From the opening flurry of discordant semitones, the following percussive entrance of saxophone and then guitar, it becomes clear that there is something rather weird and threatening about Some Kubricks of Blood. Much is surely due to the disharmonies and clashes of timbre—grating guitar over accordion gushes—and the abrupt rhythmic collisions, in addition to intentional off-mike squawks and burrs. And then, of course, there is the avowed subject matter: those images and injuries drawn from deep in director Stanley Kubrick's psyche, or at least those he managed to portray on film.
Finnish guitarist Kalle Kalima has produced some disturbing aural vistas On "Room 237," grindingly slow tempos evolve in jolts and lurches with little apparent development or resolution, unless the scenes from the film—1980's The Shining—spring to mind. Kalima doesn't so much provide an alternative soundtrack to the films as he does an evocation of some of its images and locations. Kalima's quartet, K-18, is at the top of its experimental tree, with the leader affording its members plenty of room to stretch their creative skills through his compositions.
K-18's members have all worked extensively with Kalima over the years, with saxophonist Mikko Innanen also sharing in friendship and rivalry since childhood. Kalima's scores may be highly precise for the most part, but scattered improvisational pockets draw on the clear strength of Finland's homogeneous jazz fraternity, despite Kalima now being based in Berlin.
The balance between Innanen's rhythmic but atonal playing and bassist Teppo Hauta-aho's polyrhythmic improvisation is tense but pleasing. Veli Kujala plays an accordion equipped to play quarter tones that have previously been unavailable to the instrument, and is the first voice heard on the disc. Kalima wrote the music with the accordion's microtonal features specifically in mind, and Kujala fulfills his role admirably, with his reedy tonality adding a share of contrast—native and occidental. Around these traits, Kalima similarly uses his guitar to shock and confront, much like fellow Finnish guitarist Raoul Bjorkenheim, a past teacher and mentor to both Kalima and Kuijala. But Kalima's method is more sparse and subtle, and his tone less strident, making his compositions more intriguing—disturbing, even.
Whatever parallels can be drawn with Kubrick's films—and Juhana Blomstedt's cover, with a painted Moebius loop, surely intimates a coiled spool of 35mm film—it is hard to distance this music from associations evoked by Kubrick on the psyche. Yet by granting time to these four investigators of the paranormal under Kalima's direction, K-18 proffers an open invitation to a roller coaster ride into Kubrick's darker traits. And all is not unforgiving or dark. The 46-second burst of musical errata attributed to "HAL 9000,"from 1968's 2001: A Space Odyssey, and the off-mic tweaks and scratches in the middle of "Overlook Hotel" (The Shining's location) and the bubbling theme that concludes it, are reminders that, for the open-minded, there is humor in horror. - Anthony Shaw
Finnish guitarist Kalle Kalima has been living in Berlin for some years but has remained in close contact with many Finnish musicians he grew up with, under the protective wing of guitarist Raoul Bjorkenheim. This quartet project dedicated to the visionary madness of director Stanley Kubrick allows him to call back to his side old friends-rivals such as the saxophonist Mikko Innanen, the bassist Teppo Hauta-aho and the accordionist Veli Kujala, an instrumentalist much more grim than the more famous Kimmo Pojohnen.
The accordion used in this album was modified to be able to also play quarter tones and Kujala's lopsided excursions are one of the most evident and at the same time most peculiar expressive figures of this music that is so scratchy and corrosive, more punctilious than pointillistic.
Kalle Kalima seems to stay a little apart and uses his guitar more as a source of sounds than as an instrument understood in a traditional way. The six strings are often beaten, crushed, scratched, almost as if the mysteries of Kubrick's films could be hidden between the knurled coils of copper or brass that cover the thicker strings of his instrument.
Innanen's sax is instead more linear and ethereal, but follows completely abstract rules that sometimes recall the very early Jan Garbarek of Afric Pepperbird and Sart. Distant and faded memories that reveal themselves in the fog of the Overlook Hotel hunting for the ghost of Stephen King. - AAJ Italy Staff
Tracks
1. Overlook Hotel
2. Hal 9000
3. Room 237
4. Overlook Bar
5. Korova Milk Bar
6. Parris Island
7. Dugan Manor House
8. Earth Light Room
9. Shining
KALLE KALIMA electric and acoustic guitars
MIKKO INNANEN alto, soprano and baritone saxophone
VELI KUJALA quartet-tone accordion
TEPPO HAUTO-AHO double bass
All compositions by Kalle Kalima except "Dugan Manor House" by Kalle Kalima and Teppo Hauta-aho
Recorded January 30-31, 2007 at Studio M1, Finnish Broadcasting Company (YLE) in Helsinki, Finland
TUM Records – TUM CD 022