Lars Danielsson: Echomyr
CD / Vinyl (LP, 180g) / digital
Lars Danielsson double bass, cello, gimbri (#10), piano (#10), electric guitar (#6)
Gregory Privat pianoJohn Parricelli guitar
Magnus Öström drums & percussionGuests:
Arve Henriksen trumpet on #3, 7Magnus Lindgren flute & alto flute on #6Carolina Grinne English horn on #8
Echomyr, the title of the fifth ‘Liberetto’ album from Swedish bass and cello master and composer Lars Danielsson, signifies music that has come from a particularly deep place in the soul. “The album title is a newly invented word,” he says. “The ‘echo’ part describes an expansive field where sound resonates; and ‘myr’ is an old Norse word for ‘moor’”. These are sounds from the depths, from deep within oneself. Especially now, we are asking ourselves what it is that makes each of us human and unique. And that is what I have been searching throughout my whole life as a musician: not simply to copy things that already exist, but to find something that comes from my own heart and from within myself."Echomyr sees Lars Danielsson continuing along his own distinct musical path, combining the freedom, harmony and rhythmic intensity of jazz with the vision of a cultivated sound that comes from his classical roots, together with the catchy melodies of popular and folk songs. Danielsson's compositions are unmistakable. He is a consummate melodist with a particular capacity to make complex things sound simple and natural. Danielsson, who grew up with rock and roll and free jazz, says that the way he used to compose was in a complicated way, with the aim of hiding behind the complexity. Today, what he seeks is the very opposite: clarity. ‘It's not difficult to write complicated music. But writing music that people will understand and that nevertheless has personality and depth – that's my goal.’
It is precisely this balance of depth and lightness that makes Danielsson's music so special – and on Echomyr he has taken it to a new stage in its evolution. For Danielsson, continuity and development are more valuable than the constant search for the new or the spectacular. He has been working with the core of his ‘Liberetto’ quartet – e.s.t. drummer Magnus Öström and renowned UK guitarist John Parricelli – for over 15 years. Tigran Hamasyan had the piano chair in the band in its early years, and since 2017 Gregory Privat has been the band's permanent pianist. Privat brings an ideal mix of extroversion and virtuosity with the kind of unselfish playing that works to the common good within the band and to bring out the very best in each song. In addition, three soloists appear on the album, and they are all musicians who share a characteristic: their instrumental playing is remarkable for its vocal quality, so they add their ‘voices’ to the album’s contrasted tracks: trumpeter Arve Henriksen, flautist Magnus Lindgren and Carolina Grinne on cor anglais.
When composing, Danielsson says he thinks neither of what the market wants, nor of success. Over time, he has accumulated a substantial catalogue of compositions, and they form the starting point for him – often together with his wife and fellow musician Cæcilie Norby and close confidants from his label ACT – to work on the dramaturgy, to form the shape and the flow of an album that can really touch people. But even then, he says, his aim is not to please, but to create honest, deeply felt expression. This is how ‘Something She Said’, the last track on Echomyr, came about. It was inspired by images on the news from war zones such as Gaza and Ukraine. Danielsson does not respond with loudness or anger, but rather with thoughtfulness and compassion. An echo from within – this is music with sincerity.. and clarity...and timelessness.CreditsMusic composed by Lars Danielsson
Horn arrangement on #3 by Arve Henriksen
Recorded April 6-9 and Oct 28-31, 2025
Recorded and mixed by Bo Savik at Tia Dia Studios, Mölnlycke, Sweden
Mastered by Klaus Scheuermann
Piano tuning by Bengt Eriksson
Photo by Peter PousardProduced by Cæcilie Norby, Magnus Öström & Lars DanielssonCover art Peter Krüll, used by kind permission of the artist
Design by Siggi Loch
SHALOSH: What We Are Made OfCD /
Vinyl (LP, 180g)
/ digital Gadi Stern pianoDavid Michaeli double bassMatan Assayag drums“From the very start of SHALOSH, we have always said that we would never commit to any one genre but keep our music as open as possible,” drummer Matan Assayag says. “It’s the best way to bring ourselves fully to each song and the only way to stay truly authentic.” In more than a decade since its founding, the trio has made its signature this freewheeling, energetic and deeply-felt blend of jazz improvisation with everything from rock to Arabic music, western classical composition and pop melodics. Theirs is a journeying and infectiously engaging sound that has won fans from across the globe. What We Are Made Of, the band’s fourth album for ACT, impressively brings together all the influences that shape SHALOSH’s unmistakable overall sound.” Featuring a dazzlingly imaginative takes on ‘90s Europop anthem Barbie Girl, Oasis’ Don’t Look Back in Anger, Natalie Imbruglia’s early-noughties hit ballad Torn, Muses’ heavily rocking Hysteria and their own intricate, original compositions, the record is the group’s most open to date. It also marks the first time they have collaborated with a producer, ACT’s director, Andreas Brandis.“We’re a piano trio in a world of piano trios and with six albums already under our belt we wanted to make sure we kept pushing ourselves out of our comfort zone,” pianist Gadi Stern says. “That resulted in bringing outside compositions into the group that we could reimagine. It also meant enlisting Andreas, who we have known and valued for years, as our first producer. He really encouraged our approach and the result was immensely creative.” Workshopping their ideas across a week of intense rehearsals with Brandis in Berlin, the group honed their cover versions and originals into the nine final tracks on the album.“When I approach a cover I always look for something lacking in the performance that the composition has,” Stern says. “With Barbie Girl, it’s a brilliantly cynical song with great lyrics, it’s minor and has a melancholic melodic element to it but the performance is ‘90s Europop. I broke down all the elements to see how we could put it back together and make it more faithful to the essence of the song. While on Don’t Look Back in Anger I was on a walk during a trip to Tashkent in Uzbekistan and the groove for it just popped into my head. I recorded it on my phone and the whole idea only took 15 minutes.” Other tracks took longer to gestate, like the trio’s modernist jazz version of Torn. “We had previously recorded it for an album in 2018 but it didn’t make the cut because it was 12 minutes long and so messy,” bassist David Michaeli says. “We played it to Andreas during the Berlin sessions and he was great at telling us what to delete and what to keep and suddenly it made sense.” The trio’s originals, meanwhile, take shape in the achingly beautiful downtempo melodics of Ella Plays, which was inspired by Stern’s daughter Ella and the poetry of Khalil Gibran, the dark, swirling groove and vamping piano phrases of Point of Gravity and the meditative harmonics of Circle.“The band is ultimately a safe space for the three of us to freely express ourselves and share our opinions and ideas,” Mahan Assayag says. “We accept each other and all of our songs are a collective effort, which is what you hear in the finished music – the variety of influence and experience that makes us who we are. It’s why we called the album What We Are Made Of.“ SHALOSH celebrate freedom, the beauty of contrasts, the value of truly listening to one another, and the deeply human process of creative searching and finding — qualities that seem especially important right now.”„CreditsRecorded September 10–11, 2025Recorded by Klaus ScheuermannMixed and mastered by Klaus ScheuermannProduced by Andreas BrandisCover art by Ross Bleckner, used by kind permission of the artistDesign by Siggi Loch
Peter Somuah: Walking Distance
CD / Vinyl (LP, 180g) / digital
Peter Somuah trumpet, flugelhorn Anton de Bruin rhodes, organ, keys Jens Meijer drumsMarijn van de Ven bassDanny Rombout percussion Heleen Vellekoop flute on #2Nia Ralinova cello on #2, 3
Since the release of his ACT debut Letter to the Universe (2023) and its follow-up Highlife (2024), Ghanaian-born trumpeter Peter Somuah, now based in Rotterdam, has established himself as a bridge-builder between cultures and continents. “An excellent musician and jazz at its most international,” notes the BBC. For the globetrotting Peter Somuah, musical influences from geographically distant cultures are always just a step away. This is precisely what his new album Walking Distance is about.
Walking Distance is an exploration of musical unity — a journey through diverse genres that, despite their differences, remain deeply interconnected. The album blends elements of post-bop jazz, Arab music, Latin grooves, blues, funk, and the influences of Ghanaian music, resulting in a sonic reflection of the idea that cultural boundaries are far closer than they appear. They are, quite literally, just walking distance away.
Drawing on this broad range of influences, the album’s pieces tell stories of everyday experiences: of being on the move in the bustle of life, of setting out and arriving, of universal actions that connect all people. This sense of “storytelling” once again proves to be one of Peter Somuah’s great strengths on Walking Distance, as it was on his previous albums. With a tone that is at times radiant, at times fragile, he takes listeners along on a deeply personal journey – from Ghana’s capital Accra with its vibrant highlife scene, via stations in Asia, all the way to Europe.
The music is carried by the groove and vibe of Somuah’s multinational band, which he assembled in Rotterdam. The band, too, embodies the openness of its leader: the belief that all musicians, regardless of their background, are capable of playing any music in the world, provided they engage attentively and respectfully with its vocabulary and history.
Peter Somuah explains: “I want listeners to feel both grounded and uplifted, reconnecting with themselves and the world around them through sound. Walking Distance represents my search between tradition and innovation. It’s a story of exploring the space between, finding unity in diversity, and using music as a bridge to bring us all closer together.” The way the 29-year-old does this is a reflection of his personality: assured, relaxed, sincere, fearless – and always with a smile.CreditsRecorded between 25 and 27 August 2025 at The Womb Studios, The Hague, NetherlandsRecorded by Tijmen van WageningenMixed by Anton de BruinMastered by Stuart HawkesProduced by Peter Somuah, Anton de BruinComposed by Peter Somuah
Marius Neset & Bergen Big Band: Time to LiveCD / digital Marius Neset tenor & soprano saxophonesAnton Eger drums & percussionBergen Big Band
Norwegian saxophonist Marius Neset is one of the most virtuosic and musically complex players of our time—and a masterful composer and arranger for large ensembles, from orchestra to big band. His album Time to Live, recorded with the Bergen Big Band and drummer Anton Eger, reflects a guiding idea that runs consistently through Neset’s work: music as a source of strength and confidence in dark times. CreditsRecorded by Elaine Maltezos at Lungegårdens Kulturarena, Bergen, Norway, June 2022
Recording Assistant: Mathias Røyrvik
Recording Producer: Martin Winter
Mixed by August Wanngren at Virkeligheden
Mastered by Sofia von Hage and Thomas Eberger at Stockholm Mastering
Additional keyboards on #1, 2, 4 and 7: Morten Schantz
Editing: Elaine Maltezos and Michael Barnes
Artist photos by Helge Hansen, band photo by Stein Hødnebø
Design by Jonas BoströmProduced by Marius Neset & Anton Eger
All music composed and arranged by Marius Neset
Cover photo by Helge Hansen
Mammal Hands: CircadiaCD / Vinyl (LP, 180g) / Limited transparent vinyl
(LP, 180g)
/ digital
Nick Smart pianoJordan Smart saxophoneRob Turner drums Mammal Hand stand at the forefront of a new generation of British musicians for whom jazz is above all a starting point for discovering their own means of expression. The piano/sax/drums trio blends elements of contemporary European jazz vocabulary with rock- and electronica-influenced rhythms and cinematic soundscapes. In doing so, they have succeeded in reaching an international audience that extends far beyond the jazz genre. The band’s sixth album, “Circadia,” marks a new stage of evolution in several ways: it is their first release on the ACT label, allowing them a new quality of visibility and musical freedom. And their first with a new drummer — Rob Turner, the long-time driving force behind British jazz success story GoGo Penguin.“The constants in Mammal Hands’ line-up are the brothers Nick Smart (piano) and Jordan Smart (saxophone). The departure of drummer Jesse Barrett in 2024 forced the two to reflect on what the core of the band really was. As a result, drummer Rob Turner became the new rhythmic backbone of the band. “We have known Rob since we all started out over a decade ago,” Nick Smart says. “We were all part of the UK jazz scene and we always connected over our shared musical instincts and interests. We had to rediscover the soul of our music and Rob has transformed it into something that continues our legacy as well as pushes it forward.” Rob joined the band for a forthcoming summer tour. “We spent time in the van on the road connecting over conversations about life and music and decided we should be working on a new record together once the shows were done,” Jordan says. “We took a musically open-ended approach, sending each other fragments of ideas that drew on the core tenets of the group: improvisation, intensity in the moment and ensuring the whole band moved together dynamically.”Decamping to east London’s Briggs Building for seven-hour shedding sessions once they were off the road, the reformed trio began honing the melodically-hypnotic sound that has become their signature since 2012’s debut Animalia while also injecting a new source of energy. “Myself and Jordan have been drawn to electronic music for a long time, while Rob was pulled towards the open-ended almost spiritual side of our improvisations,” Nick says. “Everything was egalitarian and empathetic in the room, being led by feelings and storytelling first. We would refine ideas until they reached their absolute essence.”The result is the enveloping nine tracks of Circadia. Moving from the intricate melodic freneticism and breakbeat rhythms of opener “Window To Your World” to the undulating harmonies of “Paper Boats”, cacophonic textural breakdowns of “Alia’s Abandon” and doom-laden overtone harmonics of “Submerge”, the album acts as a bridge back to the Mammal Hands sound as well as delving into heavier, often darker sonic territory.
“Nick’s synth bass and Rob’s drumming really locked together, creating a new rhythmic foundation that runs through the whole record,” Jordan says. “The gloves were off and we felt free to push boundaries, which meant exploring more electronic and beat-influenced textures. It was like the ideas from all our different projects were coming full circle into Mammal Hands and forming part of a bigger cycle.”That sense of cyclical progression – like the circadian rhythm that gives the record its title – is equally reflected in the trio’s move from their previous label of Gondwana Records to ACT with this release. “Esbjörn Svensson Trio is one of my biggest influences so to release on ACT feels like coming home as well as starting something new at the same time,” Rob says. “It’s one of the most exciting highlights of my career.”For Nick and Jordan, the transition also marks an era of creative freedom. “There was no pre-conceived idea of how we should sound, no baggage,” Jordan says. “It feels like an open space for people to listen to what we’re doing and for us to engage in all our influences, from jazz to neoclassical, folk, post-rock and beyond.”
Freewheeling yet tethered to their storied history, coming full circle to renew a relationship while drawing on decades of experience, the new phase of Mammal Hands has only just begun.
CreditsRecorded March 20th to March 24th 2025 at Giant Wafer Studios, WalesRecorded by Ben CappMixed by Ben Capp Mastered by Shawn JosephComposed by Mammal HandsProduced by Mammal Hands and Ben CappCover Art by Cecily Eno
Nils Landgren: Love of My Life
CD / Double vinyl (2xLP, 180g) / limited red transparent double vinyl (2xLP, 180g) / digital
Nils Landgren vocals, tromboneThe Swedish Radio Symphony OrchestraUlf Forsberg concertmasterJoel Lyssarides pianoLars Danielsson bassRobert Ikiz drumsIda Sand vocals on #1, 4, 9, 10, 11, piano on #4
Nils Landgren’s 70th birthday is approaching – it will be on 15 February 2026 – and that provides a moment to reflect not only on the scale of his achievement, but also the astonishingly wide range of roles which his life in music has involved. He is one of the most successful European jazz musicians of the past few decades. He is not just a trombonist and singer but also a festival director, mentor, promoter, producer and builder of bridges. He has been awarded of the German Cross of Merit, the Sir George Martin Music Award and the Litteris et Artibus medal, the highest order for art and culture which the Swedish royal family can bestow. He is a tirelessly hard worker, playing up to 200 concerts in peak years. But perhaps most importantly, it is in his nature to be both optimistic and huge-hearted. Everything Nils Landgren does is imbued with love, whether it is for music, for his signature instrument – the red trombone – for the people alongside him on the stage or for those gathered together in front it...And also for his wife the actress Beatrice Järås to whom he has been married for 48 years. What all of this means is that the title of his latest album could not be more apt: ‘Love of My Life’.“When I was young, I wanted to be a pop star... but one playing the trombone. Everyone told me: just forget it, take your place at the back of the orchestra. But that was something I could never have accepted.”
Recorded with a band made up of close friends, plus the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, playing opulent arrangements by seven-time Grammy winner Vince Mendoza, Nils Landgren’s new album casts its net wide, from touching original compositions to songs by Cat Stevens, Leonard Bernstein, Kurt Weill, Herbie Hancock and also colleagues with whom he has worked such as Joe Sample and Ida Sand. This wide-ranging repertoire bears testament to Landgren’s remarkable capacity to bring all kinds of people together, to unite them and make things happen. “The most important thing in music for me is: no pigeonholing. It's always better to explore together a bit, to try to do some new things...”As is so often the case with Nils Landgren, ‘Love of My Life’ also has something of the character of a musical family enterprise: he is accompanied by Sweden's rising piano star Joel Lyssarides, double bass icon Lars Danielsson, drummer Robert Ikiz – also a permanent member of the Nils Landgren Funk Unit – and singer and long-time companion Ida Sand. For Nils Landgren, this is a lifelong dream come true. In the liner notes to the album, he writes: “Basically, I'm still the boy from the small Swedish ironworks town of Degerfors. I still can't quite believe that I have been invited to make music with an entire symphony orchestra and some of my best friends.” Anyone who knows Nils Landgren or has seen him live will know that this statement has absolutely no false modesty about it; it is totally genuine. “Many people say I'm down-to-earth. Even a small mount of fame can make things go completely wrong... My father told me: don't elevate yourself above others. Keep your feet on the ground. That's a very Swedish, Nordic attitude – you should never believe that you are better than others.”
Nils Landgren is exactly the same person onstage that he is away from it. After every concert, he takes the time to talk to each and every visitor, hug them, take photos, sign albums, sometimes for a few hours. He says: “I am strongly motivated to meet the audience. It gives you an incredible amount of energy.” That's why, he says, he doesn't have any hobbies. When he's at home in the small village of Skillinge in southern Sweden, right by the sea, he likes to spend time with his wife Bea and practise the trombone in a wooden hut specially set up for this purpose, where his countless awards are also displayed. He also enjoys swimming in the Baltic Sea, even when the temperature is below ten degrees.“I have no need of bungee jumping or extreme sports – every time I go on stage, it's like free climbing. That's quite enough for me.”And that is why the Nils70 birthday concerts are likely to feel so much like family celebrations: Kicking off on 14 February at the Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg with his band, the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra and the ‘Love Of My Life’ programme, and then on 5 May at the Berlin Philharmonic – together with close friends such as Michael Wollny, Wolfgang Haffner, China Moses, Viktoria Tolstoy, members of the Berlin Philharmonic and many more. And actually, the whole of 2026 will be Nils Landgren Year: together with renowned regional orchestras, Nils Landgren will bring the ‘Love Of My Life’ programme to some of the most beautiful concert halls throughout Germany. “I usually meet orchestras for rehearsals just the day before the concert. Most of the time, it's just me and my trio – there's not even a conductor. As always in jazz, it's all about communication. I hope that the orchestral musicians understand my ideas... and if not, then I'll just have to try to convince them.”
Pianist Michael Wollny once said that ‘with Nils, everything becomes easy.’ Landgren – it seems, at least in music – has no problems, no fears, there are only ever new opportunities to create something beautiful, perhaps even something magical in the moment. Behind this is a deep belief in goodness – not only the good in music, but also in people. And being convinced that the individual can be effective in a world where one can quickly feel lost and powerless. “Seeing things positively gives you so much more strength to carry on,” says Nils Landgren. “And the love which you receive as a result can then be passed on... and then you find that even more has been added when it comes back...”
CreditsAll orchestra arrangements by Vince Mendoza – except Waiting (by Magnus Lindgren)Recorded live at Berwaldhallen, Stockholm — September 2024 & August 2025Recording engineer: Ulf ÖstlingFOH: Jan UgandProduced by Jan B. LarssonExecutive producers: Nils Landgren & Andreas BrandisPhotography: Nikola StankovicCover art by Martin NoelDesign by Siggi Loch
Vision String Quartet: in the fields
CD / Vinyl (LP, 180g) / digital
Florian Willeitner violinDaniel Stoll violinLeonard Disselhorst celloSander Stuart viola
Five years on from their last album, vision string quartet are back, and they’re on stupendous form. ‘In the Fields’, their debut on ACT, is a brilliant demonstration of new worlds opening up to the musically curious, and also a statement of how astonishingly versatile a modern string quartet as good as this one can be. This Berlin-based ensemble - Florian Willeitner (violin), Daniel Stoll (violin), Sander Stuart (viola) and Leonard Disselhorst (cello) - has established itself in recent years as the ‘string quartet of the future’ (Sydney Morning Herald) and is known for its way of traversing between classical music, folk, jazz and new and original compositions. The release is also significant in the context of the ACT label, marking a further step beyond the world of jazz. ACT CEO Andreas Brandis comments on the collaboration: "My connection with the Vision String Quartet goes back many years – it began with the Concerto.21 masterclasses that I lead, and has continued through my close collaboration with the quartet’s first violinist Florian Willeitner. In the future, ACT will open up even more to connections between classical music, contemporary music and improvisation – and Vision String Quartet is an excellent example of this new pathway."The new album is a journey in sound, with a consistent dramaturgy from start to finish. Its shape and structure are based on Béla Bartók's five-movement String Quartet No. 4. For the members of the quartet, Bartók, who found his inspiration ‘in the fields’ and in the folk music of Europe, is their point of departure and their guiding figure. “We were infected by his fascination with what is familiar but also unknown,” the musicians explain, inviting listeners to dive with them into the depths of this music.The opening track, ‘Kopanitsa’, a Bulgarian folk song in 11/8 time, already reveals the earthiness and rhythmic fire that pervades the album. In the booklet, the quartet also refer to this introduction to the new recording as the ‘first movement of our work’. Florian Willeitner heard the piece played by a bagpipe player on the streets of Sofia – authenticity and the simple joy of playing are the order of the day here. This is followed by the second movement from the string quartet in F major by Ravel, an evergreen of the quartet repertoire, to which Willeitner and pianist Joel Lyssarides add a post-impressionistic sound world in ‘Ravel Reloaded’. Bartók's String Quartet No. 4 is the centrepiece of the album: its movements are not only interpreted classically, but also expanded in collaboration with Austrian percussionist Bernhard Schimpelsberger to include a ‘percussive dimension’ that opens up new dimensions for the listener. The musicians describe the experience of playing this work in 13 concerts on their 2023 tour of Australia as a “living in a compositional dream”; living and breathing a work until it became a part of them.In addition to working with Schimpelsberger, the vision players have had many exciting and inspiring encounters and collaborations with other musicians on their numerous concert tours around the world. For ‘In the Fields’, they composed and recorded pieces together with Iranian guitarist Mahan Mirarab and Swedish pianist Joel Lyssarides. These original compositions and arrangements provide the chance to hear further surprises. ‘Lydian Rose’ celebrates the colourfulness of the Lydian mode, “Raindance” allows plucked melodies to dance in the rain, and ‘Convalescence’ by Mahan Mirarab, written during the pandemic, is a wild ride between poetic gentleness and unremitting drive. The final ‘Skymning’ by Lyssarides is a gently flowing folk song that lingers in the ear.
The vision string quartet remain true to their approach of performing as a band, playing the classical repertoire from memory and standing up – a trademark “that means maximum freedom and liveliness for us,” Willeitner explains. The group’s concert formats are equally innovative: dark concerts, cross-genre projects and collaborations with artists such as Fatma Said, Gabriel Kahane and Golnar Shahyar - all are demonstrations of the quartet's versatility.
It is definitely worth coming out of shuffle mode, and listening to this album straight through from start to finish in its intended order. That allows a true appreciation of the thoughtful interplay and contrast between the quartet movements by Bartók, Ravel and Dvořák and the quartet's own compositions. Heard like this, the dramaturgy and the utterly convincing shape of the album can unfold as intended, in all their depth. Together with their extraordinary guests, the four musicians on ‘In the Fields’ have demonstrated with complete conviction what the string quartet in the 21st century can be: packed with life, driven by curiosity, a place where the possibilities are limitless.
CreditsRecorded between 7–12 October 2024 and 29–30 October 2024 at Studio 1,BR Franken, NürnbergProduced by vision string quartetExecutive producer for BR: Beate SampsonRecording producer, engineer, editing, mixing: Christian JaegerRecording and editing technician: Tatjana SchewtschenkoPiano tuner: Theo KretzschmarMastered by Christoph Stickel, Vienna
Cover photo by Sander Stuart
Viktoria Tolstoy & Jacob Karlzon: Who We AreCD / Vinyl (LP, 180g) / digital
Viktoria Tolstoy vocalsJacob Karlzon piano, keyboards, programmingVocalist Viktoria Tolstoy and pianist/keyboard player Jacob Karlzon have worked together as close musical companions and friends for nearly three decades. So, when they choose to call their album Who We Are, it is far more than just an album title: they are making a statement. What they are offering is a kind of musical self-portrait. They are aggregating and celebrating their shared experience and their mutual trust. Theirs is the kind of artistic language which only emerges after two people have been resonating on the same frequency for years. This duo’s journey began in the mid-1990s during one of Tolstoy’s UK tours. Since then they have performed together again and again, recorded six albums together, including Letter To Herbie (2011), a homage to Herbie Hancock, an idol for both of them, and A Moment of Now (2013) the first of their widely acclaimed duo recordings.Viktoria Tolstoy and Jacob Karlzon’s close collaboration has reached the point where their story is no longer something they keep on needing to reinvent – these days they can simply tell it. Tolstoy describes in their interplay they have all the benefit of freedom, while also feeling completely secure: “What we do as a duo is really demanding – but it feels effortless. Jacob speaks my language completely; we follow and complement each other in a magical way.” This strong connection enables the duo to take constant risks, both in the studio and on stage – an essential part of who they are. Karlzon experiences this bond similarly: “Between Viktoria and me, there is no division between soloist and accompanist; we are simply two kindred spirits and we work on a completely equal footing.” This close communication forms the basis of the album – and perhaps the most precise answer to the title: Who We Are is that is a state of being. A mutual understanding. An authentic musical expression of “We”.Karlzon uses a vivid metaphor to help explain this phenomenon. He notes that the songwriters whose work the duo interprets – Billy Joel, Tori Amos, Thom Yorke – are artists who both sing and play the piano. “In a way, that’s exactly what we are trying to do – except we do it as two people. Two individuals, but one musical organism.” This idea – finding expression which is two-voiced but also unified – runs like a uniting thread through the entire production. Who We Are often sounds on a bigger scale than a duo because Tolstoy’s soul-infused jazz vocals and Karlzon’s energetic, harmonically wide-ranging playing do not merely complement each other – they merge.
Alongside distinctive interpretations of songs by iconic songwriters, Who We Are also features a number of original compositions by Jacob Karlzon. On this occasion, and for the first time he has contributed not just the music but also written all the lyrics. Tolstoy, remembers being both surprised and deeply moved when she witnessed Karlzon taking this step: “After I’d received the music, suddenly lyrics for one song after another would begin landing in my inbox – and I was completely lost for words, they were so good!” Karlzon describes the writing process as a return to what he feels is at the root of all art: it’s not about a concept or aiming for commercial viability, but all about being truthful. The lyrics reflect personal experiences as well as observations – a patchwork that nonetheless carries a clear sense of purpose. Tolstoy, in turn, transforms these songs into her own stories. Because she knows Karlzon so well, as she says: “These are words that I can feel. Because I know exactly where they come from.”Who We Are is a mature, warm, and self-assured album by two artists who know each other in all their complexity – and through that, have found the kind of freedom that is increasingly rare. They have produced a collection of work which isn’t trying to explain who they might like to be; it lets us understand who they truly are.CreditsRecorded at Musikaliska Kvarteret, Stockholm, August 25 & 26, 2025, by Lars NilssonAdditional recordings at ChassRoomMixed and mastered at Nilento Studio by Lars NilssonNilento team: Lars Nilsson, Michael Dalvid, and Jenny NilssonProduced by Jacob Karlzon & Lars NilssonJacob Karlzon is a Steinway Artist
Theo Croker and Sullivan FortnerCD / Vinyl / Limited Green Vinyl / digital Theo Croker trumpetSullivan Fortner piano
Forget the boxes.Forget the compositions.Forget the market.Forget if people will get it.Forget everything.
Let's just PLAY.
The album PLAY unites for the first time two of the most important American musicians of the current generation charting new paths in jazz & way beyond: trumpeter Theo Croker and pianist Sullivan Fortner. The two have known each other for more than 20 years, but PLAY is their first recording as joint leaders. Their original idea was to record a collection of modern jazz standards, perhaps including a few versions of popular songs. So Croker and Fortner went into the studio, made a recording… but then discarded it. In its entirety. Theo Croker remembers: ‘As we were playing it, it felt very stale. Not in the sense that the songs weren't any good. But it felt like we were just kind of playing things that had already been recorded many times.’ Sullivan Fortner agrees: ‘We felt it wasn't really us, it felt more like being in school. We had both played a lot of music from the great American songbook in the past. Those are great songs, they were our vehicle for studying. But it wasn't necessarily the music we gravitated towards on gigs. We are always rooted in something that is beyond just jazz. The music we create always tends to reflect the entire diaspora of black American music, as opposed to just one solid genre.”So Croker and Fortner went back into the studio... the very next day. The plan this time: no plan. No compositions (except for the opener A Prayer for Peace). Let’s just PLAY. Theo Croker takes up the story: “We would just come up with spontaneous little ideas: This song we’ll play fast. For this song we pick four notes we were NOT gonna play. This song I play long notes, you play fast notes. I'm gonna come up with a melody and we just see where it goes. In just one hour, we were done.” The process might sound simple in theory, but in reality it has captured the essence of two lifetimes of learning and improvisation. Sullivan Fortner says: “It just felt right, it felt like: this is really us. It pulled inspirationally and spiritually and pulled out a lot of the things we have learned together and in common.”
This extraordinary recording, now being released on ACT has an interesting backstory: Theo Croker has already appeared on ACT as the mainstay of quite a few previous releases: first was Jazz at Berlin Philharmonic XII – Sketches of Miles (recorded in 2021) and then Emile Parisien’s transatlantic project Louise (2022), first in the studio and then live. As a result, ACT CEO Andreas Brandis proposed to the trumpeter that he might release a more acoustic, chamber music-influenced album – something very different from his work as a leader, which tends to inhabit the borderlands between jazz, hip hop and pop. Croker’s first instinctive reaction to the suggestion was positive, and to offer a duo recording with Sullivan Fortner. It was an idea which the two musicians had already been considering for a long time.
PLAY is one of those unusual occasions when everything has fallen into place. In today’s music business, that’s not just rare, it’s a miracle. No rulebook, no questions about genres, no aiming at target groups...or singles...or suitability for streaming. Just the music. Even though a wide variety of influences have coalesced here, the album has a particularly emblematic and vivid statement to make about what the spirit of jazz is: freedom, interaction, the opportunity to express oneself without restriction and to communicate with one another. Or, as Sullivan Fortner puts it: ‘This is just two brothers playing.’
Credits#1 composed by Theo Croker, all other tracks are improvisationsRecorded June 6, 2023 at The Bunker Studio, Brooklyn, NYRecorded by Todd CarterMixed by Todd CarderMastered by Klaus ScheuermannProduced by Theo Croker & Sullivan FortnerPhoto by @ogata_photoSpiral motif used under license from Giorgio Morara
Alamy (vector graphic)Cover design by Siggi Loch
Dhafer Youssef - ShirazCD / Vinyl / digital Dhafer Youssef oud, vocalsDaniel García Diego pianoMario Rom trumpetSwaeli Mbappe electric bassTao Ehrlich drumsNguyên Lê electric guitar, sound design (#4,10,11,13)
There is no mistaking the deep emotions running through Dhafer Youssef's first album as leader on the ACT label, Shiraz. Feelings of love and gratitude on his part are unmistakably present, but he also imbues them with both light and darkness. The Tunisian oud master/vocalist’s pieces have a particular intimacy about them, and noticeably more so than in his previous work – because the story he has to tell here is certainly the most personal of his entire career. The album carries an explicit dedication to his wife Shiraz Fradi. It is about their close relationship and the eventful, at times bittersweet journey which they have shared since being together. Dhafer Youssef is widely regarded as one of the most distinctive musical voices of our time; his art transcends borders, languages, and genres. Already as a child in his native Tunisia, he became acquainted with the Sufi tradition of Islamic music. Most of it was about love, a mystical understanding of human existence and the spirituality behind reality. These themes aroused his curiosity, but it was not long before a place such as Teboulbá in the Sahel region proved too restricting for a young man whose mind was set on seeing more of the world. In 1990, Dhafer Youssef left Tunisia, ending up in Vienna where he initially managed to keep the wolf from the door by cleaning windows, washing dishes, and working as a waiter.. He started carefully networking, and a theatre group brought him into contact with local musicians…
What marked him out above all as a musician was that he had such a clear idea of how his music should sound: rooted in the traditions of Arabic music and Sufism, yet open to contemporary sounds – and these could come from a variety of sources: jazz, chamber music, rock or even electronic music. With these ideas and this vision, the newcomer quickly found his niche. It was not long before top musicians such as Christian Muthspiel, Renaud Garcia-Fons and Markus Stockhausen were playing in his bands. From then on, his progress was rapid, the venues became larger, the projects more ambitious. In addition to European colleagues such as Eivind Aarset, American greats such as Marcus Miller and Herbie Hancock were soon to join the fray. Dhafer Youssef's first contact with ACT came in 2006 on Nguyên Lê's hypnotic and many-hued album Homescape.However, the most important event in Dhafer Youssef's recent past didn’t have to do with music, at least not in the first place: at the end of the noughties, he met Tunisian filmmaker and director Shiraz Fradi – an encounter that, as he says, turned his life on its head. The two became a couple. The oud master, who had hitherto been restless in the extreme became much more grounded and centered. Things were going well until the coronavirus pandemic stopped everything in its tracks. And it was Shiraz and her view of the world that helped Dhafer Youssef to maintain his creativity during this time. He reflects: “Shiraz is a sensitive filmmaker, she sees life as cinema as if my days were transformed into endless scenes, and I was condemned, or perhaps blessed, to compose music without pause. Music, film, writing…they became the rhythm of our everyday life.”
Just after Covid, life changed once again - unexpectedly and dramatically - as Dhafer Youssef recalls: “Shiraz was diagnosed with cancer. But when faced with this reality, she rejected the word fight. Instead, she said: I embrace this new journey. And she walked through it with a grace and resilience that continues to inspire me.” Yet this period also proved to be an enormous challenge: “The third chemotherapy session was a moment I can never erase. I entered the room: Shiraz’ body was there, but her soul had drifted elsewhere. I looked at her; she did not look back. She was crying, and I was helpless, clueless. Only music could reach her, soothe her, bring her back to us. And I understood: my next album could bear only one name: Shiraz. For her, I could write entire books - about the doors she opened, about the light she brought. But here, I simply want to celebrate her: her journey, her grace.”
Recorded with a band of younger musicians – pianist Daniel García, trumpeter Mario Rom, bassist Swaéli Mbappé, drummer Tao Ehrlich, and guest guitarist Nguyên Lê – the nine pieces of the album trace the emotions Dhafer Youssef experienced. “The music reflects what Shiraz thinks and hears,” he explains. Generalife Gardens, for example, recalls the flamenco duo Lole y Manuel from their time in Spain. Other tracks, like The Epistle Of Love, evolve from gentle intros to joyful finales - films for the ears rather than the eyes. Listeners will notice changes during the second half of the album: the oud takes on the intimacy of chamber music, Dhafer Youssef's voice gains prominence - hymnic in Shajan, tender in Rose Fragrance, eruptive in Eyeblink And Eternity.
Besides the very personal story behind Shiraz, the music of the album, and of Dhafer Youssef in general has a cultural relevance that might be more important today as ever before: It embodies the dialogue between heritage and modernity. In an era marked by division and noise, his music offers connection, silence, and transcendence. It reminds us that art can be a bridge between East and West, between the self and the collective. And it stands as a testimony that identity is not confinement but expansion, a celebration of multiplicity and unity. Credits
All compositions and arrangements by Dhafer Youssef
Recording by Tony Paeleman at Studio des Bruères, October 21 & 22, 2024Terpsichorean recorded in Paris March 28th by Giulio Gallo
Mixing & additional recordings (vocal, oud) by Nguyên Lê at Big Rock Studio, Lyon (December 2024-June 2025) Mastered by Bruno Gruel at Elektra MasteringVisual Storyteller / Photographer: Skander Khlif
Creative Director: Shiraz Fradi
Cover art by Skander Khlif
Nils Landgren - Christmas with my Friends IXCD / Purple Vinyl / digital Nils Landgren trombone, vocalsSharon Dyall vocalsJeanette Köhn vocals
Jessica Pilnäs vocals
Ida Sand vocals, piano
Jonas Knutsson saxophones
Johan Norberg guitars
Clas Lassbo bassTrombones from the Swedish Radio Symphony OrchestraHåkan Björkman, Mikael Oscarsson, James Kent, Martha Eikemo Andersen
What would Christmas be without songs? And without friends and family? Trombonist, singer, and producer Nils Landgren had long dreamed of celebrating a musical Christmas with good friends. In 2006, this dream became reality: Christmas With My Friends was released and quickly became one of the most popular and successful Christmas albums in European jazz — and a beloved tradition. Since then, the series has appeared every two years, accompanied by regular tours. Now, with Christmas With My Friends IX, the series enters its ninth round.“Someone once asked me: is there not an end to Christmas songs?” recalls Nils Landgren. His answer is simple: “The answer is simple: no, there is not. As long as we celebrate Christmas, there will be songs celebrating the occasion in one way or the other.” For Landgren and his fellow musicians, both the recordings and the concerts are a special joy: “There is no way I can describe the feeling when another recording session is finished. We all put our heart and soul into each and every Christmas album we make, and over the years we have become a very tight bunch of people, and we know each other quite well by now — after 8 albums and 10 long tours over the past decades.”
As in every edition, Landgren & Friends also gathered over coffee and cinnamon buns for the ninth installment of Christmas to discuss and try out a selection of classic European and American Christmas songs across styles and eras, as well as new compositions. The lineup once again features Jonas Knutsson (saxophone), Johan Norberg (guitar), Clas Lassbo (bass), and Ida Sand (piano, vocals), along with vocalists Sharon Dyall, Jessica Pilnäs, and Jeanette Köhn. Traditionally, the recordings took place at the renowned Atlantis Studios in Stockholm – under the direction of Nils Landgren and co-producer Johan Norberg. As a special treat this time, Landgren invited the trombone section of the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra to perform on some particularly moving chorales.
The variety of voices, the close familiarity among all the musicians, and the warm, acoustic character – both festive and intimate – shape the unmistakable charm of this music. Christmas With My Friends IX is a celebration of friendship, peace, and joy – a musical Christmas story that Nils Landgren and his friends share with their audience.
Credits
Recorded March 3–4, 2025, at Atlantis Studios, Stockholm
Recorded by Niclas Lindström
Trombones on #1 recorded by Hans Gardemar at KMH Kungasalen Stockholm
Mixed by Johan Norberg
Mastered by Klaus ScheuermannProduced by Nils Landgren & Johan Norberg
Bugge Wesseltoft - It's still snowing on my pianoLiveCD / Vinyl / Limited Sky Blue
Vinyl / digital Bugge Wesseltoft pianoBugge Wesseltoft’s solo piano album It's Snowing On My Piano (1997) is one of the most successful albums that the ACT label has ever released. For many people – especially in Germany and Norway – this music, made with such care and love by the affable and generous-spirited Norwegian, has become an essential part of their holiday season. And yet, for a Christmas album, it is anything but typical. From the very first note, the meditative strength of the music is palpable. Wesseltoft creates a locus of peace and tranquillity – a state of being which seems even more precious today than it did when the album first appeared. In the intervening years, Bugge Wesseltoft has played the music from the album many times in concert. Each time, he reinterprets the music afresh, with the compositions and melodies serving as points of departure for musical meditations shaped in the moment. After almost 20 years of these performances, the time is now right to document and indeed to celebrate this aspect of Wesseltoft’s patient but continuing creative evolution through the release of It's still snowing on my piano. This new, live version of the much-loved album was recorded at five concerts in cultural centres and churches in Norway.
When Bugge Wesseltoft played the music from Snowing live for the very first time almost 20 years ago at Kalkmølla, an intimate hall in a cultural centre outside Oslo, he had strong doubts as to whether it would be possible to recreate the magical atmosphere of the studio recording. He recalls: “There were about a hundred people seated in a small acoustic space. I started playing quietly and slowly, just like on the album. After a few songs, I started to hear deep breathing coming from somewhere in the audience. ‘Oh God, this must be so boring for them,’ I thought... I was sure they would all leave during the interval.” Of course, his fears were unfounded – not a single person left. In fact, quite the opposite: “After the concert, everyone told me what a great experience it had been. Since then, I have been playing this music every December in Norway in front of large audiences. It's incredible to feel the collective energy that this music and the presence of an audience in a concert hall can create together.”
When Siggi Loch, the founder of ACT, originally suggested that Wesseltoft might record a Christmas album in 1997, the pianist was initially less than enthusiastic. He can still remember why: “I'm not a big fan of the frenzy of Christmas shopping, all that enforced happiness...In the early nineties I worked in a psychiatric clinic and was shocked to discover that Christmas was a peak season for depression, nervous breakdowns and family problems. I counted myself lucky, because I grew up in a family where Christmas Eve was a heart-warming, peaceful evening spent with my closest family." This eventually inspired Wesseltoft to record a Christmas album in this spirit — one that his then two-and-a-half-year-old daughter Maren might one day come to love: "Calm, slow, with an emphasis on fond childhood memories, on the songs we sang while holding hands around the Christmas tree," as he describes it. There was no particular reason to expect that the recording would do well when it was released before Christmas 1997. And at first, not much happened at all. But in the following year, word spread about this very special Christmas music, people took the album to their hearts, recommended it and gave it as a gift again and again, something which continues right up to the present day.
The live recording It's still snowing on my piano feels familiar – but at the same time it is new. The melodies of the compositions, originals but in traditional vein, remain intact. Wesseltoft's approach to the songs is neither of deconstruction nor of recomposition, but rather one of gently wandering and exploring the spaces between the notes. And yet it is precisely in this way that completely new music emerges within the songs. It seems as if each preceding note is paving the way for the next, as if each new twist and turn leads on to another. It can often seem that Wesseltoft himself is both player and listener. During the recording of the original album, his daughter Maren sat on his lap – not a typical artist-audience relationship, but rather one of listening and feeling being shared. And that is the spirit which pervades Snowing whether it is heard in concert or at home. It is the ever-present feeling of connection between musician and listener that makes this evergreen music so completely magical.
CreditsMusic arranged and produced by Bugge Wesseltoft
Mixed and mastered by Klaus ScheuermannCover art by Ardy Strüwer
Vincent Peirani - Living Being IVCD / Vinyl / limited red transparent Vinyl / digital
Vincent Peirani accordion, accordina Emile Parisien soprano saxophone Julien Herne bass Tony Paeleman piano, keyboards, Fender Rhodes Yoann Serra drums
Yesterday, 2011: Vincent, Yoann, Tony, Julien... and one more. A group of pals, each one having left Nice independently and ended up in Paris. They adopt Émile, also from Southern France, but from further west. Today: natural affinities, a leader who calls the shots, and they use jazz to embrace a wide musical spectrum, from Baroque music to teen pop, from traditions of the Balkans to sounds of Africa. Tomorrow: with their flair for narrative, for creating a scenario, and their mastery of dynamics, every concert is and will be a celebration of excellence. Listening to “Living Being IV: Time Reflections”, we are immediately struck by the range of dynamics, the intimacy and extroversion at play in every detail, the rich textures, and the arrangements that allow for riveting moments of surprise. It’s worth remembering that, from the outset with Living Being, Vincent Peirani brought to the fore the concept of chamber music: a small number of performers, with each one playing a unique part, but with the emphasis on the collective rather than the individual.From the start, with Le Cabinet des énigmes, the melodic intelligibility is impressive. A sort of children’s song sublimated by the art of superimposing transparencies. Everything is played out in a myriad of details that create a perpetual motion. Further on, in Better Days, the motif heard – it came to Vincent Peirani while improvising during one of the COVID-19 lockdowns – conveys the fragility of a slow waltz emerging from the darkness to provide a glimpse of a radiant future. Three of the tracks, Clessidra, Inner Pulse and Bremain Suite, are much longer than any of the pieces on Living Being’s previous albums. The narrative and the distribution of the parts made this inevitable. We can feel here the trust that has been built up over the years, so natural, and without the slightest tension. With different colours, they all tell the same story.This album represents perhaps Vincent Peirani’s most faithful self-portrait to date. It has as its centrepiece Time Reflections, a suite in three movements, Clessidra, Better Days and Inner Pulse, each of which is also a suite (in 3, 3, and 4 parts, respectively). This nested construction is totally in keeping with Vincent’s true nature: he is an architect, constantly mindful of even the smallest details. Back to the future for Phantom Resonanz. An unlikely encounter between the sixteenth-century polyphony of the Franco-Flemish composer Cipriano de Rore and the contemporary approach of German pianist Michael Wollny. The result is disarming in its simplicity, and all the more convincing since the accordion plays a pivotal role. In both L.L. and Bremain Suite, variations in tempo play a major role. L.L., a tribute to Lionel Loueke, presents a Cubist portrait of the Beninese guitarist. The first half of the piece focuses on his tenderness and sensitivity, the second on his dazzling rhythms. With Bremain Suite Vincent Peirani returns to his love for putting his own spin on pop and rock songs written and recorded by other artists. After hesitating between Under Pressure by Queen and David Bowie, Portishead’s Glory Box and The Beatles’ I Want You (She’s So Heavy), he decided in the end to bring all three together, shaking up their tempos and bringing out a family resemblance already spotted as a teenager. Note Émile Parisien’s bravura piece on I Want You.Vincent Peirani’s spreads his antennae so far and wide that his four companions have to be prepared for anything when he comes up with new pieces for the repertoire. A dub with an irresistible beat, such as Physical Attraction, inspired by voguing. And Nach e Vlado, reflecting a soft spot for the traditional melodies of the Balkans, especially Macedonia. In both cases, tradition is propelled into a form of expression that is infused with a fantastic appetite for every type of music.Living Being? Five living beings, together forming one vibrant entity. Credits:
All tracks composed by Vincent Peirani except #8 – medley from Under
Pressure, Glory Box & I Want You Under Pressure composed by Freddie Mercury, David Bowie Glory Box composed by Isaac Lee Hayes, Geoff Barrow, Adrian Utley,
Beth Gibbons I Want You composed by John Lennon, Paul McCartney L.L is dedicated to Lionel Loueke Phantom Resonanz is dedicated to Céline Foucaut Recorded by Boris Darley at Studio des Bruères, France
Produced by Amélie Salembier & Vincent Peirani / Yes les Guy’zz Mixed by Nic Hard Mastered by Dave McNair Artwork by Jérôme Witz
Band photo by Elisa Ramirez Cover photo by Frank Siemers With the support of SCPP, CNM
David Helbock - Faces of NightCD / Vinyl / digital
David Helbock pianoJulia Hofer electric bass, fretless bass, celloGuests:Lorenz Raab flugelhornMahan Mirarab guitarVeronika Harcsa vocals
Pianist David Helbock and bassist/cellist Julia Hofer have things in common: a playful curiosity combined with the urge to try out new things and to have fun. Both of these Austrians are also perfectionists...and natural communicators...and that’s why their musical combination works so well. “I was looking for a new duo partner,” says David Helbock, "because although I am completely passionate about my ‘Austrian Syndicate’ project, it's a really tricky thing to put together, a large band...lots of keyboards. Together with ACT CEO and producer Andreas Brandis, the idea of an acoustic duo reduced to its emotional essence was finally born - a format in which musical communication works more directly than in any other line-up. And I quickly came across Julia Hofer. What particularly attracted me to her was her versatility - and the wealth of possibilities that this opens up. I was immediately fascinated by her energy from the very first rehearsal. You can tell she enjoys the music from the very first note she plays and that motivated me enormously and is also very infectious."
Julia Hofer’s career as an artist has reversed the normal order of things. Musicians usually learn their craft, tour everywhere, maybe become well-known, and only then do they settle down and start teaching. Hofer was already making a series of teaching videos for the online music retailer Thomann while studying for her master's degree at the Popakademie Mannheim – her first degree had been in Vienna. The videos had an impact and received millions of views. She now has teaching posts in Klagenfurt and Vienna, as well as being part of the team at the Vereinigte Bühnen in Vienna.Julia Hofer is a go-to bassist on the Austrian scene. From a musical family and classically trained as a cellist, what stands out above all is her stylistic versatility. Alongside poetic cello playing which can melt the heart, there is a wonderful ease and energy to her groove playing on the bass as well. She covers the whole gamut of pop, funk, and fusion, with repertoire all the way from Earth, Wind & Fire to Jamiroquai and the Yellowjackets. And her method of familiarizing herself with music has never been led by the convenience of sheet music: she listens meticulously, makes her own transcriptions. Her process gets her closer to the originals while simultaneously enabling her to make them truly her own. No wonder David Helbock is so enthusiastic about his new duo partner. After all, the pianist and composer from Vorarlbeberg in the West of Austria has a relationship with the piano which can often turn cheerfully acrobatic. Through his trio Random Control, Helbock’s profile became established as a genuine boundary-breaker with virtuosity – and humour too. Albums such as “Playing John Williams” (2019) and “Austrian Syndicate” (2023) anchor him not just as a pianist in a chamber music setting, they also demonstrate the jazz-rock power he brings to neo-fusion. David Helbock is one of the most versatile musicians in the Austrian music world. And he loves duos, notably “Playground” (2022) with singer Camille Bertault, which has taken them on triumphant tours of the European club and festival circuit.In “Faces Of Night” with Julia Hofer, we find Helbock taking on an even wider stylistic range. The album's repertoire includes songs by Prince as well as Thelonious Monk's “Round Midnight,” a cello-hued version of George Gurdjieff's “Woman's Dance,” a soul-funk interpretation of Eddie Harris’ “Freedom Jazz Dance,” and a surprising adaptation of motifs from Robert Schumann's A minor Piano Concerto. "We tried out working with effects and electronics at the beginning, but found that we were using them less and less. Now it's an almost entirely acoustic album, except for the electric bass. And we’ve really rehearsed and tried out lots of different things. It’s been a delightful process.” A few guests have joined the duo, including soulful and lyrical trumpeter Lorenz Raab, with whom David Helbock has been playing for two decades, and singer Veronika Harcsa, also a long-time acquaintance, who scats on “Freedom Jazz Dance” and brings something totally unexpected to Monk: lyrics in Hungarian. “I've also been wanting to do something with Mahan Mirarab for a long time. He plays a double-necked guitar, one of which is fretless, and that fits very well with Gurdjeff,” says David Helbock about the second contributor to “Faces Of Night,” – this is a new collaboration. And so, we find on ‘Faces Of Night’ a team, completed by producer Andreas Brandis, which is notable for its energy, its live-wire intercommunication and its sense of unfettered adventure – all of which came together in the studio. At the epicentre, Julia Hofer plays with astonishing openness and precision, with the inspired David Helbock as her ideal counterweight. The guests – Harcsa, Mirarab, Raab – expand the foundation and take the music beyond this constellation with new colors. “In the end, it all fits well with the title ‘Faces Of Night.’ For me, the night is a border zone where opposites are possible and complement each other.” These faces of the night open the gates for a new duo whose entrance into the music world comes in the form a debut album positively brimming with enthusiasm and energy.Credits:
Produced by Andreas Brandis & David Helbock
Recorded on May 20th and 21st at Wavegarden Studio, Mitterretzbach, AustriaRecorded and mixed by Werner AngererMastered by Klaus ScheuermannPhoto by Severin Koller at Reaktor, ViennaCover art (detail) by Tanka Fonta The Meditative Movements; The Dawn Incantations III (2024) Acrylic on canvas,160 cm x 120 cmDesign by Siggi Loch
daoud - okCD / colored Vinyl (pink) / digital
daoud trumpet, flugelhorn, synthesizers, ondes MartenotSilvan Strauss drums, percussionsLouis Navarro double bassLeo Colman synthesizers, piano, Fender RhodesJules Minck synthesizers, electric bass, electric guitarQuentin Braine additional percussionsKuz additional keyboards, sound design, additional production
Special guests: corto.alto trombone, Mehdi Nassouli guembri, Charlie Burg tenor saxophone, Teis Semey electric guitar, Kuba Więcek alto saxophone, Julien Fillion tenor saxophone, Ludivine Issambourg flutes, Rosie Frater-Taylor vocals / electric guitar
With “ok”, his new album and ACT debut, French trumpeter ‘daoud’ offers a quiet manifesto - a record shaped by contrast and contradiction, by collapse and the stubborn act of beginning again. Built around the idea of accepting what cannot be changed. He explains: “The whole record is built around the concept of reluctant acceptance of things that you can’t control. All right, fuck it, fine, I guess.” The album explores failure, loss, repetition, and the soft absurdity of pretending everything’s fine. Across 14 tracks, daoud weaves tragedy and humor, chaos and tenderness, melody and noise into a rich and emotionally charged soundscape.At its core, “ok” is a jazz record treated like anything but a jazz record. The foundation of the music was created live in the studio, together with keyboardist Leo Colman, double bassist Louis Navarro, drummer Silvan Strauss, electric bassist/guitarist/keyboardist Jules Minck and keyboardist Kuz. The editing of these recordings was more akin to a pop production, yet the sounds, pads and textures added afterwards are subtle and refined. The elaborate production is topped by a striking line-up of international musical guests who lend the music even more facets and emotions: corto.alto (trombone / GB), Rosie Frater-Taylor (guitar & vocals / UK), Mehdi Nassouli (guembri / MOR), Ludivine Issambourg (flute / FR), Teis Semey (guitar / NL), Kuba Więcek (alto saxophone / PL) and Julien Fillion (tenor saxophone / CA). The result sounds organic and immediate, as if you feel the production more than hear it. The album blends jazz, hip-hop, rock, disco, Afrobeat and drum’n’bass - not as genres to explore, but as emotional textures in a broader narrative.What emerges is a tone both satirical and melancholic, where humor masks deeper sadness, and childish playfulness veils inner tension. “ok” is an album of contradictions: lightness built on weight, sincerity laced with irony, warmth streaked with anxiety. There’s a deep sense of emotional dissonance — exposing what hides behind the act of saying “ok” when you’re not. It’s the sound of things breaking quietly, of resilience masked by routine. This duality runs through everything daoud creates - including the visual world of “ok”. The album cover features a childhood photo of him, capturing the vulnerability and raw innocence that echo throughout the music, the covers of the digital singles are illustrated with simple, childlike black marker drawings. The aesthetic draws on fragility, impermanence, and the bittersweet tension between playfulness and pain.And behind it all stands daoud. “I've been obsessed with the idea of being a circus clown since I was like 3 years old”, he recalls the starting point of his life as a musician. “I must have seen a clown on TV or somewhere else playing the trumpet and thought that this was the instrument that a clown had to play. So that's how I picked the trumpet - not out of classical ambition, but for its absurd theatricality.” That tension in the figure of the clown - between the comic and the tragic, the graceful and the ridiculous - has defined daoud’s relationship with music ever since.After a few early attempts at classical and jazz training, he dropped out. He wandered across Europe and the U.S., lived in backrooms, delivered pizzas, worked at a funeral home, played football and boxed obsessively. He quit music altogether more than once. “I think I gave up playing music because it meant so much to me that I needed to prove I could still exist without it.” Eventually, he returned to music — on his own terms. Trumpeter, producer, beatmaker, composer, engineer — he taught himself everything. “I’m so grateful I’m alive during the Internet era. If you want to learn something, you just can.” He works 18 hours a day, seven days a week. His self-produced 2024 debut “GOOD BOY”, recorded in just three days, drew immediate attention for its emotional force and genre-defying clarity. Since then, daoud has produced and written for other artists in pop and hip-hop, while continuing to refine his own singular voice.“ok” is the distilled essence of that journey — sonically, emotionally, and spiritually. ‘’Contrasts and contradictions shove us and rattle us and make us feel things in the way that homogeneous environments don't.” says daoud. “For me, this is where human emotions live.“ It is the scope and depth of emotions that make the album so extraordinary. It doesn’t offer clarity. It doesn’t pretend things are fine. It asks what it means to carry on anyway. Credits:All tracks composed by daoud Produced and arranged by daoud & Jules Minck, additional production by Kuz Recorded by Julien Couralet at Studio Capitole, mixed by Olivier Cussac, mastered by Alexis Bardinet at Globe Audio Mastering Cover art by daoud
Vincent Meissner - EigengrauCD / Vinyl / digital
Vincent Meissner piano Josef Zeimetz bass Henri Reichmann drums
"The more new discoveries you make, the more you go back to the beginning," observes pianist Vincent Meissner. The music on his third album, “Eigengrau”, is characterised by an inward gaze, by his reflections on experiences and encounters that have been meaningful to him. Together with his working trio, Josef Zeimetz on bass and Henri Reichmann on drums, Vincent Meissner has developed his own language, drawing inspiration from artists such as The Bad Plus, Esbjörn Svensson, Vijay Iyer – and his mentor, Michael Wollny. “The word ‘Eigengrau’ describes a state of darkness behind closed eyes,” Meissner explains. “But once you rub your eyes, you see patterns. Everyone sees something different: structures, objects, perhaps nothing at all...and that’s what our music is like – creating a distinct image for every listener." On stage, the trio is in constant motion, often exploding with pure energy. In the studio, Vincent Meissner, his fellow musicians and producer Andreas Brandis have sought a paring down of melody, texture and mood. On the album, the three are in close focus, with every note as an exploration, each of the tracks an invitation to finely honed and playful yet profound interchange.For Vincent Meissner, the fact that you can always listen to his mentor Michael Wollny is a compliment. What they both have in common is the urge to embrace the unknown, to accept things that simply happen. "Sometimes mistakes are the best thing you can do," says Meissner. "Through them you gradually understand more and more, a mystery dissolves, a new tool appears in the big playground. Wollny says: Now you have something new to experiment with again." Vincent Meissner listens to music non-stop in order to better understand what others are doing and then to better understand what he himself is doing. He can't play without listening. He needs encounters with people and also time without the piano, which leads him back to the piano. "Sometimes I might not touch the piano. It's essential, like a relationship. If you see each other all the time, 24/7, what else do you want to tell each other?"At its heart, then, and despite the depth and complexity, “Eigengrau” is an album of songs. That suits Vincent Meissner's unpretentious personality. Not always showing everything, playing what the music needs, not what the ego demands. Its nine highly focused tracks are always emotionally involved rather than detached, and each in a subtly different way. “Eigengrau” flickers and shimmers with intense and carefully gradated pastel shades; their appeal is never less than totally hypnotic.
Credits: Music composed by Vincent Meissner - except #A03 (Prince) and #B05 (T. Yorke, J. Greenwood, E. O`Brien, P. Selway) Produced by Andreas Brandis Recorded by Johannes Kellig, between 8-10 September 2024 at Jazzanova Studios Berlin, Germany Mixed and mastered by Klaus Scheuermann Lacquer disc cutting by scape mastering Photo by Niklas Wagenbrenner
Cover art by Mascha Schultz, used by kind permission of the artistCover design by Siggi Loch