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Ketil Bjørnstad:
Early Piano Music 2CD
Ketil
Bjørnstad:
piano
HUBROCD2506 CD 7033662025060 Release:
With “Early Piano Music”, the albums Preludes Vols. 1 & 2 and
Pianology from the mid-1980s are once again becoming available.
These recordings have been unavailable since the mid-90s, and
have been very much in demand.
Ketil Bjørnstad: “People have been
asking me for many years why these recordings are not being
re-released. It is very gratifying that HUBRO is releasing them
now, and this also serves as a reminder that even if you develop
and change throughout the years, there are some central concepts
which can be pursued throughout life and which are closer to you
than any others. For me, these are mainly melody, harmony and
structure. And the amazing possibilities inherent in
improvisation.”
These three albums are from the middle period of Ketil
Bjørnstad’s career, and were recorded in 1984 and 1987. The
music evokes imagery, and like so much of Bjørnstad’s music it
straddles the border between classical and jazz. All the music
on the records has been composed, but there is plenty of space
for improvisation.
In
the 1970s and 80s Ketil Bjørnstad enjoyed considerable success
with several large-scale, ambitious recording projects for the
Norwegian market, including Leve Patagonia, Tidevann and Aniara.
His collaboration with Manfred Eicher and ECM, which would bring
his music to a large, international audience, did not begin
until 1993 with the album Water Stories.
“My
decision to produce both Preludes 1 & 2 and Pianology myself was
probably due to the fact that I was in the process of developing
a new artistic idiom,”
says Bjørnstad in the liner notes. “All of the major projects
in which I had been involved had demanded a great deal of time
and energy, and I began to focus on a more minimalist idiom. I
rediscovered the pleasure of exploring the grand piano, and was
once again reminded of the extraordinary richness of the
instrument’s sound, especially in a small and naked format.”
He
finds a close interconnection between these two recordings and
the music he later recorded for ECM. Several of the preludes are
found in a larger format on later recordings such as The Sea
(1995).
The
24 compositions in total that constitute Preludes 1 & 2 were
written by Bjørnstad in 1984. They were first released on two
LPs by the Norwegian underground label Uniton, which is most
renowned for its releases with Holy Toy, Conrad Schnitzler, Fra
Lippo Lippi and Harold Budd. “I
recorded them in two different studios a few months apart. The
first twelve were recorded in the summer of 1984 at the newly
opened Rainbow Studio, which had not yet gone digital, with
sound technician Espen Dahl. I recorded the next twelve at
Rosenborg Studio in February 1985, with my old friend Hans
Petter Danielsen. This was our last project together after years
of collaboration.”
Preludes 1 & 2 were later released as a CD set on Bjørnstad’s
own label, Hermitage, and the Japanese label September, in 1993.
Pianology was first released by the Norwegian label Hete Blikk
in 1987, and re-issued on Hermitage and September in 1994.
“I
recorded Pianology in 1987, and as far as I recall it was one of
the first digital recordings made by Jan Erik Kongshaug in his
already-famous Rainbow Studio. The Steinway Model C in the
studio, which I really loved, enabled me to work in an even more
minimalist idiom.”
Liner notes by Ketil Bjørnstad in the booklet insert.
About Ketil
Bjørnstad
Ketil Bjørnstad has been one of Norway’s most prolific artists
since he launched parallel careers as author, composer and
musician. So far he has released over 50 albums and published
over 30 books, and has a devoted audience of listeners and
readers at home in Norway and in the rest of the World. He has
written rock operas, ballet music and film music for filmmakers
such as Ken Loach and Jean-Luc Godard. Bjørnstad trained as a
classical pianist under Amalie Christie and Robert Riefling,
among others, in addition to studies in London and Paris. He
held his debut as a concert pianist at the age of 16 with Béla
Bartók’s Piano Concerto No. 3. Bjørnstad eventually became
active in Oslo’s young music scene at Club 7, and began to
explore jazz and rock in close collaboration with guitarist
Terje Rypdal, bass player Arild Andersen, drummer Jon
Christensen, the American cellist David Darling, and others.
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