The Tomasz Stańko Quintet was one the greatest European free jazz ensembles of the late ’60s and early ’70s. It toured extensively in the West, but within the span of five years of its existence it made just three albums – one in Poland Music for K (a 1970 tribute to the late Krzysztof Komeda) and two in Germany: Jazzmessage From Poland (1972) and Purple Sun (1973). It is something of a sensation that now, fifty years later, the tapes of two German concerts have been discovered and will be soon released by Astigmatic Records as Wooden Music I (Radio Bremen, June 1972) to be followed by Wooden Music II (Hamburg, November 1972). The title of both volumes refers to the type of instruments they played. Zbigniew Seifert just switched from the alto saxophone to violin, Bronek Suchanek played acoustic bass (mostly arco), Janusz Stefański was on drums, Janusz Muniak on woodwinds (tenor saxophone and flute, plus percussion). They created a carpet of sound for Stańko trumpet to take off and soar freely high above. It was free jazz in its purest, with the musicians in peak form, at their most creative, daring and ferocious. The music was spontaneously improvised on the spot, with no fixed forms, hints or discussions. Colorful, impressionistic, painterly, but also full of energy, intensity and fire. Bassist Bronek Suchanek, who has lived in America for several decades now, is the legendary Quintet’s only survivor.