By Ed Pettersen
Rumblings.
That’s how it starts. That’s how
it always starts. A buzz in the distance,
a hum, distortions, but then it starts coming closer. Closer.
Like a heartbeat to the ear. Or a
tank.
Maybe that’s how it sounded to my
forefather’s as they came rolling through Norway in the 1940’s. Or to Martin Küchen’s family in Sweden. It’s also how his new album begins though the
first track never reaches the roar of a tank.
Just a fuzzy child’s toy. But it
is ominous much like his brilliant 2012 Hellstorm album recorded in a church
and inspired by the Nazi occupation and “the world’s worst war” (liner notes).
Buzzing, puffed breaths, humming,
textures…these are all musical landscapes in Küchen’s world and you can’t help
but pay attention. He never screams or
shouts, even when he is actually playing his sax, but you can’t help and listen
closer. That is his gift. And he never uses a cliché. Ever.
It’s just not in his DNA. I
imagine he doesn’t even know what it means.
It appears he is in his own little world. These compositions on this album are very
well not like anything else you will hear this year (or maybe any other year).
There are other great players, such as Arve
Henriksen with his trumpet, who mine some of the same territory as Mr. Küchen
but with them it almost sounds like an experiment, an affectation or
dissatisfaction with their instrument but not here. Küchen is exploring his own personal space
and doesn’t even know we’re listening and that’s fine with me (and I bet with
him too).
Please understand, this is a delicate
recording but not a fragile artist. To
make music this bold and carefree you can’t possibly give a damn. And I think that’s the point and why, to me,
it’s all the more powerful. A bit
self-indulgent? Sure. That’s why I don’t give it 5 stars but
otherwise I say bravo.
Highly recommended.
Highly recommended.
4 comments:
Thank you Ed and Antonio for the Küchen and Angles updates. Truly a phenomenal musician and politically informed critic. If you guys wanted to complete a "Küchen trilogy" of sorts, you might want to consider checking out the Küchen and Landaeus Trio LP "Four Lamentations and One Wicked Dream of Innocence" on Moserobie. It is a fantastic and haunting record by an ad hoc group with serious chops, and there is not an ounce of fat on it.
agree with everything that told Fergus!
Martin Küchen - BIG MUSICIAN ! Küchen and Landaeus Trio LP "Four Lamentations and One Wicked Dream of Innocence" fantastic record ! thanks MAESTRO !!!
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