Berlin Calling is an enduring snapshot; a meeting of two different peer groups from the younger generation of the city’s players, and each of the musicians pose their own questions on this album. On the one hand we have the established leaders saxophonist Daniel Erdmann, who created a stir playing in Gebhard Ullmann’s Ta Lam Zehn, and pianist Carsten Daerr, whose trio turns the slightly dusty jazz piano-trio format inside out and upside down – and on the other hand four promising youngsters who have yet to receive nationwide recognition: trumpeter Ritsche Koch, guitarist Ronny Graupe, bass player Oliver Potratz and drummer Sebastian Merk. “Berlin itself needs no wake-up call†states Carsten Daerr. “But maybe this project can be some kind of wake-up call that alerts the outside world to the scene in Berlin. Berlin has a much higher reputation among musicians than among reviewers and listeners. Many musicians are coming to Berlin because they find the contacts that they need here.â€
The six musicians have not taken the easy route. They do not stick to a swing idiom, or remain caught up in ethno-platitudes. They avoid the clichés of free-, noise- or groove-jazz that have so far served to label the city's music. Instead, they play a fragile, sensitive and intelligent music, music of cosmopolitan understatement that defies pigeonholing. Yet they bridge the gap to the great musicians of jazz history in that they not only know what to play, they are also masters of leaving out the unessential.
Wolf Kampmann
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