Reviews

reviews:

the wire
Beautiful, filigree arrangements of the most delicately chosen sounds, Here Comes The Sun is the first recorded outing of a Berlin/Vienna trio that has performed on and off together for six or seven years. The craftsmanship of this hammered dulcimer/clarinet/guitars trio, borne out of many years of playing together in composed and improvised music, is put to use in six incredibly fragile small pieces. The music is airy, gentle and slow paced. Everything is thoroughly refined down to the barest elements – softly plucked guitar notes or dulcimer chimes sound against warm yet unobtrusive clarinet or vice versa. There is a distinct sense of distant melody always present, with nothing ever coming even close to a tune, but with an emotional warmth throughout. Hard to pin down to any one simple category, this is achingly beautiful music formed out simple ingredients.
by richard pinnell (u.k., may 2013)

freistil
Man hört auf here comes the sun an allen Ecken und Enden die Erotik der Stille knistern. Nahe an der Grenze zum Fastnichts erlebt die Konzentration auf das Wesentliche in diesem gemischten Trio fröhliche UrstĂ€nd’. Das Ausloten des Minimums an Hackbrett, Gitarre und Klarinette gehört zu den Spezialdisziplinen von Barbara Romen, Gunter Schneider und Kai Fagaschinski, ihre feine Abmischung zu jenen der Wiener Amann Studios und ihre Publizierung zu jenen des Moskauer Mikroton-Labels von Vladimir Kudryatsev. In dieser nicht definierbaren Grauzone, in der die Drei sich bewegen, wimmelt es gemeinhin vor unstrukturierten Egozentren. Nicht so in diesem Fall: ein feiner roter Faden durchzieht das Album, Spurenelemente von Songs finden sich darin, Andeutungen einer strengen Form, smarte Kurven und BrĂŒche inklusive. Ein Album zum immer wieder Hören, transparent vermittelt in einer Offenheit, die weder dĂŒmmer noch klĂŒger tut, als sie es ist. Da geht die Sonne auf.
by andreas fellinger (austria, april 2013)

vital weekly
A bit older are the 2008 recordings from a trio of which I only recognize Kai Fagaschinski (clarinet); also here are Barbara Romen on hammered dulcimer and Gunter Schneider (guitars). The six pieces were recorded in a single day in Vienna at the Amann Studios (obviously, I almost added, where all this weird stuff is recorded). With this release we enter a territory that is well covered in these pages. That of the carefully constructed improvised music. It plinks and it plonks, instruments do not sound like how they normally do, but act as resonating boxes or sine wave apparatus. You may think I may not like this, but in fact I actually do like this. It is perhaps not something I haven’t heard before but who cares about that? These three players created some thoughtful, intense improvised music in which ‘silence’ meets up with something that might very well be the opposite and sometimes in a matter of seconds. Nothing new, but very nice indeed.
by frans de waard, (netherlands, january 2013)

le son du grisli
Premier disque d’une association qui, depuis 2006, met en commun l’intĂ©rĂȘt que Barbara Romen (hammered dulcimer), Gunter Schneider (guitares) et Kai Fagaschinski (clarinette), trouvent Ă  la recherche de sons inusuels, Here Comes the Sun donne Ă  entendre un couple de Viennois inquiet de musique contemporaine autant que d’Echtzeitmusik – collaborations avec Burkhard Stangl, Christof Kurzmann – et l’un de ses plus brillants fureteurs.
Leur dĂ©marche est lente, bien sĂ»r, mais les premiers reliefs, bien qu’ajourĂ©s, ne sont-ils pas considĂ©rables ? Propice Ă  la contemplation, l’air ambiant fait naĂźtre quelques questions : Sun Ra, par exemple, n’aurait-il pas trouvĂ© chez Romen et Schneider d’autres Strange Strings que les siennes ? PincĂ©es ou dĂ©licatement agacĂ©es, en appelant Ă  l’arpĂšge s’il accepte d’ĂȘtre court, rĂ©tablissant d’un grave ou d’un feedback l’Ă©quilibre menacĂ©, toutes ont ici leur place, et mĂȘme leur rĂŽle.
Quant Ă  Fagaschinski : sa premiĂšre ascension n’Ă©tait-elle pas un message adressĂ© Ă  ses deux partenaires : qu’ils quittent donc le champ de la rumeur et rejoignent, Ă  force de flux et de reflux, le domaine de l’affirmation ! Alors, voici le dulcimer changĂ© en soufflerie et la guitare accusant quelques coups, double transformation dont les consĂ©quences feront le pouls de l’enregistrement… Et le soleil fut.
by guillaume belhomme, (france, may 2013)

just outside
A 2008 recording with Romen (hammered dulcimer), Fagaschinski (clarinet) and Schneider (guitars). Interesting to hear the dulcimer (often sounding like one) in this kind of context. The music is soft, gray and somber, bearing strong tonal underpinnings, freely improvised but in a pastoral sort of way. I might even go so far as to say that some portions, much of “Feelings Without End” for instance, could constitute an ECM-ish branch of eai…Which isn’t to say that it’s all pastels. It’s highly listenable throughout, some nice pulses feeding in here and there, the colors always clear and refreshing. Fagaschinski, as ever, is wonderfully warm and controlled. I can’t recall if this is my first real exposure to Romen and Schneider, but both offer subtle, not overly-instrusive contributions. This said, there’s nothing terribly memorable here either, though the final track, “plainchant and Goodbye”, manages to transcend the rest, it’s calm resolve evoking a mysterious forward motion that’s very attractive. It emerges, passes, one experiences a short pleasant sensation and that’s it. Maybe enough.
by brian olewnick, (u.s.a., march 2013)

improv sphere
Ici, trois artistes que je ne connaissais pas: Barbara Romen au hammered dulcimer (sorte de cymbalum), Kai Fagaschinski Ă  la clarinette, et Gunter Schneider Ă  la guitare acoustique. Il s’agit d’une suite de six piĂšces improvisĂ©es, calmes, lentes, axĂ©es sur des longues notes et des nappes interminables qui Ă©voluent par micro-variations. Il n’y a pas vraiment de techniques Ă©tendues, il s’agit avant tout de notes qui forment des accords sans rapport hiĂ©rarchique ni structurel. Les notes sont jouĂ©es pour leur qualitĂ© sonore et acoustique, avec une grande attention portĂ©e sur les attaques, l’intensitĂ© et les propriĂ©tĂ©s acoustiques propres Ă  chaque instrument. Un jeu sur une texture faite de notes frappĂ©es, soufflĂ©es et pincĂ©es. Une musique assez sensible mais qui ne retient pas forcĂ©ment l’attention, car les textures ne sont pas beaucoup dĂ©veloppĂ©es dans la durĂ©e et l’ambiance reste sensiblement similaire tout au long des piĂšces. Reste un timbre et un univers sonore singuliers, notamment du fait de l’instrumentation. Pour les curieux et amateurs d’ improvisation minimaliste et contemplative.
by julien héraud, (france, february 2013)

free jazz blog
Here Comes the Sun is a long, moody record, an hour of improvisations with no clearly defined rhythm, but always a sense of trajectory; movement is created through tension and color. The music is delicate and unhurried, long drapes of sound, or at times sparkling fields of notes, like light on water. Hammered dulcimer is not a particularly common instrument in free improvisation, but Romen deploys it to great effect, evoking harps, humming oscillators, even muted piano at times. The dulcimer and Schneider’s guitar coast along Fagaschinski’s pure clarinet, creating utterly beautiful, immersive music. “Who’s There?” asks the opening track. Some formidable improvisers, I’d say.
by dan sorrells, (belgium, april 2013)

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