Musik / folkemusik

Rímur : chants, hymns, folk songs and improvisations based on Icelandic, Norwegian and Swedish sources


Anmeldelser (5)


All about jazz

d. 1. mar. 2017

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Henning Bolte

d. 1. mar. 2017

"Rímur is a collection of seventeen chants, hymns, folk songs and improvisations based on ancient Icelandic, Norwegian and Swedish sources, brought into our contemporary way of sensing by singer/violinist Anna Maria Friman, singers Linn Andrea Fuglseth and Berit Opheim, and eminent trumpeter Arve Henriksen ... Impressive from the first moment of listening is the strength, calmness and concentration this originally monophonic music exudes. Some may need more time to really get into it but it offers the listener to opportunity to feel the deeper ground of existence the music is touching upon".


AllMusic

2017

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James Manheim

2017

"The music is drawn from Norwegian, Icelandic, Swedish, and Scottish sources and includes both chant and secular folk music, approaching the sometimes elusive connections between the two in a wholly novel way. Certainly, as with many of ECM's more experimental releases, this will appeal most of all to listeners with a certain speculative frame of mind, but it might catch the attention both of early music specialists and of those in search of an exotic meditative mood".


BBC music magazine

2017 July

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Oliver Condy

2017 July

"An intoxicating mix of chants, hymns and folksongs, performed in charmingly simple vocal arrangements alongside hardanger fiddle and droning shruti box".


Jazz special

Nr. 157 (2017)

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René Larsen

Nr. 157 (2017)

"Improvisation og middelalder møder nutidens klange. Arve Henriksens æterisk kommenterende trompet tilføjer trioen en fjerde stemme, der på bedste vis opdaterer trioens ellers fragile og diskrete lyd. Det smukke åbningsnummer "St. Birgitta Hymn" er et glimrende eksempel på det inciterende med dog lavmælte vokale samarbejde trioen imellem. Det er fascinerende, hvordan vokalerne næsten ubemærket glider ud og ind af hinanden, og hvordan de skifter mellem forgrund og baggrund. Hele tiden i samklang med Arve Henriksens lydflader. Konstellationen mellem en vokaltrio, elektronisk manipuleret trompet og hardanger-violin er sjældent set før, og det gør Rimur til en unik oplevelse".


The gramophone

2017 June

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Andrew Mellor

2017 June

"The trio sing with their usual combination of precision, imagination and deep care with text and ornamentation. Arve Henriksen's trumpet sounds like a flute, a seabird, a human voice, a distant wind and just occasionally like the breathy trumpet of Scandinavian jazz cliché ... If the idea of a semi-distant Nordic cousin to Garbarek and the Hilliard Ensemble's Officium series appeals, this is worth procuring".