Rune Grammofon paired
Arve Henriksen's Chron album with Cosmic Creation early in 2014, revealing two aspects of the composer/improviser's meticulous, singular perception of sound as abstraction and perception, both inner and outer. While it is equally intimate,
The Nature of Connections couldn't be more different from its immediate predecessors. This is a completely acoustic recording whose approach combines neo-classical music with folk-inflected chamber jazz.
Henriksen leaves most of the composing to his collaborators:
Nils Økland (violin, hardanger fiddle, viola),
Svante Henryson (cello),
Gjermund Larsen (violin, hardanger fiddle), and
Mats Eilertsen (double bass). Only ace drummer
Audun Kleive stays out of the compositional mix. The set's hinge piece, "Hymn," was written by
Henriksen's
Supersilent collaborator
Ståle Storløkken. These eight pieces are gentle, all beautifully textured and, for the most part, lyrical. "Blå Veg,"
Henriksen's only original, was arranged by the entire group. It opens with piccolo trumpet, hardanger, cello, and viola, following an elliptical yet defined melodic line of exposition. It is unequivocally "pretty." The interplay of strings is supported by an underlying (quiet) drone. The smaller trumpet gives way to a muted, standard one, and the effect is so reverential, it is almost spiritual.
Larsen's "Hambopolskavalsen" is almost a folk song, with the strings employed as a chorus of harmonic voices. A tenderly articulated bassline and hardanger add dimension with percussion interceding only as a marker to reset the cyclical melody.
Henryson's "Seclusive Song" is a neo- classical chamber piece that employs something approaching jazz in its cadenzas. "Hymn," with its thematic cellos, bowed double bass, violin, and viola with brushed snare, is almost cinematic, expanding the color palette of recording.
Henriksen's trumpet is used sparingly, with the melodic weight taken up by his piano.
Eilertsen delivers a gorgeous bass solo to underscore that effect. Though
Henryson's "Keen" commences on a note of mild dissonance, its pulsing cellos, tight snare, and the interplay between piccolo and standard trumpet, almost make it a jazz-pop tune. Its groove is defined -- though its middle section evidences an Eastern-tinged, more active dialogue between cello bass and trap kit. "Arko Akropolis" is a group piece that feels like an expanded intro, with rumbling middle-register piano, pulsing strings, and a hardanger solo interlude that frames the closer,
Eilertsen's "Salm." The latter is a brief folk melody adorned by his bassline, offering a (slightly) wider dimension to its restrained lyric before
Henriksen's trumpet enters to expand its premise ever so slightly; it sounds and feels like a lullaby.
The Nature of Connections may not have been primarily composed by
Henriksen, but his refined dynamic and texturally subtle approach are trademarks that illustrate his spirit of inquiry into the mystery of sound -- no matter how economic the musical structure. These works, taken as a whole, affirm by their very articulation the indefinable depths of beauty itself. [
The Nature of Connections was also released on LP.] ~ Thom Jurek