Owing little to the main stem US jazz tradition, composer Michael Gibbs' orchestral suite Europeana has more in common with the work of folk-influenced English composers like Vaughan Williams, Benjamin Britten and Malcolm Arnold, and their particular varieties of English lyricism.
It's a work of magnificence and beauty which was barely noticed on original release eleven years ago and seems since to have been almost entirely forgotten. This audio enhanced reissue provides a welcome opportunity to celebrate it anew.
Despite co-funding from German radio, the recording represented a major investment for the independent ACT label in the days before it struck international gold with the Esbjorn Svensson Trio. The project involved commissioning Gibbs to suggest a group of European folk songs, and then arrange them for the Radio Philharmonia Hannover symphony orchestra, augmented by a jazz trio (pianist Joachim Kuhn, bassist Jean-Francois Jenny-Clark and drummer Jon Christensen), plus a diverse group of guest soloists (including trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff, tenor horn player Django Bates and accordionist Richard Galliano). Gibbs also conducted the orchestra.
If you have an aversion to folksiness, stop worrying. While some folk-based projects may indeed adopt a tone best suited to the kindergarten, Gibbs' perspective on Europeana is by contrast big, majestic, adult and mysterious.
The suite includes thirteen traditional tunes: Irish, Scottish, Norwegian, French, Finnish, German, Swedish and Spanish. There's nothing from the English tradition, but it's Gibbs' cultural background—and in particular his very English scoring of the Philharmonia's strings and woodwinds, which is a joy in itself—which defines the album. Kuhn gets star billing on the packaging of this reissue, but he is essentially "just" another of the soloists. His astringent, going on dissonant style is, however, a valuable bit of grit in the machine.
Although it was regarded by most commentators as a quaint curiosity back in US-centric 1995, hindsight reveals Europeana as an important stepping stone in the evolution of contemporary European folk-jazz—not as influential as the work of Jan Garbarek or John Surman perhaps, but every bit as distinctive and enduring. The album may not have made the year-end best-of lists first time around, but it surely deserves to do so now as a reissue. - Chris May
It's a work of magnificence and beauty which was barely noticed on original release eleven years ago and seems since to have been almost entirely forgotten. This audio enhanced reissue provides a welcome opportunity to celebrate it anew.
Despite co-funding from German radio, the recording represented a major investment for the independent ACT label in the days before it struck international gold with the Esbjorn Svensson Trio. The project involved commissioning Gibbs to suggest a group of European folk songs, and then arrange them for the Radio Philharmonia Hannover symphony orchestra, augmented by a jazz trio (pianist Joachim Kuhn, bassist Jean-Francois Jenny-Clark and drummer Jon Christensen), plus a diverse group of guest soloists (including trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff, tenor horn player Django Bates and accordionist Richard Galliano). Gibbs also conducted the orchestra.
If you have an aversion to folksiness, stop worrying. While some folk-based projects may indeed adopt a tone best suited to the kindergarten, Gibbs' perspective on Europeana is by contrast big, majestic, adult and mysterious.
The suite includes thirteen traditional tunes: Irish, Scottish, Norwegian, French, Finnish, German, Swedish and Spanish. There's nothing from the English tradition, but it's Gibbs' cultural background—and in particular his very English scoring of the Philharmonia's strings and woodwinds, which is a joy in itself—which defines the album. Kuhn gets star billing on the packaging of this reissue, but he is essentially "just" another of the soloists. His astringent, going on dissonant style is, however, a valuable bit of grit in the machine.
Although it was regarded by most commentators as a quaint curiosity back in US-centric 1995, hindsight reveals Europeana as an important stepping stone in the evolution of contemporary European folk-jazz—not as influential as the work of Jan Garbarek or John Surman perhaps, but every bit as distinctive and enduring. The album may not have made the year-end best-of lists first time around, but it surely deserves to do so now as a reissue. - Chris May
Tracks
01. Castle In Heaven
02. Black Is The Colour Of My True Love’s Hair
03. The Shepherd Of Breton
04. The Ingrian Rune Song
05. The Groom’ Sister
06. Norwegian Psalm
07. Three Angels
08. Heaven Has Created
09. She Moved Through The Fair
10. Crebe De Chet
11. Midnight Sun
12. Londonderry Air
13. Otra Jazzpaña
JOACHIM KUHN piano
JEAN-FRANCOIS JENNY-CLARK bass
JON CHRISTENSEN drums
ORCHESTRA RADIO PHILHARMONIA HANNOVER NDR
THEO WIEMES french horn (1)
DOUGLAS BYRD oboe (2)
DJANGO BATES tenor horn (2)
RICHARD GALLIANO accordion (3)
CHRISTOF LAUER soprano saxophone (5) tenor saxophone (7)
MARKUS STOCKHAUSEN flugel horn (6) piccolo trumpet (8)
MARTIN STOLL oboe (6)
ALBERT MANGELSDORFF trombone (7)
KLAUS DOLDINGER soprano saxophone (9)
VOLKER WORLIZSCH violin (12)
MICHAEL GIBBS arrangements, conductor
Music composed and arranged by Michael Gibbs
ACT - ACTSACD 9804 - 2