Cim Meyer, All That ... (Denmark)
Carsten Dahl (p), Lennart Ginman (b), Thomas Blachman (d). The three gentlemen's merits are well documented, and this listener has high expectations. The sound is excellent and the dosage of reverb exquisite. It takes some time to come to terms with the airy, slow, and understated feeling. But slowly and quietly, the first melancholy and later also more angular and combative expression finds its way into the mind. You hear these three musicians as an extension of blessed Bill Evans' famous trios. As the written surnames already indicate, it is a joint project – even more so than it applied to Evans' trios. Each of the 15 relatively short pieces on WHAT'S TO COME is based on an idea, an unwritten loose sketch that has been played out together through improvisation in the studio. As a conversation where all three are more or less in agreement on the subject and refer to the luminaries of jazz in the 1950s and 60s (including Jan Johansson in A Children's Walk, Thelonious Monk in The Rock And Roll Swing Experience and Avant-garde Muzak In The Lush Palm Garden, and there are shadows of Miles Davis in Waiting Room Anxiety Blues, where Dahl reverses the rhythm in his left hand). It should not surprise me if all the pieces appear in the order in which they are conceived and recorded. Despite the predominance of tracks in slow tempos, this listener senses an increasing intensity. This is partly due to Blachman’s dynamic markings (also when he competently plays with brushes) and Ginman’s bass-lines, which inspire Dahl, who as usual is not afraid to break boundaries and conventions both harmonically and rhythmically. Where other pianists fear failure, Dahl finds new sounds and figures that can be developed. The playful approach without a written or pre-rehearsed structure is the project’s great strength and small weakness. This particular trio indisputably gets great art out of it – could it be even more interesting if there was a more compositional and rehearsed structure, or would the current fresh expression become a stiffened mask?