Inspiration: Esbjörn Svensson Trio

When I was in university, every so often one of my friends would announce some random gig or other that we all just had to go to. Sometimes the excitement was well founded – like the first time Damien Rice came to play in NUIM was just at the university open mic, but the excitement was well built up by the time he came back a year later with a full band. Other times, the hype fell through. But this particular friend had never gotten so enthusiastic about a gig before this. She wanted us to go and see the Esbjörn Svensson Trio. Nika is Swedish, and we figured it was just some random Swedish band who no-one else would know about, so we’d all go along with her and see them in Vicar St. In her eagerness, Nika ended up being one of the first people booking tickets, and we were seated up in the two tables front and centre in Vicar St – right up at the stage with a full clear view of the jazz trio set up.

We gathered first out in the bar, before going in to take our seats, and I got chatting to some random guy who was asking me what I thought of the group, and if I’d seen them before. When he discovered that not only was this the first time I’d be seeing them live, but also that it would be my first exposure to their music at all, he was surprised. But upon also find out that we were all music students, he decided to give me a copy of “Strange Place For Snow“, which he had intended to give to the friend he was meeting to go to the gig with. But it ended up in my bag instead, and I said thank you as we headed into the gig.

I felt a bit guilty taking the best seats in the gig, especially as only one of us even knew of e.s.t. beforehand. But as the gig progressed, I was kinda glad we had those seats, as the band completely blew us away. A gang of eager music students hanging on every note was perhaps the best thing you could have in those seats at a gig. The energy coming from the stage was astonishing, and seeing how each musician stretched the boundaries of what they could make their instrument do was inspiring. It completely reignited my love of jazz and Esbjörn Svensson quickly moved into my list of inspirational pianists.

After the gig, the simple gesture of a stranger giving me a copied CD of some music meant a hell of a lot more, and that album has become one of my most listened to records over the years.

Astonishingly wonderful piano playing. I love how he incorporates prepared piano techniques into his music, and quite effortlessly, and to brilliant effect:

The two piano lines in this track really showcase the Baroque influence on his piano style, and always brings to mind that amazing piano solo in Nina Simone’s version of “Love Me Or Leave Me” :

Tragically, Esbjörn Svensson died in 2008 in a diving accident. His obituary in The Independent tells how he brought jazz to new audiences, and speaking from personal experience, that is most definitely true.

The pianist and composer Esbjörn Svensson was one of the most popular and influential figures in contemporary jazz. His group e.s.t. (Esbjörn Svensson Trio) […] drew inspiration from Bach and the baroque, ambient music, rock and techno to create a new form of intensely textured instrumental music that proved as attractive to younger fans with no previous interest in jazz as it did to admirers of the classic piano trios that the group’s ensemble-based style referenced.
[…]

As a jazz pianist, Svensson had an unusually versatile style, which combined the structural importance of baroque counterpoint that he had learned to appreciate in his classical studies, with lightly twinkling improvisations that recalled Bill Evans and Keith Jarrett, the two most influential piano trio leaders of the post-war period.

What made Svensson most unusual within the normally promiscuous world of jazz is that almost all his mature work was with the same group, and the same personnel. He was also very happy to let Berglund and Oström take up solo space themselves, and the great delight of e.s.t. as a group was the strength of the ensemble rather than that of the individuals who comprised it.

Someone I was chatting to recently about music, was hating on jazz, and saying that a lot of instrumental jazz had no heart, and was just experimentation and a wild mess that was unlistenable and had to structure. I’ll be the first to admit that I loved vocal jazz a lot earlier than I developed a love for purely instrumental jazz, but can you listen to this and say it has no heart:

The melody at the end of that track just hits me really hard. It’s just beautiful, and the whole ending of that piece is magical.

Along with everything else in this track, listen to the double bass part here around the 5min mark especially. Seeing a double bass being used like that live for the first time was ear and eye opening for a young music student, let me tell you:

Photos from the last two months

Finally got around to looking at the few photos I’d shot on my phone since Xmas. I like a few of them, but not all.

Cork, visiting Meadhbh
Cork.. far too early am.

Cork.. far too early am.

Salthill sunsets again – I’m obsessed. The light is different every time.
Salthil sunset
Salthil sunset

Boo reading …
Boo reading

Boo reads Agatha Christie

Intended on having a shot of Boo reading all the books I’ve read, but I missed taking shots of Overqualified by Joey Comeau, Liquor by Poppy Z Brite and Written On The Body by Jeanette Winterson. The last two are two of my favourite books that I decided to re-read instead of tackling the rest of my “to read” pile that is sitting by my bed. I’ll get around to them.

NYE in Cork with Meadhbh

I’m reposting this here from my facebook, because I can’t face doing my “review of the year: 2010” just yet. I have a feeling I didn’t do one last year either. They’re rather sporadic, and usually happen on LJ.

  • Someone wearing lettuce as a hat.
  • a straight boy deciding to prove he wasn’t homophobic by kissing me. Thrice.
  • 5am impromptu music session
  • dumplings
  • “some like it hot”
  • jake gyllenhaal’s arse
  • That feeling when you go to a gay bar where you know nobody, and no-one knows you.
  • random friendly cork gays, and lovely twitter folk.
  • People wanting a go on Damien’s cigar. Not a double entendre.
  • the middle-aged woman in the fabulous outfit who bonded with me over some other random guy complimenting both of us, “he liked my dress! he did! and your trousers! he did! And he liked my dress!”
  • “do ye do chips?”. They did. And doughnuts.
  • Meadhbh’s straight guy admirer on Barrack St at 4am in the great coat
  • “I work at apple, you know? Do you know apple?” but her swiss boyfriend was handsome, so we’ll let it slide.
  • Discovering that Meadhbh’s idea of food shopping is buying toilet roll, bed sheets and olive oil. She’s a prostitute.

I should also add, that most of the conversation between us on NYE was done in the vein of Katie’s Corner. It was that kind of day.

Snow days

Snapped some more photos of the snow, and low solstice sunlight over the last day or two.

Here’s a few of them (click to see bigger versions, as per usual) :

St. Nicholas’ Cathedral and one of my favourite lines of trees in the city:

The grounds of NUIG

They were just snapped on my HTC Desire, not anything snazzy. ;) But it’s handy to have on me when I don’t feel like carrying around a camera. You can get decent shots with it too, every so often.

Christmas means the Muppets.

It may be a bit odd, but Xmas for me has always meant the Muppets. One of the earliest presents I remember the whole family getting one Xmas was a VHS player. We didn’t get one until sometime in the early/mid 90’s. Xmas 1993, I think, as the movie that my folks bought with it for us all to watch was the Muppets Christmas Carol, which came out in 1992.

We watched that movie so many times since then and it’s kinda become one of the longest christmas traditions. Back then, we’d rent out one video every so often, as a treat, and watch it all together as a family, but the Muppets Christmas Carol was one of the ones we actually owned and was rewatched so often. I know the songs in that movie as well as any of the Christmas carols I grew up listening to and singing in choirs.

I still love the music in that movie, and indeed the music in many of the Muppet movies is absolutely wonderful, and I’d rank it up there with the best Disney musicals. Nothing makes me happier and feeling more Xmas-y than sitting down to watch this brilliant retelling of the Dicken’s classic.

The melody in “One More Sleep ‘Till Christmas” is absolutely gorgeous:

The variety of character singing in “Scrooge” is brilliant, and sets up the movie wonderfully:

The Muppet movies manage to mushy, happy, heart-warming songs so well, without becoming overly sickly sweet, in my opinion. I can’t help but smile at “Bless Us All”. Simple song, beautiful little harmonies, and a lovely sentiment.

And “It Feels Like Christmas” captures the essence of Christmas better than most any other song. A lot of the best Christmas songs have a sadness or nostalgia in them (“Last Christmas” by Wham, “All I Want For Christmas Is You” by Mariah Carey, “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas”, “White Christmas”), but this song just celebrates the different parts that go together to make a classic christmas, from choirs singing, to fireplaces, to present giving, to meeting up with old friends and family… It’s a wonderfully happy joyous celebration of the best things about Christmas, and is probably my favourite Christmas song ever. The key changes are beautifully subtle (Westlife, take note) and lifts your spirits. True, it’s hardly subtle with the message of “wherever you find love, it feels like christmas”, but it is a movie aimed at all ages and I don’t think subtlety is really the point of the thing. ;) But still. This song makes me feel like it is Christmas.

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