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[ni:d]

About Me

[ni:d]
Three musicians with a common goal: Unison ensemble playing.
Together the group [ni:d] dive into the depths of folk music to explore how three people can sound like one.
The melodies are always in focus and give inspiration and ideas for what [ni:d] wish to communicate.
Their close ensemble playing captures and entrances the audience, taking them on a journey unlike any other.
Recension:
"Inspirerande folkmusik!
Mia Marin, Hanna W Griffiths och Petter Berndalen gett ut en alldeles utomordentlig folkmusik-cd. Den på pappret något udda sättningen fiol, saxofon och slagverk visar sig i praktiken tolka musiken på ett förförande sätt. Micke Marin skriver i skivans konvolut att [ni:d] lyckats skapa "det musikaliska nordiska ljuset". Det är en liknelse som väl presenterar gruppens musik. Skall man försöka spåra influenser till gruppens sound får man lyssna på Filarfolket, där en av Mias inspiratörer Ellika Frisell spelade fiol och Tina Johansson-Quartey spelade slagverk. Speciellt den härligt galna old-time låten Blackberry Blossom skulle mycket väl kunnat dykt upp på en gammal Filarfolketplatta och Eva Saethers underbart vackra Fastän fanns faktiskt med på Groupas klassiker Utan Sans från 1988. När jag spelade plattan för några "rockorienterade ungdomar" blev den spontana kommentaren att det låter som Freak Kitchen med IA Eklundh på fiol! Liknelsen säger en hel del om intensiteten och närvarokänslan i musiken. Det är en skiva som förbehållslöst kan rekommenderas alla som är intresserade av bra musik! Faktiskt är det den bästa folkmusikplattan jag hört på mycket, mycket länge."
Sven Ljungberg, Arvika nyheter
[ni:d] at Korrö Folk Music Festival. July 2007

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 02/10/2006
Band Website: www.nidmusic.com
Band Members:

[ni:d]
Mia Marin - Fiddle
Hanna W Griffiths - Saxophone
Petter Berndalen - Percussion

Mia Marin - Fiddle


Hanna W Griffiths - Saxophone


Petter Berndalen - Percussion


Visit our website!
www.nidmusic.com

Buy our CD!
www.playingwithmusic.se

Review:

There is something about trios. The spare nature of the lineup and the direct connection between the ear and the individual musicians make them attractive to me. These same qualities also make the musicians more attuned to each other, locked in to nuances that might be missed in a larger ensemble, yet offering sonic complexities that might elude the duet or solo performance.

This particular instrumental trio from Sweden offers an unusual sonic structure. Mia Gustafsson is the violinist, Hanna Wiskari plays saxophones and Petter Berndalen whacks, strums and caresses kit and frame drums and all sorts of small percussion. The violin and saxophone often play in tight unison or harmony, breaking off to counter and challenge one another in careful, open improvisations. These two young women clearly have learned their lessons from some of the best, and you can hear phrasing that indicates how much they revere masters of the previous two decades, like Lena Willemark, Mikael Marin, (who produced this recording), Sven Ahlbäck, Jonas Knutsson, Sten Källman and Ellika Frissell. Berndalen's playing owes much to the great Nordic drummer Terje Isungset in his use of brief, spacious patterns, irregular rhythms that fit tightly between the beat and unusual approaches to the instruments. They have studied the best of the best.

But they are ultimately their own masters. They show an astute understanding of regional folk music, with a particular focus on Värmland and Bohuslän, but they are not chained to the past and are willful in their reinterpretation of the old tunes. They freely mix in the jazz and classical idioms they all have training in, while never remaining true to the folk music, never becoming a fusion. Each tune offers a surprise, be it an unexpected sense of drama or a sudden flight of whimsy. This is all brilliantly expressed in their austere reading of Norwegian fiddler Hans Brimi's "Gammelhussin," where the fiddle and percussion don't so much take alternate lines of the tune as hurl them at one another, each challenging the other to take chances. They follow this with a warm romantic interpretation of the Brimi march "Nävårsetermarsjen" that starts as a slow fiddle solo and then evolves bit by bit into a raucous turn on the American fiddle tune "Blackberry Blossom," punctuated by a brief animated line from "Amazing Grace."

[ni:d] may have complicated their professional lives with their unusual name, (the phonetic of the English word 'need' as well as a reference to a Swedish song style), one that is impossible to file alphabetically. But perhaps that is the point; it is a name to match their equally undefined approach to folk music. As Wiskari explained to me, "Mostly it's about having a need for something - for example, playing music!"

- Cliff Furnald, Rootsworld

www.rootsworld.com

Record Label: Academus
Type of Label: Indie

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