
For the title composition Air, Hans Abrahamsen returned, at Frode Haltli’s suggestion, to the early solo work Canzona,
revising it until it became a new piece. Of Abrahamsen’s music, Frode
Haltli writes that “not one note is accidental, nor are any of the other
specifications. Sometimes, this results in very complex music, while a
moment later it is so simple that it seems a child could perform it. He
writes music that can be on the verge of being discomforting, while at
the same time it is indescribably lovely.”
Haltli acknowledges that the music of Bent Sørensen has been an
influence on his development as a player. Sørensen composed the
demanding Looking on Darkness (later the title track of
Haltli’s ECM debut) for Frode’s first concert in Copenhagen, forcing him
“to discover new ways of thinking and of playing my instrument, which I
have continued to work on for many years, also in the field of
improvisational music, and in other contexts than classical music.” In
the same spirit It is Pain Flowing Down Softly on a White Wall
challenges perceptions of what can be achieved on the accordion through
tone control and nuances in soft dynamics. On the present recording,
Haltli’s accordion blends into and out of the sound of the Trondheim
Soloists’ nine violins, three violas, three cellos and double bass.
Towards the end of the piece the Trondheim musicians take up melodicas,
to create textures which seem like a ghostly echo of the accordion.
All of the music on the present disc was written for Frode Haltli, with the exception of Sigrid’s Lullaby,
which derives from Bent Sørensen’s set of nocturnes for piano. “The
piece flows easily into the adjacent but so different space of the
accordion,” Paul Griffiths observes in his booklet essay. “The lullaby
is repeated again and again, slowly dissolving in the waters of time.” (ECM Records)
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