Terje Rypdal: Conspiracy - LP 180g Vinyl

ECM Records

€22,90
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SKU:
ECM 2658
UPC:
0602507116309
Availability:
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Edition:
1x LP Vinyl
Rotation Speed:
33rpm
Record Weight:
180g
Vinyl Record Type:
LP
ECM Records Cat#:
ECM 2658
Released:
11.9.2020 in Germany
Genre:
Jazz
Artist:
Terje Rypdal
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A new ECM studio album and a programme of new music from Terje Rypdal is cause for celebration. On Conspiracy the great Norwegian guitarist seems to reconnect with the wild inspiration that fuelled such early masterpieces as Whenever I Seem To Be Far Away, Odyssey and Waves, exploring the sonic potential of the electric guitar with both a rock improviser’s love of raw energy and a composer’s feeling for space and texture. Keyboardist Ståle Storløkken, who contributed to Terje’s Vossabrygg and Crime Scene albums is an ideal co-conspirator, perpetually thickening the plot with his own intuitive feeling for complementary sound-colours. Conspiracy also marks a welcome return for Pål Thowsen, whose subtle, detailed drumming was last heard on ECM with Arild Andersen’s 1970s groups. Rypdal’s best band in years is completed by gifted young bass guitarist Endre Hareide Hallre. Conspiracy was recorded at Oslo’s Rainbow Studio and produced by Manfred Eicher and Terje Rypdal.

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TRACKLIST

A1 As If The Ghost... Was Me!? 5:39
A2 What Was I Thinking 5:30
A3 Conspiracy 6:10
B1 By His Lonesome 6:54
B2 Baby Beautiful 8:01
B3 Dawn 2:38

BACKGROUND

The sonic signature of Terje Rypdal is unmistakable. The yearning, skywards-slanting sustains which introduce his new album could not be anyone else. On Conspiracy the Norwegian electric guitarist – Terje likes to emphasize the electric - reconnects with the inspiration that fuelled such early masterpieces as Whenever I Seem To Be Far Away, Odyssey and Waves, exploring the potential of his instrument with both a rock improviser’s love of raw energy and a composer’s feeling for space and sound-colour. Conspiracy, recorded at Oslo’s Rainbow Studio is Terje’s first new ECM studio album in two decades. His other 21st century recordings have, to date, drawn upon live sources. The clarity and depth of the new production, and the panoramic sweep of the music, invite the listener to explore the grain, the detail and the texture of its enveloping sounds up close.
 
Conspiracy is here an album title, a composition, and the name of Rypdal’s current ensemble, one of his very best. Keyboardist Ståle Storløkken, who contributed to Vossabrygg and Crime Scene and was also a member of Terje’s Skywards groupis an ideal co-conspirator, perpetually thickening the plot with his own intuitive feeling for complementary shades and washes. The sound of the Hammond organ blending into and surrounding Terje’s Fender Statocaster can seem both nostalgic and futuristic.
 
Conspiracy also marks a welcome return for Pål Thowsen, whose subtle, detailed drumming was first heard on ECM with Arild Andersen’s 1970s groups. As Terje observes Thowsen is the Norwegian drummer whose feeling for time and dynamics is coming from the Tony Williams’s end of the percussive spectrum; his differentiated cymbal-playing is exceptional throughout. Rypdal and Thowsen first played together more than 40 years ago, when Terje guested on a collaborative recording session led by Pål and fellow drummer Jon Christensen (No Time for Time). The Conspiracy band is completed by gifted young bass guitarist Endre Hareide Hallre, whom Terje features as principal soloist on “By His Lonesome”.
 
When Conspiracy started out Terje envisioned out it as a project that would re-examine and develop material from the repertoires of his groups Odyssey and the Chasers, but it soon moved past this blueprint stage. The compositions here are all new, “some played for the first time in the studio,” including the final sound-painting “Dawn” which shares its title with an unrelated Odyssey piece: this is a new “Dawn”, in other words.
 
“As If The Ghost…Was Me” introduces the project, the guitar stretching out over tracery of cymbals, pellucid pools of keyboard sound, and free-roaming fretless bass. “What Was I Thinking”, meanwhile, is a rubato ballad that marshals a lot of feeling and still retains an experimental flair as the ensemble rallies behind Terje’s impassioned guitar. Title piece “Conspiracy “ is the closest to rock, taking off from Thowsen’s drum patterning against growling keyboards, and throbbing bass - all of which inspires Terje to take off on a characteristically ecstatic solo, soon followed by Ståle Storløkken with urgent statements of his own… The sounds of Storløkken and Rypdal are also intertwined and juxtaposed on the floating “Baby Beautiful”, where highlights include an extended organ solo with brushed drum accompaniment gradually overtaken by squalling guitar.
 

Terje Rypdal, was born in 1947 in Oslo. After early studies in piano and trumpet he took up the guitar at 12 and by 15 was playing with the Vanguards, a Norwegian beat group originally modelled on the Shadows and the Ventures. Subsequent decisive impulses for his future direction came from hearing music of Jimi Hendrix, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Ligeti and Penderecki, from playing and studying with George Russell, and taking composition classes with “neo-serial” composer Finn Mortensen. This medley of disparate influences has continued to play upon his imagination, inspiring a unique body of work.
 
Rypdal first came to ECM as a member of the Jan Garbarek Quartet on Afric Pepperbird in 1970, recording his leader debut for the label the following year. He has since appeared on a further 40 ECM albums, at various times closer to jazz, rock and classical idioms while always being true to himself as an improvising guitarist and composer.
 
Recent releases hint at the range of his work. Vossabrygg, for instance, is in part a tribute to Miles Davis and Bitches Brew, while Crime Scene, a collaboration with the Bergen Big band, was inspired by John Coltrane’s Meditations. Melodic Warrior, with texts drawn from Native American poetry sung by the Hilliard Ensemble, brings together Terje’s soaring electric guitar and the Bruckner Orchester Linz under the direction of Dennis Russell Davies, creating what the Independent On Sunday called “startling shamanic soundscapes.”

Conspiracy was recorded at Oslo’s Rainbow Studio early last year, and mixed there in January 2020 by producer Manfred Eicher, Terje Rypdal and engineer Martin Abrahamsen.

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3 Reviews Hide Reviews Show Reviews

  • 5
    Essential Rypdal

    Posted by Paul on 10th May 2022

    Absolutely love this album. The thing about Terje for me is that he stands out from all other guitar players as not sharing an identity with any obvious influences. Terje is unique. I have been a fan since 1978 when I heard Odyssey. This particular album is atmospheric jazz rock fusion with a great band and plenty of feedback (thanks Terje). I played the album first time and it was over before I realised I had even listened to it. It's not intense listening. This is Terje Rypdal. I don't think I need to add anything else.

  • 5
    Terje Rydal's back at last, and he's on top form ...

    Posted by Mandrek on 10th May 2022

    It's been a long time since electric guitarist and ECM stalwart Terje Rypdal gave us a new studio album; but Rypdal, now in his seventy-fourth year is back with "Conspiracy" and its like he's never been away as he's delivered another a suite of sparse atmospheric tones and jazzy notes from his Fender Stratocaster [I wish I could get my Strat to do this too!]. Backed by keyboards, fretless and Precision basses, drums and percussion the quartet open their account with "As If The Ghost... Was Me!?"; growing softly from the initial pairing of guitar and cymbal the intensity increases before reaching its haunting and wistful crescendo that sets the direction for the remainder of the album. The haunting beauty and intensity of Rydal's Strat continues into "What Was I Thinking", here played over a wash of keyboard sounds and bass notes, this is classic Scandi jazz territory, classic ECM territory, and classic Terje Rypdal. The title track though is heavier, less atmospheric , more fusion than fjord as Rypdal with his Strat set to stun fires off longer and faster runs, Storlokken's keyboards deliver occasional blasts of funk, Thowsen's drums throb and Hallre's base rolls. Perhaps not one for straight ahead jazzers but Rypdal always had an interest in the rockier side of the road. But the big skies, the vast open landscapes and perma-chill return for the reflective "By His Lonesome" with its bass-led eerie soundscape; and the expansive sparse mood continues into "Baby Beautiful", the longest track on the album its eight minutes allows time for a slow build to an early climax before Rypdal delivers his masterclass. Finally "Dawn" does what it says on the label: sit back, close your eyes, let your imagination go and you'll see what I mean. And that's it. Disappointingly "Conspiracy" is only six tracks long and clocks in at less than 35 minutes, but under Manfred Eicher's precise production they're all good minutes.

  • 5
    Wonderful vintage Terje Rypdal music, connecting with "After the Rain", of 1976.

    Posted by Jose on 10th May 2022

    At this stage of maturity, musician and composer Terje Rypdal delivers a work made of very inspired pieces with the kind of atmosphere proper to his fist period albums, like "After the Rain", very quietly and "spiritually" driven to the extent of taking the listener to a state of a sort of "active meditation". Yes, "Conspiracy" conspire with your soul and taste to take you to higher levels of inspiration without the need of taking anything else but the music. So is the experience that Terje's best music can produce in listerners like me.