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#14
Rauhan Orkesteri
LP
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”If you didn’t know before, hopefully out article about Finnish underground music in
this issue has shown that there’s a whole lot more to the thriving Finnish scene than
damaged Krautrock grooves and scattered folkscapes. If not, this self-titled album
from Rauhan Orkesteri is more clear evidence that that’s the case. This LP,
which has allready been called a Finnish free jazz masterpiece, is co-released by four
Finnish underground labels, Lal Lal Lal propably being the most well known among the
readers of this publication. From the very start it’s clear that these guys are inspired
by the energy of folks like Sun Ra, Albert Ayler and Art Ensemble of Chicago, but at
the same time keeping a voice of their own with boiling reeds, swirling flutes, complex
multi-directional percussion and contra bass. Some of these tracks border on maniacal
and full-blown band improv, but there’s a slithery charm to most of them that
doesn’t only make them sonically challenging and interesting but also joyful. The toned down moments of side B is pure bliss and provide a
nice place to stop at, reflect on and then proceed back into the uncompromising musical freedom, which characterize this quartet. I have a feeling
that the rather limited edition of this one might make it a bit tricky to get hold of, but if any of the names above ring a positive bell you’d be
a fool not to track it down.”
- Mats Gustafsson / Broken Face #18
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"If naming a free jazz group Peace Orchestra (Rauhan Orkesteri in Finnish)
seems like a contradiction, it should; free jazz has always reveled in contradiction: the
established rules of melody, harmony and rhythm, the jazz tradition and images of the stereotypical
jazz player have all been questioned, torn down and then recreated
by those working within the free jazz aesthetic. What's more, the label “free jazz” is nothing more than a
broad stylistic umbrella that encompasses a range of approaches, from the sonic onslaught
of Peter Brötzmann to the more cerebral structures of Anthony Braxton.
On their debut album, Rauhan Orkesteri thrives on contradiction and finds space for both the sonic onslaught
and the cerebral, unleashing music that at times roils frenetically, at others softly rustles but always exudes
a spine-tingling tension and a warm spirit of playfulness.
Rauhan Orkesteri hails from Turku, a university city on the southwest coast of Finland.
The quartet is the Brothers Tolvi (Antti on reeds and Jaakko on percussion), Tero Kemppainen on
bass and Ville Jolanki also on reeds, and their aesthetic is very DIY. Their label, Pohjoisten Kukkaisten Äänet,
is run partly by Antti Tolvi; their first release is LP-only and all the art was originally done by hand;
their sound is mono and was recorded partly outdoors. All these factors contribute to the music’s warmth,
evocative of nature’s free-flowing organics rather than harsh urban squalor.
”Uunituoreet porkkanasämpylämpimät” (Oven-fresh carrot rolls) opens like the forest at night, sounds
springing from every direction, some startling and some serene, like a group of small animals conversing
in some secret language. Cued by the horns, the quivering dialogue eventually evolves into a ramshackle march,
which itself soon dissipates into a dialogue between arco bass and the horns, only to be taken over again by the
march, this time louder and more frenetic, as Antti Tolvi and Jolanki twist, bend and break the brittle melody
against Jaakko Tolvi’s skittering, multi-faceted percussion attack.
The quartet pits dense passages against more serene spaces. Moments of aching harmony emerge then slip away in a clatter of cymbals or snare burst on “Suklaamuusi.” ”Alkukeittiö tai kevätkääryle” (Soup or springrolls) sneaks up on the listener, as Tolvi and Jolanki suddenly leap, horns stuttering and vocalizing, from the underbrush of ever-shifting percussion.
The epic ”Meren antimet” (Fruit of the Sea) starts out jagged and flailing, then enters more ambient space,
as Tolvi and Jolanki blow long, quavering tones on wooden flutes and shimmering, metallic smears on saxophone
as Kemppainen saws out wounded responses. The piece does not so much end as it decomposes, each member gasping
their last, until only Tolvi is left clanging, crashing, rolling and popping to a final child-like twinkling on
the chimes.
Rauhan Orkesteri puts the freedom back in free jazz. Full of brash and unpredictable turns, earth-pounding
rhythms, cerebral wanderings, stratospheric cries and distorted shapes, Rauhan Orkesteri keeps the listener
tuned to its every twisting, turning moment."
- Matthew Wuethrich, www.allaboutjazz.com
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"Brillante debut album per questo quartetto finlandese. Free Jazz, avant-improvised music, musica ecologia... potremmo utilizzare qualsiasi inutile categoria per semplificare questo stupendo insieme di brani.
Rauhan Orkesteri (che significa Orchestra Di Pace), unisce un approccio assolutamente free-jazz ad un'indiscutibile amore ed interesse per l'ambiente, le sonorità di questo.
Il disco è registrato in parte all'esterno, tecnica ultimamente spesso riscoperta (vedi alcuni lavori di Animal Collective) anche da molte neo-folk band per ottenere sonorità più reali e vive, per mantere il suono in quanto tale. Il risultanto è ottimo, in mezzo alle decine e decine di uscite in ambito avant-contemporaneo, questo quartetto riesce a distanziarsi, a colpire.
Questo disco suona libero, energico, vivo! Qualche amico mi faceva notare come a tratti sembrasse che gli uccelli stessero cantando insieme alla band, questo paragone apparentemente azzardato, è assolutamente vero!
Resta poco di cui scirvere, non servono altre grossolane descrizioni, provate a sentirlo!"
- Boris Battistini, Movimenta