you live here -especially in Turkey- right in the middle geographically trying to make compromises. That's why I think and believe that Turkey is one of the most interesting countries. Actually my uncle Amin Maalouf wrote a lot about the culture here. I grew up reading his books. I have always felt that in this part of the world there is a compromise between tradition. Usually in Turkey, not everybody but in general in history -even until now- people have always tried to mix their culture wih modern world - the modern Western world. We have always been touring between those two things. People here had to really find a balance between those things. It is not very easy. You are right between Europe and Arab world. You are not Arab, you are not European, you are just something else right in the middle. You have to find your way. I am very interested in this.

F.E: That's our chance and your chance may be getting raised in such an intellectual family.

I.M: I don't know. Maybe. Maybe.

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F.E: How does it feel like working with Sting?

I.M: He is a very very nice and careful person. 

F.E: A nice Englishman?

I.M: In Italy because I worked with him two weeks in his Toscana house. It was very interesting because he is a very nice and humble person.

F.E: Maybe that's why he always say "in my humble opinion".

I.M: Really?

F.E: Yes you can see it on DVDs. Was the house the one that was on one of his DVDs?

I.M: Exactly. This specific house. Very huge.

F.E: Did you play in this performance?

I.M: No.

F.E: It should be right after 9/11. It is an impressive performance - he first express his sadness then starts to play.

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F.E: I am sure you have listened to Miles Davis a lot. You are an innovative trumpet player like Miles and inserting the trumpet into the different styles like what Miles did in 70's. How do you define and compare what Miles Davis was doing and what you are currently playing?

I.M: I can not compare because for me Miles is the man who changed completely the face of trumpet in jazz. He really made it - go towards a direction that nobody had before. But I don't consider myself as going so far yet - maybe one day. Of course I admire a lot Miles and everything he achieved but I am much more impressed by what my father did. Because Miles grew up in United States and lived all his life in United States - the country of jazz.

F.E: He was born with jazz.

I.M: He was born with jazz. He heard jazz when he was seven or eight years old. He started to play trumpet when he was nine. His parents were rich. His father was a dentist. His mother played organ in the church. 

F.E: Unlike John Coltrane.

I.M: Yeah, exactly and they were wealthy. He studied classical music and then he started jazz because he think it is cool.

F.E: He had options.

I.M: He had all the options. He played with Bird... You know his life. There is something very logical in his life. He followed this, he went very far and it's great. But when I think of my father's life, I am much more impressed because he grew up in a farmer family in Lebanon in 40's.

F.E: No music, no archives...

I.M: No music except maybe the Arabic traditional music and he discovered trumpet for the first time when he was 23. He had no money and no future. He just took a boat and escaped whether his parents were telling him not to do it. They were telling him "don't go, you're gonna lose yourself, you're gonna be crazy, you don't speak French, you haven't gone to school, you don't know how to write and read Arabic, you don't have money, you just discovered the trumpet and you wanna go to Paris conservatory. Who do you think you are?" And he left and from there he studied classical music and he became one of the top trumpet players of classical music in France.

F.E: He should have felt like Man on The Moon.

I.M: Yeah. He is really that kind of man. I so much admired his life. He made something that very few people in the world did. You know when you don't have the choice... He invented this trumpet.

F.E: He built his own way. There was no way and he built his own way.

I.M: He made it. There was no way to go through and he opened all the doors. I so much admire him. For me he is the example. I work so much today and I know that if I work so much, if I can't sleep during the nights and I am always thinking of "I have to work, I have to work, I have to work..." because my father did all these and I can't fail.

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F.E: Well what do you think in general when you compare the jazz music made in its hometown United States and jazz made generally in Europe nowadays?

I.M: It is not easy to compare, because maybe I am not the biggest specialist but my feelings in this is that maybe in USA they go much more into the contemporary jazz. They are looking for how to go further in one specific direction -most of them- and if you don't do this you do usually maybe pop or this kind of thing like Jammie Cullum and who really like also to jump from soul, from gospel... 

F.E: They are concentrated on how to play instead of what to play. Can we say that?

I.M: Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Maybe Europan musicians and maybe the rest of the world in jazz is more interested in mixing American culture to something else.

F.E: They are trying to find melodies in the compositions.

I.M: They are trying to find a melody that is different. Trying to find harmony that integrates other things... Trying to find a Jazz with different rhythms... You know this kind of mixing, which is very interesting for jazz also. You know it spreads all over the world. It's like a telephone you know. It may be made in silicon valley but you have all the languages - you can have it in Chinese, in French...  It works also. That's why I love jazz. It travelled all around the world. Each country integrated jazz and made its own way.

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F.E: What about Turkish jazz musicians? Do you know any? Did you work with any of them before?

I.M: Not so much. But I really appreciate Turkish musicians because they mix so well the maqamat and the tarab and everything related with tarab and all kinds of music: with pop, with jazz, with hardrock...

F.E: Any names?

I.M: When I was young I used to listen a lot to Laço Tayfa for example.

F.E: Hüsnü Şenlendirici.

I.M: Yeah, Hüsnü for me... I know he is like a star, he really created something. I really believe he is one of the best guys. I really love also the new generation of guys like New York Gypsy All Star who are based in New York. They are great. 

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With all your experiences, how do you see the future of jazz and music? Considering also album sales and other things... 

I.M: Who knows. We don't know. For sure the concerts will exist because if there is no concert, there will be no music. 

F.E: But you are not sure about the album sales and records?

I.M: I think we can't avoid albums and if there is no album nobody tours.

F.E: Yes I agree. I am still buying albums don't worry.

I.M: Me too. I think we should reconsider people's education about this. People don't understand why it is important to buy the album. They think "Hey, the album here is -I don't know how much- but I can get it for free. Why would I buy it? I would be stupid to buy it." Yeah you would be stupid -maybe- in this world but there is another world. Somebody paid to make this album and if you like it and you don't pay to get it, this person will not get enough money to do another one.

F.E: That's a general thing in fact - not only about music. 

I.M: It's right for everything, yeah.

F.E: Imagine that every father tells the same thing that your father told to you "music is the most important thing in the world." 

I.M: Yeah, people don't necessarily understand this. I can understand this. If you love arts if you are educated in arts, if you like to go movies, to go to operas, to go jazz...

F.E: If you have a taste in your mind about art...

I.M: Yeah, if you love arts - whatever could be the kind of art - you can not be unaffected. There is a simple question I usually ask to some people. Would you imagine a world without arts? They say no.

F.E: Engineers can do.

I.M: Yeah but love is a kind of art, living together is an art, eating is an art. The couch we sitting on... Somebody designed this. Somebody designed this (showing the sofa next to us). So if there is no art, there are no walls, there are no couches, there are no carpets.

F.E: But people are missing all of these while living in busy life. 

I.M: They think that it is obvious. They take it for granted.

F.E: They think they are trivial, straight forward.

I.M: Yeah, they take it for granted. No. There is somebody who desgined this. He had paid for this. It's his job

F.E: They have been educated for this.

I.M: Yeah, they have been educated for this. Can you live without music? I doubt. I doubt anybody could live without music.

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F.E: What is the next step in your career and what are future plans?

I.M: I have lots of projects. Many many many things... I really hope that I don't know them all. I really hope that something that I don't expect are gonna happen. Because all my plans are so already here. I am preparing for example two albums as tribute to Umm Kulthum. It is already ready - we're gonna release this in a year.

F.E: Really? With the same band in Illusion?

I.M: No. One of the bands will be the same with the previous album Wind - acoustic jazz quintet- and we're gonna play one of the most famous Umm Kulthum hits. The other one is also a tribute to Umm Kulthum but in a different way. It's my compositions. It will be a quartet. Two members of the band I am playing with now will be two of the three guys who play with me. And the third one is the piano player Éric Legnini.

F.E: Thanks a lot. That was an amazing interview. Thanks for your time.

I.M: Thanks man. It's my pleasure.

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