By Colin Green and
Martin Schray
There are two
anecdotes about Paal Nilssen-Love that might say more than the following
reviews.
When The Thing feat. Neneh Cherry played a festival in Karlsruhe last year Paal Nilssen-Love tried out the drum kit during the sound check. It was a fierce attack, the roadies and the people who were responsible for the sound stood there with open mouths - and after about 20 minutes Nilssen-Love just said: “I need a new snare.”
When The Thing feat. Neneh Cherry played a festival in Karlsruhe last year Paal Nilssen-Love tried out the drum kit during the sound check. It was a fierce attack, the roadies and the people who were responsible for the sound stood there with open mouths - and after about 20 minutes Nilssen-Love just said: “I need a new snare.”
And after a double set
at the 2012 Jazz Métèo Festival in Mulhouse (Atomic and Fire Room) he needed a
new shirt after each performance because they were completely soaked wet with
sweat.
Whenever people talk
about Nilssen-Love they are deeply impressed by his awesome energy, his
brilliant technique, his sheer power and absolute dedication. He has been a
member of groups as different as Peter
Brötzmann’s Chicago Tentet, Atomic, Ballister, The Thing, Fire Room, Scorch
Trio, or Original Silence (just to name a few) and he has worked with almost
every important musician in the contemporary free jazz scene, his reputation
precedes him like a thunderclap. Maybe this is what you could expect when you
grow up as the son of a drummer who ran the jazz club in Stavanger/Norway and
whose main influences are Art
Blakey, Elvin Jones, Steve McCall, Philip Wilson but also John Bonham and
Stewart Copeland.
But Nilssen-Love is not
always the mad wizard who provides the barrage for the above mentioned bands,
he is also able to play very sensitively, for example in his Double Tandem trio
with Ken Vandermark and Ab Baars or when he plays the congas in his duo with
Mats Gustafsson. All in all he is one of the hardest working, most innovative
and dynamic men of today’s improv scene,
releasing at least a dozen of records every year. This week there will be a survey of his latest albums.
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