TOMASZ STANKO
:rarum XVII
ECM
Records
Read the Jazzitude
review of Tomasz Stanko/Suspended Night
Stanko’s :rarum collection
demonstrates that while he has always possessed the soul
of a lyrical minimalist, those tendencies have sometimes
been colored by a restlessness bordering on compulsion,
particularly on some of the trumpeter’s earlier work.
Here that earliest sound is captured via two tracks from
Stanko’s first album for ECM, 1975’s Balladyna.
On “Tale” Stanko is backed by bassist Dave Holland
and drummer Edward Vesala, both of whom are completely comfortable
with the free playing that defines the piece. “Balladyna”
finds this trio augmented by the addition of tenor saxophonist
Tomasz Szukalski, whose tone and vocabulary recall Dewey
Redman’s work with Keith Jarrett’s “American”
quartet. The influence of Ornette Coleman still hangs over
these recordings, which makes sense since Stanko’s
first band, the Jazz Darings, were inspired by Coleman,
Miles Davis, and composer George Russell.
From the time of Balladyna’s
release through the rest of the seventies and eighties,
Stanko didn’t record as a leader, instead contributing
periodically to other performers’ ECM recordings.
“Together,” from drummer Edward Vesala’s
1976 recording Satu (which appears to be currently
unavailable), uses a string section as a bulwark over which
Vesala and bassist Palle Danielsson provide a roiling sea
that floats the melodic statements of Stanko and Juhani
Aaltonen, who plays alto flute. The alto flute proves to
be a perfect match for the tone of Stanko’s trumpet,
and the piece exudes a calm, radiating energy. “Moor”
comes from Gary Peacock’s 1981 release Voice From
the Past—Paradigm and finds Stanko and Peacock
in the company of drummer Jack DeJohnette and saxophonist
Jan Garbarek, here featured on soprano sax. The piece is
reminiscent of the work that Keith Jarrett did with his
European quartet, which is not surprising in light of the
fact that Garbarek played with that group and Peacock was,
by this time, a member of Jarrett’s ‘standards’
trio. It’s a jaunty composition and affords Stanko
the opportunity to demonstrate his ability to swing in a
straight ahead yet modern jazz setting.
Stanko was quite busy during the ‘80s
despite the relative scarcity of his appearances on vinyl.
He played with Alex Schlippenbach’s Globe Unity Orchestra,
a major European avant-garde ensemble, as well as working
with Don Cherry and Krystof Penderecki. His work with Eward
Vesala, the Finnish drummer, was of major importance to
his development. The quartet work that they initiated on
Balladyna was an important development in European
jazz, and the two also experimented with incorporating folk
elements (Nordic and Baltic). During this decade, Stanko
also traveled to India and worked with both Chico Hamilton
and Cecil Taylor, as well as leading COCX and Freelectronic,
both groups that experimented with jazz rock textures and
combining electric and acoustic components.
When Stanko did resurface as a leader in the
90s, it was with a renewed sense of purpose. His style now
more readily reflected the influence of cool trumpeters
like Miles Davis and Chet Baker, as well as the heavy influence
of pianist Krzysztof Komeda. Komeda was Poland’s foremost
jazz pianist at the time of his death in 1969 at the age
of thirty-seven. His work combined the lyric elements of
Bill Evans with the more adventurous, spiritually searching
influence of John Coltrane and Eric Dolphy. Stanko worked
and recorded with Komeda, playing on eleven albums with
the pianist in a five-year period. Komeda and his quintet
also contributed to many Polish film scores during this
period, and Stanko’s early playing can also be heard
on many of them. From Komeda, Stanko developed his sense
of lyricism and the ability to boil musical elements down
to their essence, leaving aside the merely ornamental. The
result is music that is undeniably truthful and compelling
and that relies on its emotional core much more than any
display of pyrotechnics by the musicians.
In 1994 Stanko recorded the album Matka
Joanna From The Angels with Bobo Stenson (piano), Anders
Jormin (bass), and Tony Oxley (drums). Stenson, the Swedish
pianist who emerged in the late ‘60s and has worked
extensively with Jon Christensen and Charles Lloyd, is an
excellent piano foil for Stanko’s grainy, haunting
sound. With his wide open chord voicings and delicate right
hand melodic passages, Stenson supports Stanko without in
any way filling in the carefully considered spaces that
the trumpeter leaves on the overall sonic canvass. Oxley,
who has worked extensively with British woodwind improvisor
John Surman, is also excellent, helping keep the energy
level up without ever overpowering Stanko or Stenson. Two
tracks from Joanna are included here. The collection’s
opening track, “Tales For a Girl, 12” capture
the mercurial mood of a pre-pubescent girl, and much of
the track’s nine minutes are spent in restless searching
by the ensemble, in a display of free jazz that is highly
disciplined and relatively gentle and romantic. “Cain’s
Brand” becomes much more agitated, as Stanko solos
over Oxley’s explosive drum accompaniment for a time,
and even Stenson’s playing is much more agitated over
the course of this piece. Tension is stretched pretty far
on this track, yet it still never becomes shrill or difficult
to listen to.
In 1996 the same group released the album
Leosia, which is somewhat similar to its predecessor,
but often much more pensive and serene. Stanko leans toward
the romantic side of his playing, with fewer free elements
than on previous recordings, but there is still a lot of
room for the individual players to chart their own destinies
through the music. Stenson’s work is more lush on
“Die Weisheit von Le comte Lautreamont” than
on the previously discussed tracks, and his solo develops
a deeply classical feeling. “Morning Heavy Song,”
from the same album, is very slow and thoughtful, with blues
elements lending a slightly new flavor to the tune. By this
time one can hear Stanko’s complete mastery of the
trumpet. Whatever comes out seems to be precisely what Stanko
intended, such is the sense of control that is communicated.
The following year Stanko released Litania,
an album of Krzysztof Komeda compositions that serves as
a tribute to his mentor. Here Stanko works at times with
a larger group, including saxophonists Bernt Rosengren and
Joakin Milder, Stenson, bassist Palle Danielsson, and drummer
Jon Christensen. The album’s title track, arranged
by Stanko, is both beautiful and hauntingly lonely. Stanko
solos with immense sensitivity and great passion. Without
belaboring the Stanko/Miles connection, the setting and
Stanko’s solo are not terribly far off the mood and
sound of some of Davis’ work on Sketches Of Spain.
The other Komeda piece heard here is a version of “Sleep
Safe and Warm,” which the pianist composed for the
Roman Polanski film Rosemary’s Baby. Performed
as a duet with Bobo Stenson and clockin in at just over
three minutes, it’s a performance stripped down to
the bare essentials, relying almost entirely on the beauty
of the melody and the authority with which Stanko and Stenson
perform it.
As the new millennium dawned, Stanko put together
a quartet of young Polish musicians to play the style of
music toward which he had been moving for the better part
of three decades. He gave his lyrical side free reign while
pushing his young compatriots to play at the peak of their
abilities. The results have been two albums, The Soul
of Things and Suspended Night, that have moved
Stanko from a highly interesting, first rate talent about
whom few outside his homeland were familiar, to one of the
music’s current top performers. Unfortunately, there
are still far too few who are familiar with Stanko’s
work, but that appears to be changing. The release of Stanko’s
:rarum collection, along with his two most recent recordings,
should help ensure that a large group of American listeners
will be exposed to his considerable talent.