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Florian Willeitner - What The Fuge

CD / digital

Florian Willeitner violin
Ivan Turkalj violoncello
Alexander Wienand piano

Now here’s a challenge: to take the fugue, possibly the most complex compositional procedure in Western classical music, and to transform it to reflect the modern age. The ‘New Piano Trio’ - violinist Florian Willeitner, cellist Ivan Turkalj and pianist Alexander Wienand – has taken this task to heart. Rather than being in any way daunted by the towering achievements of the baroque period, these three classically trained and extremely open-minded musicians have risen to the occasion, and achieved a fine balance between the rigour of the art of fugue and the freedom of jazz in their album ‘What the Fugue’. 

Florian Willeitner, the violinist who is the principal composer and organiser behind the project, combines the streams of classical music and jazz, both of which run deep in him, in a unique way. This phenomenally talented and multifaceted musician was born in Passau – a city where major rivers converge – in 1991. He began improvising and writing his own music at an early age. Since his youth, he has been fascinated by music from all over the world. His peregrinations with a rucksack and a violin have taken him to Ireland, Spain, Bulgaria, Cuba and Brazil...where he has expanded his horizons by forging links with local musicians. He later studied classical violin at the Salzburg Mozarteum, founded the ‘New Piano Trio’ and became first violinist of the renowned ‘vision string quartet’. In 2021, his first ACT release ‘First Strings On Mars’ was released - for Jan Brachmann, one of Germany's most important classical music journalists, an ‘album to refresh both the heart and the mind.’ 

Florian Willeitner says of the background to his new project ‘What The Fugue’: ‘The fugue, the supreme discipline of the Baroque era, has fascinated me for decades. My studies of the counterpoint of both Bach and Shostakovich provided me with one important source, but there was another: I was equally captivated by West African groove music. It inspired my to involve its highly complex interplay of many layers and the harmonious intertwining of several equal voices.’ Developing an entire programme based on this fascination for music with multilayered interlocking rhythms and melodies was a long-cherished wish for Willeitner. However, it wasn’t until the pandemic in 2020 that he actually found the time needed to immerse himself fully and properly in it. 

Drawing inspiration from diverse musical traditions, he carefully set about the task of crafting compositions based on four distinct “keys”, each representing a unique musical language. The key “Orient” is influenced by the vibrant colours and rhythmic ideas of Middle Eastern music, and in particular one of Willeitner’s greatest musical heroes, Tigran Hamasyan. In “Dimensions,” he delved into the exuberant understanding of harmony of Jacob Collier. The key “Bach,” though not an attempt to mimic Bach’s tonal language, pays tribute to his preludes from the Well-Tempered Clavier. And lastly, “The Twinkle” sought to capture the mischievous spirit of Sergei Prokofiev, a favourite composer, infusing the compositions with his playful energy and wit. 

‘What The Fugue’ has captured some of the typical and exciting traits of current jazz artists and that is what makes this music both appealing and so substantial, interesting and eventful: outstanding musical skills from all the players, a spirit of inquisitiveness and openness, a broad musical horizon across styles, eras and borders. And, above all, the will and the imagination to use all of these ingredients to create new, fresh and unexpected music.

Artists: Florian Willeitner
Empfehlungen: Next Generation
Format: CD
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Manufacturer information

ACT Music + Vision GmbH & Co.KG
Hardenbergstr. 9
D-10623 Berlin

Phone: + 49 - (0) 30 310 180 10
E-Mail: info@actmusic.com

Florian Willeitner

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What The Fugue
Florian Willeitner - What The FugeCD / digital Florian Willeitner violin Ivan Turkalj violoncello Alexander Wienand piano Now here’s a challenge: to take the fugue, possibly the most complex compositional procedure in Western classical music, and to transform it to reflect the modern age. The ‘New Piano Trio’ - violinist Florian Willeitner, cellist Ivan Turkalj and pianist Alexander Wienand – has taken this task to heart. Rather than being in any way daunted by the towering achievements of the baroque period, these three classically trained and extremely open-minded musicians have risen to the occasion, and achieved a fine balance between the rigour of the art of fugue and the freedom of jazz in their album ‘What the Fugue’. Florian Willeitner, the violinist who is the principal composer and organiser behind the project, combines the streams of classical music and jazz, both of which run deep in him, in a unique way. This phenomenally talented and multifaceted musician was born in Passau – a city where major rivers converge – in 1991. He began improvising and writing his own music at an early age. Since his youth, he has been fascinated by music from all over the world. His peregrinations with a rucksack and a violin have taken him to Ireland, Spain, Bulgaria, Cuba and Brazil...where he has expanded his horizons by forging links with local musicians. He later studied classical violin at the Salzburg Mozarteum, founded the ‘New Piano Trio’ and became first violinist of the renowned ‘vision string quartet’. In 2021, his first ACT release ‘First Strings On Mars’ was released - for Jan Brachmann, one of Germany's most important classical music journalists, an ‘album to refresh both the heart and the mind.’ Florian Willeitner says of the background to his new project ‘What The Fugue’: ‘The fugue, the supreme discipline of the Baroque era, has fascinated me for decades. My studies of the counterpoint of both Bach and Shostakovich provided me with one important source, but there was another: I was equally captivated by West African groove music. It inspired my to involve its highly complex interplay of many layers and the harmonious intertwining of several equal voices.’ Developing an entire programme based on this fascination for music with multilayered interlocking rhythms and melodies was a long-cherished wish for Willeitner. However, it wasn’t until the pandemic in 2020 that he actually found the time needed to immerse himself fully and properly in it. Drawing inspiration from diverse musical traditions, he carefully set about the task of crafting compositions based on four distinct “keys”, each representing a unique musical language. The key “Orient” is influenced by the vibrant colours and rhythmic ideas of Middle Eastern music, and in particular one of Willeitner’s greatest musical heroes, Tigran Hamasyan. In “Dimensions,” he delved into the exuberant understanding of harmony of Jacob Collier. The key “Bach,” though not an attempt to mimic Bach’s tonal language, pays tribute to his preludes from the Well-Tempered Clavier. And lastly, “The Twinkle” sought to capture the mischievous spirit of Sergei Prokofiev, a favourite composer, infusing the compositions with his playful energy and wit. ‘What The Fugue’ has captured some of the typical and exciting traits of current jazz artists and that is what makes this music both appealing and so substantial, interesting and eventful: outstanding musical skills from all the players, a spirit of inquisitiveness and openness, a broad musical horizon across styles, eras and borders. And, above all, the will and the imagination to use all of these ingredients to create new, fresh and unexpected music.

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Florian Willeitner - First Strings on MarsCD / digital Florian Willeitner violin, soulfiddle, mandolin & vocals Georg Breinschmid bass &vocals Igmar Jenner violin & vocals In the past the violin in jazz could sometimes seem a bit exotic, even outlandish, but all that has changed. Classical music and jazz are no longer mutually exclusive worlds; these days they enrich each other, and it is the norm for string instruments to take centre stage. 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His duo with Slovenian accordionist Borut Mori won the 2010 Austrian World Music Award. The third member of the trio is legendary double bassist Georg Breinschmid, who gave up his permanent position with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra because other things were more important to him: musical freedom and what he calls “a carefree approach to music.” Since then he has opened up to genres from blues to ‘Wienerlied’, and is a pioneer in combining jazz-inspired composition and performance with that particular kind of ironic humour which the Viennese call ‘Schmäh’. Here we have the perfect line-up for “a feast of musical freedom and curiosity," as Willeitner calls "First Strings on Mars.” And if that sounds like hyperbole, it isn’t. There has never been a string trio with a range of sounds and techniques like this, nor players who can res-pond so effortlessly to one another's ideas. It begins with Willeitner's “Novemberlicht”, simultaneously poetic and powerful. Then we hear Sting's “Fragile”, in a version that breaks all the boundaries of string-playing, Breinschmid's exquisitely tender “Reminiscence”, Willeitner's mysterious “Dark Romance or The Short Life of Mister Gimli Hope”, his folky pop song “The Green Wind”, Breinschmid's virtuoso reinter-pretation of alpine folk music with “The Swindler” and “Hochkar” - and finally a yodel into which the sounds of "Ho Chi Minh” have been smuggled. Willeitner's hard-grooving tune “Brazil Imported” has it all: the trio show the range of techniques, tempi and thematic variety that is possible with their combination of bass, violin, mandolin and soulfidd-le (an instrument custom-made by Weilleitner's friend, luthier Valen-tin Kaiser). And again when they dig hard into “Searching” by Georg Breinschmid, they bring us back what this album is all about: “Our goal as a band,” says Willeitner, “is to be traditional in the best way. To learn from the past while writing for the future. To push the limits of our instruments. And to be the First Strings On Mars.” They're already well on their way.Credits: Recorded by Franz Schaden at Wavegarden Studios, Mitterretzbach/ Austria, July 2019 “Fragile” recorded at POI Studios, Passau/Germany, October 2018. “The Swindler” recorded live by Peter Tomic at Enter Enea Festival, Poznan/ Poland, May 2018 Mixed by Franz Schaden & FSOM, 2020. “The Swindler” mixed by Peter Tomic Mix Panorama (from left to right): Florian Willeitner, Georg Breinschmid, Igmar Jenner Mastered by Philipp Treiber at PDV Records Produced by Florian Willeitner, Georg Breinschmid & Igmar Jenner Cover art by Peter Krüll

€17.50*