Friday, November 7, 2014

RARE NOISE TO RELEASE ALBUMS BY MOLÈ & JÜ IN DECEMBER!

RARE NOISE TO RELEASE ALBUMS BY   

MOLÈ & JÜ 
 
IN DECEMBER!  
 
 


    
Partners
Mark Aanderud & Hernan Hecht
Present a New Take
On the Piano Trio with their Highly Evocative
'RGB'

Bassist Stomu Takeishi
Joins the Inner Circle on Molé's Second
RareNoise Release


AVAILABLE IN STORES AND ONLINE ON DECEMBER 8, 2014
AND THROUGH RARE NOISE RECORDS
ON CD, VINYL AND HI-RES DIGITAL DOWNLOAD


Mark Aanderud
Piano, Keys, Electronics
Stomu Takeshi
Electric Bass
Hernan Hecht
Drums
 
 

 
          

 
ABOUT THE LABEL - RareNoiseRecords was founded in late 2008 by two Italians, guitarist/arranger/ producer Eraldo Bernocchi and all-round music nut Giacomo Bruzzo. Located in London, the label was created to present a platform to musicians and listeners alike who think beyond musical boundaries of genre. For further information and to listen please go to www.rarenoiserecords.com or https://www.rarenoiserecords.com/jukebox/mole/rgb/


New York, November 6, 2014 - Freedom, experimentation and telepathy are the watch words for RGB, the latest transcendent collaboration of pianist-composer Mark Aanderud and drummer Hernan Hecht under their collective name of Molé. Joining the two longstanding partners on their second RareNoise outing is the inventive Japanese bassist and longtime New York resident Stomu Takeishi, whose highly expressive and adventurous low-end presence has graced albums by such forward-thinking, cutting-edge artists as saxophonist Henry Threadgill, cellist Erik Friedlander, trumpeter Cuong Vu, saxophonist Patrick Zimmerli, pianists Myra Melford and Satoko Fuji. Together these three refined, deep-listening musicians strike a rare accord on pieces that range from meditative motifs to rhapsodic crescendos, from spacious, ECM-ish soundscapes to turbulent, collective jams.

It was nearly ten years ago that Mexican-born pianist-composer Mark Aanderud (now living in Prague) began playing with Argentinian drummer Hernan Hecht. Their chemistry was immediate and natural, eventually leading to the formation of Molé, a vehicle to explore their common interests. As Aanderud explained, "Hernan and I do have certain unspoken philosophies. We love sound, groove, freedom and songs. The first things we did were all related to free music, with electronic elements or not, but always with the idea of creating songs or forms in the moment. We do have some incredible magic going on, as much as we can play concerts or record without ever speaking of music, and never repeating ideas or stop developing. This actually hasn't changed over the years." 

After exploring their tight duet chemistry together on gigs, Aanderud and Hecht began inviting other musicians into their inner circle to see how it affected their music. "In the process of creation, we always considered the possibility of working with more people to achieve different characters, sounds and experience new artistic possibilities," explained Hecht. To date, those musicians who have stepped into Molé's inner circle have included American saxophonist Tim Berne, Israeli saxophonist Eli Degibri, Austrian saxophonist Edith Lettner, American guitarists Jonathan Kreisberg and Mike Moreno, Mexican bassists Aaron Cruz and Marco Renteria. Mole's hard-hitting 2012 RareNoiseRecords debut, What's the Meaning?, featured Mexican upright bassist (and Aanderud's boyhood friend) Jorge "Luri" Molina and New York guitarist David Gilmore, whose impressive list of credits includes tours and recordings with the likes of Wayne Shorter, Trilok Gurtu, Don Byron and Steve Coleman's Five Elements.

On RGB, with bassist Takeishi affecting the overall vibe with his intuitive genius, things opened up and became more conversational and telepathic in the process. "After What's the Meaning?, it became very clear that the music we should continue doing had to go back to what we always did, and that was to experiment," says Molé's principal composer Aanderud. "And we always had Stomu in mind. We always loved his sound, his approach and concepts. He is unique artist. We couldn't think of anybody better for this, so we just decided to send him an email and invite him to do a tour and record. Once he said yes I started composing all the music thinking of the three of us. I wanted to do music that would be as open as possible but that would provide a rhythmic and structural base to start with. As you can imagine, Stomu absorbed and exceeded the music."

From the meditative soundscape of "Sub-All" to the frantic funk of "Reasons," fueled by Hecht's slamming backbeats and Aanderud's hyper piano solo, to the suite-like "Trichromatic," which travels from an evocative rubato into to a free section in the middle which resolves to a lyrical theme, this edition of Molé is perhaps the most flexible and experimental of all. "Winip" opens with a hymn-like refrain before heading into a heavy-duty Bad Plus-like theme underscored by Hecht's big-as-a-house backbeats. "Freelance" has Takeishi pushing the envelope with effects before soloing over a drum 'n' bass groove by Hecht while "Rodriguez" is Molé's unique take on the classic Clyde Stubblefield-Jabo Starks funky drummer groove from classic James Brown bands of the '60s. The extremely spacious "T-Overlap" leads into some provocative collective improv while "Ine Sest" opens on a classical not with a piano etude by Aanderud before evolving into a whimsically tuneful number underscored by Hecht's supple brushwork. And the closing three-way conversation on "Wix," paced by an exacting and infectious 6/8 over 5/8 groove, is perhaps the best example of collective improvisation on the record.

"I had written eight songs for this record," says Aanderud. "Some, like 'Winip,' 'Reasons,' 'Wix' and 'Rodriguez', had a lot of notes. So I thought I had to balance it and add some songs that would be easier and would provide an atmosphere for creating something. So I wrote other four songs -- 'Sub-All,' 'Ine Sest,' 'Freelance' and a fourth one that became the ending part of 'Winip.' But for the recording I thought we should start playing something free, and that was 'T-Overlap.' I liked it so much that I proposed to do another free improvisation which became 'Trichromatic.' After that we just went on to do what was planned. There is a lot of experimenting in the music, but there is very precise stuff. There are no chords on this music. There is no structure for improvisation either. Some ideas are very chromatic with hard rhythms and others are just the simplest I could think of. But there was always a direction towards improvisation."

Aanderud is also quick to point out, "I had some clear influences for writing this music. Tim Berne was one, Paul Motian another. I was also inspired by other bands like Aphex Twin, Massive Attack, Lamb or Sigur Ros and, of course, Cuong Vu, Peabody and many other bands that may be of inspiration." While eight of the titles on RGB were composed by Aanderud, his kindred spirit Hecht is a key component in the band's overall sound. "In this Molé project, Mark is the composer and I create opportunities for the music to thrive," says the inventive and flexible drummer. "I'm involved in the creative process of interpreting the songs. In this environment, our aesthetics work together." Adds Hecht, "I think we are part of a worldwide movement, a generational shift that has fewer stylistic prejudices. I am interested in music that is broad, not determined by a style. I like breadth of concepts and the possibility of being in infinite change, refreshing me, trying to find freedom for the child in me and permit manifestations to occur in music; a deep love of life and nature, a freshness to grow and advance in years, sure to shape a better person and hopefully help make this world a better place for everyone."

In the company of the extraordinarily sensitive and expressive bassist Stomu Takeishi, Aanderud and Hecht make some startling sonic discoveries together on RGB.


TRACKS
1. Sub-All
2. Reasons
3. Trichromatic
4. Winip
5. Freelance
6. Rodriguez
7. T. Overlap
8. Ine Sest
9. Wix











Hungarian Power Trio  


Joins Norwegian Saxophone Icon  

Kjetil Møster  

On Provocative New Collaboration For
RareNoiseRecords


JÜ Meets Møster 


AVAILABLE IN STORES AND ONLINE ON DECEMBER 8, 2014
AND THROUGH RARE NOISE RECORDS
ON CD, VINYL AND HI-RES DIGITAL DOWNLOAD


Àdàm Mészáros
Guitar
Ernö Hock
Electric Bass
Andràs Halmos
Drums
and

 
Kjetil Møster
Saxophones & Clarinet
 

  

  


ABOUT THE LABEL - RareNoiseRecords was founded in late 2008 by two Italians, guitarist/arranger/ producer Eraldo Bernocchi and all-round music nut Giacomo Bruzzo. Located in London, the label was created to present a platform to musicians and listeners alike who think beyond musical boundaries of genre. For further information and to listen please go to www.rarenoiserecords.com or https://www.rarenoiserecords.com/jukebox/ju-moster/jmm/


New York, November 6, 2014 - Worlds collide when the raucous Budapest-based power trio JÜ (consisting of fire-breathing guitarist Àdàm Mészáros, fuzz-bassist Ernö Hock and the remarkably flexible drummer Andràs Halmos) joins Bergen-based saxophonist Kjetil Møster for this subversive meeting of the minds on RareNoise Records. A powerful manifesto for ecstatic, exploratory, envelope-pushing music mixed by Bill Laswell and mastered by Michael Fossenkemper. JÜ Meets Møster bridges the gap between free jazz and hellacious, distortion-laced, guitar-driven hardcore rock.

The album opens on an explosive note with a turbulent tenor sax-drums breakdown between Møster and Halmos on "Dear Johann" which takes on the feel of latter day John Coltrane or free jazz icon Albert Ayler jamming with the Allman Brothers Band on "Whipping Post" or vintage King Crimson on "21st Century Schizoid Man. "Bhajan" opens on a darker, more mysterious vibe before building to a potent crescendo, with Møster wailing on baritone sax, which is steeped in the tradition of Jimi Hendrix's bold jazz-rock anthem "Third Stone From the Sun." Møster stretches freely with baritone sax on the moody and spacious "Morze" while "Hassassin," full of slamming unisons and fierce overblowing by Møster, is an intense showcase for drummer Halmos.Mészáros adds another frantic six-string onslaught at the tag of this intense offering. The four intrepid musicians explore collectively on the more atmospheric "KJÜ" and they close out the collection with the expansive, 15-minute "One," which makes dramatic use of echo to create an otherworldly texture before building to a powerhouse conclusion of thunderous proportions.

"This collaboration came about because I got to know Andras after he attended the very first concert of my own band called Møster! at Kongsberg Jazz Festival in Norway," explains the esteemed saxophonist. "One of my own goals with my own group is to show that different genres are not necessarily as far away from each other as one might think today. Up until the mid-80's, musicians and artists from completely different musical directions were collaborating and drawing inspirations from one another. I dream of the times when Velvet Underground would go to Sun Ra concerts and use the inspiration in their own music. Or to hear the mythical collaboration between Miles Davis and Jimi Hendrix. (My theory is that the music industry needed the segregation of musical genres to increase their sales, making people incapable of using their musical taste and to think for themselves, since the record labels already told them what the music was and who should buy what genres.) So I guess Andras heard some reflections of his own thoughts in my music and invited me to play with some Hungarian soulmates called JÜ. In describing his process of collaboration with JÜ on this RareNoise debut, Møster offers, "What surprised me was that they use some of the same compositional approaches to improvisation as I do. So the compositions are just skeletons, and we put meat on them as we improvise. And some of them, like KJÜ, is all free improvised, but as we go we talk about sound textures, instrumentation, temperature, forms and shapes. It might sound academic or intellectual, but it's done very intuitively".

Regarding his own influences that came to bear on this rare encounter with JÜ, Møster explains, "For me, Coltrane has without a doubt been the strongest influence on my life as a musician. I've had many incredibly strong, overwhelming, physical experiences listening to him. And his approach to music has learned me a lot. And seeing how he influenced Albert Ayler, John Gilmore, Roscoe Mitchell, Pharoah Sanders, Wayne Shorter, to name a few, has expanded that influence, since they also influenced me a lot.

As for the open-mindedness that he exhibits as a musician on this project and others, Møster says, "I do play very many different kinds of music and with many different bands. This past summer I played with Röyksopp and Robyn, an amazing Norwegian rapper named Lars Vaular and my long time electro-rock band Datarock.I find the same kind of open-mindedness in the members of JÜ. They all play and like very different kinds of music. So we can play on very different references, talking musically together in different languages, or mixing languages, so to speak.

Halmos started playing music relative late, at age 17, but soon found himself in a band that played complex compositions with odd meters. "Over the last 20 years or so I've played in many bands in many styles but I've always stayed in the underground circuit as a musician," he explains. "In the last 11 years I've made my living as a concert promoter for bigger venues and festivals, bringing acts that never played in Hungary before. As an organizer, I've had a chance to spend time with many of my musical heroes like drummers Joey Baron, Kenny Wollesen, Billy Martin and learned a lot from them. I also had chance to study and play with drummer Hamid Drake and bassist William Parker as a member of a workshop big band at the Mediawave festival. The two of them introduced me to Gnawan music and encouraged me to study it. In fact some of the first things we ever played together in JÜ were based on those trance-like Gnawan patterns. Guitarist Mészáros was initially inspired by the Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin records his father turned him on to. "From age 10 we always had a guitar at home," he recalls. "I played but never got too serious about it until high school when I actually forced myself to listen to and learn jazz because I felt like this was what I had to do to get a degree in music and to be a high level player. And, of course, players like John Scofield, John McLaughlin and Bill Frisell just blew my mind." By 2005, Mészáros grew tired of formal music studies and began playing in pop-rock bands, traveling across Europe and earning money along the way. By 2007, he started to get involved in experimental and improvisational music, which led to his encounter with Hock and Halmos. Bassist Hock began playing at age 15. "My main influences were hardcore and metal back then which changed almost immediately when I was introduced to the double bass at age 21," he recalls. "First it got me into Hungarian folk music, then later jazz, and that was followed by a variety of genres (classical music, hip-hop and electronic music, music from Morocco and other parts of Africa, Avant - Garde and free music.)"

TRACKS
1. Dear Johann 
2. Bhajan
3. Morze (for Ágoston Bèla)
4 Hassassin
5. KJU
6. One




PRESS CONTACT 
Antje Hübner
hubtone PR | New York
phone: 212-932-1667