the
liner notes |
Among the brilliant
young musicians emerging from the strong Munich jazz scene of the 80s flutist/saxophonist
Beate Kittsteiner once was the best kept secret around. Although her music was appreciated
by concertgoing jazz fans and by musicians as different as Don Cherry and Gerry Mulligan,
for record collecting jazz fans without live experience her name was sort of a rumour: I
remember an italian jazz buff telling me a story about an enthusaistic french jazz fan who
tried in vain to pronounce the name of a really incredible Munich jazz lady he had heard
playing excellently at least on a dozen of horns. He was exaggerating... but not much! The
situation changed in 1995 as "Guajira For My Moods" (AWS 069505) turned the
attention to the remarkably gifted lady who finally is achieving long overdue popular
recognition. Unlike most musicians who get in the recording studio at rather tender ages
her debut as a leader presented the mature achievements of a creative artist already in
her thirties: an improvising soloist and skillful composer with a sense of flowing melodic
line, a strong feeling for rhythm and a lovely tone. An all encompassing musician. The
combination of classical education, experience in Modern Jazz and especially her curiosity
and deep understanding not only of the Western musical heritage but of many moods, rhythms
and scales from all continents, permits her to tell her own stories. Beate Kittsteiner
whose name was misspelled in 1991 by a Japanese record company on a sidewoman-date with
Mal Waldron as "Beat Kiffstiner" shows again that she is very unlikely to be
beaten by any flutist!
"Man only plays where he/she is a human
being in the true sense of the word, and only where he/she plays is man a true human
being." With this argument for the "homo ludens" Friedrich Schiller could
easily become the next patron saint of jazz! So its just fitting that the aptly
titled PENTALUD opens the album. The Greek word "Penta", known from
expressions like "pentagram" or "pentameron". and the Latin word
"ludus" join together to the "play of five" of a band that has
definitely grown together. Beates "International Jazz Quintet" consists of
musicians "who play my music the way I feel it.". Already featured on
"Guajira" were tasteful German Pianist Walter Lang, rock-solid Canadian bassist
Rocky Knauer and Brazilian percussion-wizard Borel de Sousa with whom Beate started a
promising duo-partnership. John Betsch has not only been the first choice of Mal Waldron,
Steve Lacy and the late Jim Pepper, but has also been for years Beates musical
companion and one of her best friends.
But "Pentalud" also means
Beates playful treatment of the fifth degree of the scale, which is by turns either
augmented, diminished or natural. The head begins like an Indian raga and continues with
complex, changing rhythms and vertical harmony in the B and C sections. With an inspired
solo, Walter shows why he belongs to Germanys most sought-after pianists, while
Borels skillful tabla playing so far might have been a secret even to his biggest
fans.
By trying to whistle or hum along with
Beates haunting melodies, one realizes that in spite of their catchiness they are by
no means easy. All of a sudden one notices unusual changes or meters. A case in point is MONTOONO.
"Like all of my tunes, also this one is a little bit the other way around, a little
different." Most Cuban montunos feature patterns with only a few changes. Are
montunos too monotonous for improvisation? Jazz musicians not familiar with Latin music
might think so. With an uncommon montuno Beate demonstrates that they are wrong. In a very
unconventional way she spiced the third part of the head with interesting changes,
replaced the sometimes squeaky sound of the Cuban flute by her alto flute and featured the
bassist.
QUE PASA? Whats going on? Beate
shows with a minor blues that her mellow, but muscular baritone voice now has come close
to her unrivaled flute mastery.
"Waiting for the ringing of a phone is
one of the most awful feelings I know. And writing this tune was my way of dealing with
it." It is hard to believe that such an unpleasant feeling can inspire a dreamy
ballad like WAITING, which on Beates bass flute sounds especially tender..
At the very beginning of her career Beate
played with musicians like Karl Berger and Don Cherry in Woodstock. One of her oldest
sambas dates back to that time. When Kenny Werner played the tune for her, he changed one
single chord. Beate liked that little change so much that she dedicated the tune to Kenny
and named it after his Jewish name, GIDALJA. In this lively tune, Borel plays the
surdo, something of a Brazilian bass drum. He and John Betsch, who takes care of the
higher register with his tasty cymbal work, complement each other excellently. And with
his solo, John confirms Beates words: "John knows that my music consists to a
large extent of Latin tunes, and, though always claiming not to have much experience in
that style he proved the contrary with these recordings. Also, the combination of Rocky
Knauer and John Betsch is one of the hardest swinging rhythm sections you can find in
Europe at the moment."
The third jazz album Beate bought as a
teenager was one by John Coltrane. With COLD RAIN, a blues with changes that early
Coltrane would have used, Beate pays homage on alto-flute to one of the last giants
"who brought something new to Jazz. The search for something new is essential to most
musicians. Without his pioneering work today we wouldnt play the way we do."
With the colourful title UMAGADUM Beate
has created a rhythmical variant of the Songo interspersed with a Guaguanco. The
composition with changing meters (6/4 and 4/4) features Borel on a vaselike Senegalese
drum called Udu, which is made of clay and has two toneholes.MERCEDES
"Years ago we were playing some
music.
Years ago our friendship was great.
Sharing every single moment,
Everything happy - everything sad.
What a pleasure just to be with you!
Hear your laughing - see you cry.
What a pretty and wonderful friend."
Beate dedicates this song to the memory of
Mercedes Rossi, a great pianist and friend who died young in 1995. She will be remembered
by everybody who had the chance to listen to her playing.
The title SOMEBAIÃO is a play on words
as Jazz musicians (and especially Beate!) like them and does not only refer to some baiao,
but also to the samba. Compositions often change like growing up children. Originally
conceived as a samba, the tune more and more took the form of a Baiao. Beate, who works
regularly with Brazilian musicians, was inspired to this composition by a Brazilian
fairytale about two lovers living apart. They keep in contact with each other with the
help of a big bird on whose back they fly to each other in their dreams.
DR. PEPPER, a straightahead number with
a slow B-section, was written by Beate for the great Indian saxophonist Jim Pepper, who in
hard times always had some good piece of advice for Beate (or cured her soul like a wise
medicine man).
Beates light-footed CALYPSO,
which is based on a musical phrase composed by Burkhard Kienzler, leads the album to a
carefree finale. The tune dates back to the time when she was in Woodstock, and therefore
she doesnt remember exactly why she combined the Trinidadian dance with the
favourite dish of the Australian Koala bear. The rhythm section includes soundengineers
clapping their hands. Good idea! Lets clap for the Beatifying album!
Marcus A. Woelfle |