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"The Move" Between The Lines Records 2005

 

Zwischen gewalttätig, zärtlich und tanzend bewegen sich die dynamischen Performances dieser beiden Giganten an Posaune und Piano im atemlosen Aufeinanderprallen. Nils Wogram  und Simon Nabatov haben sich nach vielen wechselseitigen  Auftritten in ihren Quartetten zu einem Duo zusammengetan, das die Möglichkeiten dieser Kombination bis auf den Grund auslotet.  Zum dritten Mal legen sie ein exorbitantes Duo-Album vor, das  weitab von leichter Kost ein Stück New Jazz in Vollendung präsentiert.

Lateinamerikanisch beseelt zeigt sich Wograms Titelstück, wahrhaft "abgehoben", gehaucht und getüpfelt gleich darauf das ebenfalls von Wogram komponierte "Ballooning" und im gleichen scheinbar leichten Duktus beginnt und endet Nabatovs "Itapo" mit kernigem Mittelteil. Zum bewegenden Nachruf auf den französischen Bassisten Pierre Michelot ist ungeplant das ihm und Herbie Hancock bei den Aufnahmen 2002 gewidmete "Herbie and Pierre" geworden, vielschichtig, blumig, rhythmisch und melodisch mitreißend. Michelot starb zwei Monate nach der Veröffentlichung des Albums am 5.7.2005.

Mit Gefühl und ebenfalls wie im Tonfall eines zärtlichen Nachrufs zitiert Nabatov durch Wograms Posaune in "Simple Sentiment" eines von Chet Bakers Paradestücken: "Everything Happens To Me". Seinen Flügel, den er singen, brüllen, tänzeln oder wie in "Lay Low" zum Jericho-Klang der Posaune brachial hämmern lassen kann, lässt er in der Schlußpassage von "Simple Sentiment", auch wieder mit einem Zitat, zierlich wie eine zerbrechliche Spieldose ausklingen. Die zwei Instrumente und ihre schier unendlichen Klangmöglichkeiten überraschen und faszinieren. Hinhören.

Frank Becker

All About Jazz 2006


Trombonist Nils Wogram has been playing and recording with pianist Simon Nabatov for the past ten years, and they have developed a very close musical comraderie. The Move is composed of seven pieces, three by Wogram and four by Nabatov, that explore many different moods and emotions, many times with good-natured humor.
The record has the feeling of a recital--the music sounds very through-composed and rehearsed--but that could just as easily come from good composition and exceptional musical reflexes honed to familiarity by time.
Wogram is a trombonist with no technical limitations; his playing transcends the instrument. He can fly high into its upper range and then instantly fall to its very bottom. Ranging from a bell-like, very clear sound to a rasp or split notes, Wogram uses his prodigious technique to create a very wide emotional range. Nabatov is a very strong, clear player who can also shift gears instantly moving from crashing, dense chords and a driving left hand to a singing line with lots of pedal. From the first notes of The Move, it is clear why they have recorded so much together.
"Lay Low," actually written by Nabatov, is a show piece for Wogram's split notes as his line is played in unison by Nabatov's left hand, way down in the depths of both instruments. "Ballooning," written by Wogram, begins with Nabatov playing wide open sounds that invoke the feeling of floating and surround Wogram's very low notes. The piece then continues delightfully on its airborne trip as we look down over the landscape.
Nabatov's "Herbie and Pierre" is the longest piece at almost seventeen minutes. Starting with a classical fugue-like introduction whose main figure provides the central thread of the first half of the work, Nabatov builds an impressive edifice that never quite resolves, becoming a tour de force where Bach meets Mussorgsky with faint echoes of the "Rite of Spring." The second half sounds a bit like "Lay Low" with its unison low piano and gruff trombone, and thus the mild-mannered Herbie crashes against the bullish Pierre, who can get down and has a penchant for the blues, but they finally do some stride walking together by the end. Great stuff.
The long lines of the beautiful "Simple Sentiment" opens with Wogram at his warmest and ends the set. While Wogram is the lead instrument, Nabatov encircles him, sometimes playing the line also, while at others counter lines fly from one hand to the other.
This is marvelous, intelligent and good-natured music, played by a duo with a single mind. Highly recommended.


Bud Kopman