Reissued by Heptagon in 1994,
300.000 is an excellent collection of live and studio recordings from
Jan Johansson's late period. The material, which was recorded in Stockholm in 1967 and 1968, is as rewarding as it is diverse.
Johansson is in fine form on everything from the standard "Willow Weep for Me" to the traditional Scandinavian folk song "Visa Fran Jarna" and four compositions of his own, including "300.000 km/s" and "A + B." Those eerie
Johansson originals find the Swedish pianist being influenced by American avant-garde jazz, but instead of going for the abrasive, dense approach that
Albert Ayler and
Cecil Taylor were known for, he favors space and shows his appreciation of
Sun Ra's innovations.
300.000 proves that
Johansson still had a lot left to say during the last years of his life; one can only speculate on what else he would have done had a car crash not killed him on November 9, 1968. ~ Alex Henderson