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Jens Thomas

Born in 1970, Jens Thomas grew up with rock music before discovering jazz and studying with Dieter Glawischnig at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg.

However, despite forming the band Triocolor in 1993, he had achieved only modest success until his first solo album, "Endlich allein," received enthusiastic praise from Michael Naura in 1999. This, in turn, caught the attention of ACT boss Siggi Loch.

At Loch's suggestion, Thomas, together with Paolo Fresu and Antonello Salis, interpreted compositions by the great Ennio Morricone in a surprisingly new and distinctive way. The album "You Cant Keep A Good Cowboy Down" released in January 2000, was a sensation.

Critics raved about it. Even more successful was the album "Shadows in the Rain"
, recorded in a duo with saxophonist Christof Lauer and featuring guest artists, which explored songs by Sting. It was named "Album of the Year" across Europe, from French Jazzman to British Jazzwise, and received the Annual Prize of the German Record Critics in Germany.

If you add the still highly acclaimed duet album "Pure Joy" by Thomas and Lauer from 2003, Jens Thomas, in just over three years, received "more awards and accolades than any other German jazz musician, except for Albert Mangelsdorff," as noted by Ulrich Olshausen in FAZ.

However, Jens Thomas, who celebrated all these successes precisely because of his uncompromising search for new paths and constantly changing perspectives, cared little for appearances. Musically, he was drawn to something different, and he left ACT for a theater interlude.

He accompanied the Munich Kammerspiele production of "Othello" as a singer and improviser on the piano.

In 2011, Thomas made an extraordinary comeback at ACT with "Speed Of Grace," a tribute to the music of Australian hard rockers AC/DC. However, it's not loud and rocky; instead, it's balladic and intimate.

He reinterprets songs like "Highway To Hell" or "The Jack" in a completely different way, turning hard rock into lyrical chamber music, creating deeply dimmed, impressionistic, and entirely improvised ballads.

Jens Thomas also surprises as an exceptional singer, and on seven tracks, the Nordic-lyric Finnish trumpeter Verneri Pohjola joins Thomas on his somewhat different rock 'n' roll train.

Releases

Fahrt ins Blaue III - dreamin in the spirit of jazz
Various Artists - Fahrt ins Blaue III - dreamin in the spirit of jazzCD / digital Esbjörn Svensson E.S.T. Symphony Youn Sun Nah, Ulf Wakenius & Lars Danielsson Wolfgang Haffner Quartet feat. Dusko Goykovich Nils Landgren Quartet Paolo Fresu, Richard Galliano &Jan Lundgren Julian & Roman Wasserfuhr, Tim Lefebvre & Nate Wood Viktoria Tolstoy Cæcilie Norby & Lars Danielsson Matthieu Saglio &Vincent Peirani Ulf Wakenius Norah Jones, Joel Harrison & David Binney Jan Lundgren Quartet Michael Wollny & Vincent Peirani Natalia Mateo Jens Thomas & Christof Lauer Daydreams and soothing stories...in the Spirit of Jazz "There's a place for us, somewhere a place for us. Peace and quiet and open air wait for us. Somewhere…". These words from the classic song from Leonard Bernstein's “West Side Story” set the tone for "Fahrt ins Blaue III - dreamin' in the Spirit of Jazz": this is uplifting music, to take the mind and the soul to a place of safety. The kind of quiet interlude in a day which is always restorative. Switch off and then switch back on – better focused. We find calm, intimacy, thoughtfulness here; the sixteen tracks in this compilation have a sense of flow, while also allowing the listener to wander off into all kinds of musical dream worlds....From the very first spacious piano tones of Esbjörn Svensson’s "Ajar", one feels time standing blissfully still. This little gem, and the "e.s.t. Prelude" which follows it, is our entry point into the dreamy universe which will open itself up to us over the next 67 minutes. Youn Sun Nah's bittersweet "Lento", based on the music of Russian composer Alexander Scriabin, gently emerges, seamlessly followed by Dusko Goykovich’s wonderfully warm and sad muted trumpet as he contemplates the falling of "Autumn Leaves" with Wolfgang Haffner's "Kind of Cool" ensemble. Then we hear singer/trombonist Nils Landgren, gentle almost to the point of weightlessness in "Somewhere". There is poetry and the originality in Paolo Fresu, Richard Galliano and Jan Lundg-ren’s Mare Nostrum Trio: we hear Swedish pianist Lundg-ren’s earwormish ballad “Aurore”. Lundgren also appears with his own quartet, with some hushed lyrical magic from Finnish saxophonist Jukka Perko in "No.9". On "Fahrt ins Blaue III", Michael Wollny and Vincent Peirani show their astonishing kinship of spirit and their serendipitous ability to move together in their duetting on "The Kiss". Accordionist Peirani is also to be heard with Ricardo Esteve’s heart-rendingly lovely flamenco guitar and cellist Matthieu Saglio on the poignantly sad but uplifting and warmly Mediterranean "Bolero triste". We then hear the Wasserfuhr brothers transport us to New York's Brooklyn Bridge with a sweeping view of the shimmering Manhattan skyline at dusk with their relaxed grooving jazz ballad "Carlo". For peace and inspiration, there’s a man and his guitar: Ulf Wakenius plays Keith Jarrett's "My Song". That is followed by the duo of Caecilie Norby and Lars Danielsson enchanting us with an intimate version of Leonard Cohen's “Hallelujah”. Two more singers take us to the world of cinema: Natalia Mateo sings Wojciech Młynarski's gorgeous lyrics to Krzysztof Komeda’s “Lullaby” from "Rosemary's Baby", starting in her native Polish, and drifting into utterly beautiful wordlessness; and Viktoria Tolstoy offers that most pensive and gentle of breakup songs, "Why Should I Care". from the Clint Eastwood film "True Crime", with some stupendous guitar work from Krister Jonsson. And then there is an appearance by inimitable Norah Jones alongside guitarist Joel Harrison and saxophonist David Binney. She recorded a languid version of the country song "Tennessee Waltz" on ACT, on the album "Free Country", from the same era as her 27 million-seller "Come Away With Me". Pianist Jens Thomas and saxophonist Christof Lauer give us the quiet poise of “Green Dance”. This epilogue sums up the aesthetic of "Fahrt ins Blaue III": dreamlike music of beauty, tranquillity and calm – that it is well worth spending some time with. Credits:Mastered by Klaus Scheuermann

€12.90*
The Jubilee Album: 20 Magic Years
For the 20th birthday of ACT-Music, the Jubilee Album presents 20 highlights from the moving history of the Munich label. A real treat for connoisseurs, explorers, researchers and the curious, as well as for anyone seeking the Spirit of Jazz.

€4.90*
Speed Of Grace
Jens Thomas' tribute to AC/DC in intimate, improvised ballads – a lyrical, chamber music reinterpretation of hard rock classics.

€17.50*
Piano Works: Romantic Freedom
A curated compilation by Siggi Loch featuring solo performances from twelve top pianists, showcasing exceptional jazz piano talent.

€17.50*
Piano Works 5 CD Box Set
Piano Works: Four albums of masterful solo piano recordings – a comprehensive 5-CD collection for all piano music lovers.

€49.90*
Pure Joy
Jens Thomas and Christof Lauer deliver emotive, wordless hymns blending piano and saxophone in a captivating jazz experience.

€17.50*
Shadows In The Rain
Christof Lauer & Jens Thomas with Sidsel Endresen and Cikada String Quartet – awarded Vierteljahrespreis 4/2001, recorded at Rainbow Studio Oslo.

€17.50*

Concerts