TORD GUSTAVSEN TRIO
Being There
ECM
Read
the Jazzitude review of Tord Gustavsen Trio/Changing
Places
Read the Jazzitude review
of Tord Gustavsen Trio/The Ground
Listening to “At Home,” the opening
track on Being There, Tord Gustavsen Trio’s
most recent CD, one cannot help but think of this European
unit as being highly influenced by the Western classical
music tradition. And you’d be right, but this group
is anything but ‘chamber jazz.’ On its previous
two releases, 2003’s Changing Places and
its follow-up, 2005’s The Ground, Gustavsen
has seldom made explicit the influence of blues, gospel,
and other building blocks of American jazz, but the influences
were there, nonetheless. On Being There he widens
his range to include pieces that make some of his American
influences clear, but the disc is still a showpiece of control
and subtlety.
There’s plenty of the meditative sound
that Gustavsen and company have worked with since their
debut, but there are some tracks where the energy level
is boosted quite a bit for this group. “Vicar Street”
almost bristles with energy, largely due to Vespestad’s
kinetic, yet restrained in its enthusiasm. Vespestad is
an unusually light drummer, especially on the tracks where
he uses brushes. His work on these tracks is very light
and approaches the drum set in an unusually gentle way.
The concept of meditation is a good one to explain the work
of Gustavsen and his trio mates: their playing becomes like
following one’s breath. Thoughts and ideas float by
like clouds against a blue sky that is always there. The
listener is required to listen in the moment to catch the
music’s meaning, neither focusing on what has just
happened nor anticipating what is to come. It’s a
daunting task to remain fully engaged enough to play this
music, and it demonstrates the incredible skill of these
musicians, rendering any overt show of virtuosity unnecessary.
A couple of tracks really stand out among
the group’s oeuvre. “Blessed Feet” makes
Gustavsen’s love of American blues and gospel explicit,
reminding the listener at times of the work of Keith Jarrett’s
‘European’ quartet. It demonstrates that, while
Gustavsen and company may be trained European musicians
who are influenced by the Western classical tradition, they
are also very cognizant of the American roots of improvisational
jazz. No jazz-oriented pianist who wants to be taken seriously
today can ignore either area. To play in the Western tradition
without an understanding of both improvisation and Afro-American
musical history is to be more of an improvisational classical
composer than a jazz artist. On the other hand, to play
without an understanding of musical compositional structure
and traditional Western harmony is to be either very primitive
or radically avant-garde. “Where We Went” introduces
Spanish and Moorish overtones, sometimes sounding a bit
like one of Chick Corea’s Spanish piano fantasias,
albeit with distinctly less percussive bite.
Music such as that created by Gustavsen and
many other ECM (in particular, but not exclusively) artists
is designed in a way that is antithetical to the way many
of us listen today. That is to say that it unfolds slowly
in time, eschewing hooks that serve to impress an actual
musical phrase upon the mind, choosing instead to create
a certain atmosphere that the listener begins to crave the
more he or she is exposed to it. And the more one is exposed
to Gustavsen’s recordings, the more one takes away
in terms of narrative arcs across a single CD or across
the entire trio of discs ECM has released by this trio.