B i o g r a p h y
(by Official Site)
Guitarist Eivind Aarset, one of the most exciting, individual and creative
voices from the Norwegian jazz underground, saw "Electronique Noir", his first
release as a leader, hailed as "One of the best post Miles electric jazz albums"
by none other than the The New York Times as well as America's leading jazz
magazine Jazz Times and the UK's Jazzwise. Now Light Extracts, his much
anticipated follow up album, is set to establish Eivind as one of the key voices
in European Nu-Jazz. Once again his music is a here-and-now reflection of the
latest, most exciting sounds to be found in jazz, mixing improvisation with
rhythms from European club culture, exploring the potential of a music so new it
has not yet set any frontiers or rules and the only limits are the limits of the
imagination.
"What drew me to this music was the hypnotic grooves and
musical freedom I found," says Eivind. "There's no established rules or
tradition in what I am doing, you can make the rules up as you go along. Rhythm
is the centre of the music, the landscape the soloist travels through. It's
fresh territory and I have no idea where this scene will end up, but there's a
lot of great sounds and new music being created which makes it such an exciting
scene." Two key tracks on Light Extracts is "Empathic Guitar" with a stunning
crossfade into "Wolf Extract" that sets the scene for a creative masterpiece.
Taking instrumental imagery to a new level of intensity and excitement, Eivind
opens with ambient soundwashes, but he's is careful not to precisely define the
new ground he is exploring. Suddenly, as the piece unfolds, his improvisations
begin to suggest the sound and chattering symbolism of a 21st century "Bitches
Brew", complete with a mysterious bass clarinet. Yet all the while there is no
doubt this music is following a fresh path into a yet to be discovered
consciousness beyond consciousness, creating a new order of jazz sounds and
tribal rhythms that fuses new tastes with old.
Joining Eivind on Light
Extracts are Wetle Holte on drums, drum programming and ambient noise, Marius
Reksjo on bass (who is a part of the Beady Belle duo), Arve Furset on keyboards
and Hans Ulrik from Denmark on saxes, the only non-Norwegian and whom Eivind met
while playing with Marylin Mazur's band Future Song.
One of Norway's most
in demand guitarists, Eivind is a regular member of Nils Petter Molvaer's group,
appearing on the trumpeter's landmark albums "Khmer" and "Solid Ether" which
first introduced Europe to the sound of the Norwegian jazz underground (Molvaer
makes a guest appearance on "Light Extracts"). Away from Molvaer, Eivind has
appeared on over 150 albums with musicians as diverse as Ray Charles, Dee Dee
Bridgewater, Ute Lemper, Ketil Bjornstad, Mike Mainieri, Arild Andersen, Abraham
Laboriel and Django Bates.
Eivind's musical wake-up call came when he was
12 and first heard Jimi Hendrix, "I started on the guitar as soon as I heard
him," he recalls with a smile. "I bought a second hand Hendrix record and that
was it. Then I started getting into rock bands like Deep Purple, Black Sabbath,
Santana and Pink Floyd before my brother introduced me to the music of Miles
Davis, the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Weather Report and Return to Forever. After a
while I got into the ECM sound of Jan Garbarek, and Terje Rypdal who was a big
influence. Then I went on the road with a fulltime heavy metal band, a fantastic
experience, until I got tired of being angry every night! Then I quit and became
a session musician."
He also became involved in a band called Ab &
Zu, which allowed him to start finding his own individual voice, which was taken
a stage further working with the Norwegian sax player Bendik Hofseth (who
succeeded Mike Brecker in the band Steps Ahead). Then he became progressively
involved in Oslo's jazz underground and working with keyboard guru Bugge
Wesseltoft he finally arrived at the broader vocabulary for guitar he was
reaching for. Then, in 1998 came Electronique Noir that passed all but the most
clued-up music critics by. Powerful, yet strangely moving tracks such as "Dark
Moisture" and "Entrance/U-Bahn" announced a new voice in contemporary jazz
willing to take the music onto the next level of intensity, depth and
excitement. Here was music that was truly meant for a new millennium.
Now
Light Extracts, the latest instalment of Eivind Aarset's musical odyssey, has
arrived, crossing the warp from the tried and tested sounds of yesteryear to
create an inner cinema of musical symbols spinning their own evolution of
perpetual transformation. The sonic possibilities of the future begin here,
music of the new future jazz and a journey to an unquantifiable musical eternity
with no solidarity, no limits, no inception and no conclusion. |