From "
Chiaroscuro" (2004)
Images :
Greg Bod
I do NOT own the copyright for the music and video that I upload and will remove it immediately upon request from copyright holder or band.
Arve Henriksen is a trumpeter whose name will be familiar to anybody listening to the new music flowing out from
Norway over the past decade or so. Chiaroscuro is Henriksen's first outing as leader since his debut in
2001.
As well as being a remarkably experimental trumpet stylist(in concert it sometimes seems impossible that the shakuhachi, flute and saxophone sounds are actually created by the trumpet he is playing), Henriksen sings with an angelic, falsetto voice. On Chiaroscuro he's provided with sympathetic support from
Jan Bang on samples and
Audun Kleive on percussion.
"
Opening Image" begins with orchestral swoops, distant hints of shaken percussion and manipulated gongs. Henriksen's voice seems to be reaching towards the ineffable and then unexpectedly he captures and expresses it.
The music appears to have been siphoned directly from the cool, clear air of remote mountain ranges via a natural alchemy.
The opening moments of "
Bird's Eye View" recall a passage from
Brian Eno and
Harold Budd's ambient masterpiece
The Pearl. As it progresses the music evokes images of
South Sea islands in balmy high summer. Klieve's percussion spins pitter-patter webs on which Henriksen's breathy notes surge like gentle breezes blowing in from the
Pacific.
In contrast to the suggestion of its title, "Chiaro" changes the atmosphere to something twilit, as though the listener had strayed from sunlit beaches into a shadowy jungle full of hidden creatures.
"
Blue Silk" acts as the
album'sgorgeous fulcrum. As riven with cruelty and tragedy as our world is, this piece feels like an undeserved benediction, a momentary reminder of the beauty that it's possible to realise if we're only given the chance. Trying to describe this piece would be a waste of words; better for you to seek the music out and listen yourself.
"
Parallel Action" carries brief hints of Henriksen's early mentor,
Nils Petter Molvaer in its weary, but proud playing. "Circled Take" cuts closer to the bone and turns towards a haunted darkness,
Bang or Kleive provide sloughing sounds like trudges through snowdrifts. "
Time Lapse" appears to either fuse light and dark, without achieving grey. Chiaroscuro ends like a short farewell, an ode to the emotional journey travelled over the preceding nine pieces.
To borrow from
Robert Schumann's definition of beauty; Arve Henriksen's music effects a union of both the contemplation of nature and the expression of unmediated feeling. It seems that Henriksen is wringing his soul out to find the notes that he plays and sings. He expresses emotion in the same intensely heightened, verging on hallucinatory, way that the Fauves used colour. Chiaroscuro as a title is well chosen, for each of these tracks does represent a shade between light and darkness. The focus upon both of these aspects, rather than only upon one or the other, results in a profound and singularly moving statement.
Unofficial video
To my "chere et tendre" like we say in french
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- published: 24 Mar 2012
- views: 11332