Friday, 16 November 2018

Various Artists (incl. Jan Garbarek Quartet) - Popofoni (1973)

Anyone watching the Åpen Post show on Norwegian TV on 6th March 1969 (which I doubt will include any readers here, but you never know -YouTube link, sorry no subtitles) would've caught a fascinating, bizarre debate about pop music/popular culture vs. classical music/high art.  The programme caught the attention of Arne Nordheim, previously featured on these pages here, and of the Ny Musikk organisation and the Henie-Onstad arts centre.

The plan was hatched (in an uncanny precedent for Ode To Marilyn) to get hold of some prime Nordic musicians - step forward Jan Garbarek, Bobo Stenson, Arild Andersen, Jon Christensen and Terje Rypdal - and have them collaborate with some of Norway's foremost modern composers to produce music that would represent a meeting point between popular music and the avant-garde.  Arne Nordheim, Alfred Janson, Gunnar Sønstevold, Kåre Kolberg and the soon-to-be ECM-ers, plus additional musicians, duly obliged, and a concert of the results was held in April 1970.  Three years later, this limited-edition double album emerged as a document of the project, which had been titled Popofoni.

The six tracks here are certainly fascinating, essential listening, especially if you're familiar with early ECM classics like Afric Pepperbird / Sart / Rypdal's debut.  Imagine these records with a whole extra layer of avant-garde composition/production over the top, and that's pretty much what Popofoni sounds like.

The 20-minute opener Arnold, composed by Gunnar Sønstevold, is a free jazz groove with echo-laden vocals wafting over the top, and occasional organ and tape effects.  Nordheim's two tracks that follow are even better works in the same vein, with the eerie collage of Solar Plexus (his first response to the TV debate) ending in a scratchy, sampled dance orchestra, a hail of gunfire then an emptying sink (or toilet?).  The second disc is dominated by Alfred Janson's 25-minute Valse Triste, where the jazz musicians veer between free playing and lounge pastiche, feeling their way towards the eventual schlager payoff, whilst spoken samples of the TV debate pepper the sonic landscape.  Kåre Kolberg's Blow Up Your Dreams is a more succinct attempt at stretching a conventional song (sung by Karin Krog) to fit an avant-garde frame, and as a closer we get a brief Rypdal composition in which he plays flute rather than guitar.  An utterly essential collection.
Original double-LP cover
Disc 1
Disc 2
pw: sgtg

6 comments:

  1. Alan, can't thank you enough for this rarity. Very much appreciated!

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  2. Those are some of my favorite early ECM albums, so I'm really looking forward to this one. I've always thought of their work as more avant than 'pop music/popular culture' but I wish it were. Thanks Alan.

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  3. I bought the double cd reissue last year, best use of money! Awesome album. I don't know why they ditched the great original cover art - the new cover is pretty bland.

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    1. Agree, that original cover's somehow just perfect for the 'cross-pollenation' experiment of the music... And there's been a vinyl reissue, so the original image was definitely available - unless the CD company couldn't get the licensing rights to it, or something.

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    2. They show it inside the cd reissue booklet, so who knows why they didn't use it up front.

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    3. Ah yeah, so it is - duh! I only glanced at the inside the once, thinking it was a shame there wasn't an English translation of the liner notes. Yup, who knows...

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