Skip to content

Other sounds 5: Feat. Arve Henriksen

A fugitive sound, soft, glancing, indirect: the Norwegian trumpeter Arve Henriksen has a signature I love, in pretty much whatever context it appears. It could be in his group Supersilent, or with Jan Bang, Christian Wallumrød, Dhafer Youssef, Terje Rypdal, Iain Ballamy or Trygve Seim, or on his own albums, particularly Places of Worship (Rune Grammofon, 2013), which I think of as this century’s Sketches of Spain.

He’s developed the European equivalent of Jon Hassell’s trumpet sound, using electronics and a natural tendency towards understatement to take the instrument out of its normal brassy universe and into somewhere more mysterious. And he finds two soulmates in the Danish drummer Daniel Sommer and the Swedish bassist Johannes Lundberg on Sounds & Sequences, a trio recording made in a Gothenburg studio.

A series of 11 pieces evolving from free improvisations subjected to post-production processes of editing and shaping, this is a very beautiful thing indeed. Sommer’s playing draws the ear throughout, pulling gentle grooves out of the air and adding the finest of detail. Lundberg and Henriksen both contribute electronic beds and textures (Henriksen also uses his counter-tenor voice from time to time), nudging the music towards something that touches the celestial sublime.

The trumpeter pops up in Triage, the new album from Erik Honoré, one of the founders of Kristiansand’s remix-based Punkt festival, which celebrated its 20th edition last month. Deploying colleagues including Sidsel Endresen, Eivind Aarset, Ingar Zach, Nils Petter Molvaer and Jan Bang, Honoré creates little tone poems, some of them used as settings for found texts.

These include Emily Dickinson’s poems “Hope Is a Thing With Feathers” and “Pain Has an Element of Blank”, portions of Ezra Pound’s Cantos — read by Bang — and a section from the US Surgeon General’s undated instructions on early care of combat wounds: “A not uncommon occurrence in the present war are those distressing wounds of the face and jawbones which have attracted particular attention not only on account of the disfigurement which they cause but even more so from the difficulty that was first encountered on dealing with them…”

The use of different readers adds variety and surprise, as if there were not already enough in the music itself, which also makes use of radio samples and field recordings. An instrumental piece called “Prague”, featuring Molvaer’s trumpet over Bjørn Charles Dreyer’s guitar and Mats Eilertsen’s treated double bass, is particularly striking, as is “In the Station of the Metro”, in which Henriksen’s breathy trumpet emerges between Pound’s lines and Honoré’s manipulated samples with typical probing grace.

Finally, Henriksen’s recent album of duets with the Dutch pianist Harmen Fraanje, Touch of Time, is more conventional in terms of exploitation of the available sonic materials, allowing a clearer view of the trumpeter’s playing, with only the occasional effective touch of electronics. Compositions by both men create music that is delicate, pensive, carefully weighted, devoid of affectation or allusion to outside worlds. The closer you listen, the stronger it gets.

* Sounds & Sequences is on the April Records label (www.aprilrecords.com). Triage is on Punkt Editions/Jazzland. Touch of Time is on ECM. All are out now.

5 Comments Post a comment
  1. Graham Roberts's avatar
    Graham Roberts #

    ’Touch of Time’ is a lovely album; Arve Henriksen and Martin Fraanje will be appearing at Kings Place on 22 November during the London Jazz Festival.

    Good to learn about the Daniel Sommer and Erik Honore releases. An earlier trio recording by Daniel Sommer, ‘As Time Passes’, on which the drummer is joined by Arild
    Andersen and the terrific English guitarist Rob Luft, is also worth checking out.

    October 30, 2024
  2. mjazz g's avatar
    mjazz g #

    I had reached saturation point with Henriksen a few releases ago, I wasn’t hearing anything too different from him, probably my ears.

    However I do think he’s a terrific musician and have just pre-ordered Sounds & Sequences on the basis of a couple of quick online samples, lovely to hear him with an acoustic bass. Thanks for alerting me to its existence.

    October 30, 2024
  3. Simon Scott's avatar
    Simon Scott #

    I don’t think you will be disappointed. My copy arrived from the label about a week ago and, to my ears, features some of Arve’s strongest playing in years. This is the second of what will be a trilogy of albums put together by Daniel Sommer. The first featuring Arild Andersen and Rob Luft is extraordinarily good.

    October 30, 2024
  4. Frank Hudson's avatar

    Thanks for alerting me to the Triage album as I’m generally interested in ways of combining literary poetry texts with various music. Listening now.

    November 9, 2024
  5. micksteels's avatar
    micksteels #

    Just seen Henriksen with Fraange playing at the wonderful Howard Assembly rooms. Not familiar with his playing I was taken with the variety of moods he managed to conjure with the pianist in perfect accord. He even played a blues bending notes like Rex Stewart. I saw the magnificent Wadada Leo Smith, a very different trumpeter 48 hours before, the Norwegian lost nothing in comparison

    November 20, 2024

Leave a reply to Graham Roberts Cancel reply