Mondavi Center Presents
Tord Gustavsen Trio
Often with just a few carefully chosen notes, Norwegian jazz pianist Tord Gustavsen draws listeners into a world where melody is cherished as much as the freedom to explore textures and soundscapes.
Taking care to play only that which says something, and leaving space for listeners to savor what has been said, his bands unite beauty and emotional intensity in their playing and improvisation. His two Mondavi Center appearances have been spiritual moments for many audience members, a very intentional effect. “For me,” he says, “playing the piano is very similar to a meditation or prayer.”
Runtime: 1hr 20min with no intermission.
Sponsored by
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The Nancy and Hank Fisher Family Fund
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Capital Public Radio
Artist Bios
Tord Gustavsen
Piano & Electronics
Tord Gustavsen
Born in Oslo the eldest of five children, Tord Gustavsen and his family moved to a village in rural Norway where he grew up. Playing the piano from age four, he began composing and improvising before learning to read classical pieces. Soon he played gospel in churches, jazz fusion on other stages, and used his classical training to write his own songs. At age nineteen, he returned to Oslo to study sociology, psychology and the history of religions at the University of Oslo; and met singer Kristin Asbjørnsen whose thoroughness and expressive powers have had a lasting effect on his artistic journey.
In 1993, he was accepted to the Conservatory of Music in Trondheim, a place known to emphasize development of artistic identity. Having finished three years of training in jazz piano, jazz history, improvisational techniques, composition and analysis, he moved back to Oslo to pursue a career as a freelance musician and to commence a second wave of academic studies at the University of Oslo. Over the next three years he obtained a graduate degree in musicology, specializing in the psychology and phenomenology of improvisation.
In 2003, he released his first album with his trio on ECM Records, Changing Places, which captured the imagination of listeners worldwide and launched Gustavsen on an international career. Two more trio albums followed, The Ground (2005) and Being There (2007) to complete a trilogy that was met with critical acclaim and took the trio to leading events in Europe – the UK, Ireland, Denmark, Sweden, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Poland, Bulgaria, Serbia, Romania, Greece; in Asia – Japan, South Korea, Azerbaijan, Turkey; in North America – Canada and the U.S.; and Australia.
In 2008, the Vossajazz Festival in Norway commissioned a work that brought a new Gustavsen ensemble to the stage with singer Kristin Asbjørnsen, actress Cecilie Jørstad, saxophonist Tore Brunborg and bassist Mats Eilertsen. In 2009, this commissioned work was arranged for quintet and became Gustavsen’s fourth album for ECM, Restored, Returned, and gave rise to his new touring quartet with Brunborg, Eilertsen, and drummer Jarle Vespestad, who has played on all of Gustavsen’s ECM albums. The quartet went on to complete a second trilogy with the acclaimed albums The Well (2012) and Extended Circle (2014), and added Portugal, Russia, Brazil, New Zealand, and South Africa to Gustavsen’s touring history.
Inspired by his interest in Rumi, whose poems he had set to music, Gustavsen created a new trio in 2016 with vocalist Simin Tander and drummer Jarle Vespestad. They performed Norwegian hymns sung in Pashto and poems of Rumi in English for the album, What Was Said.
In 2018, his artistic journey came full circle with the return to the piano trio and the release of The Other Side. Having the melody wholly in his hands once again, Gustavsen’s growth as an artists is evident in the album’s sound, paradoxically deeper and darker yet more open. To his sound palette he added the subtle use of electronics. His ninth album for ECM Records, Opening, was again devoted to the piano trio and was released in 2022.
Before starting his solo career, Gustavsen had already been a vital part of the Norwegian jazz scene for some years. His playing was a cornerstone in projects that featured some of Norway’s finest singers, including Solveig Slettahjell, Silje Nergaard, Siri Gjære, and Kristin Asbjørnsen.
Among those who have commissioned him to compose works are the Vossajazz Festival (Norway), Cheltenham Jazz Festival (UK), and the Oslo International Church Music Festival. His ongoing collaborators include singer Solveig Slettahjell with whom he has created new versions of Christmas hymns, singer Mahsa Vahdat with whom he has interpreted Persian repertoire, singer Simin Tander, and saxophonist Tore Brunborg. In 2017, he became cantor and jazz pianist for Tanum Church in Bærum, Norway. His awards include the Norwegian Grammy, the Spellemannsprisen, for the album Restored, Returned. The album What Was Said was awarded the Jahrespreis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik as one of the ten best albums in any genre in 2016 by music critics in Germany.
Links
Steinar Raknes
Double Bass & Electronics
Steinar Raknes
Steinar Raknes is a Norwegian bassists, vocalist and songwriter. Raknes has toured most corners of the world, collaborating with musicians from many styles of music, with his roots in jazz music. Raknes is recognized through his work as composer and musician in the award-winning jazz trio Urban Connection, and for collaborations with artists such as Chick Corea, Michael Brecker, Bobby McFerrin and Ola Kvernberg. After completing a Master of Arts at NTNU year 2001, he has played in a large number of ensembles, including The Core, Ola Kvernberg Trio, Skáidi, Kirsti Huke Quartet and Trondheim Jazz Orchestra.
Raknes is a double bass virtuoso, playing both pizzicato and arco. He is known for his big tone in the instrument, and for his work with alternative pizzicato styles on the double bass, inspired by African Kora and American fingerpicking. He is also using electronics to extend the sound of the double bass, using guitar pedals and loopers, on both bass and vocals.
The name of Raknes vocal project is STILLHOUSE. The bass player writes songs and lyrics Americana style, mixing it up with jazz & blues and more.
Raknes has also worked several years with Sami music – yoik, starting with collaborating with the great yoiker Inga Juuso for many years. Together with her successor Sara Marielle Gaup he is now working with the duo Arvvas.
Links
Jarle Vespestad
Drums
Jarle Vespestad
Born in Kirkenes, Norway, Jarle Vespestad turned his attention to music in high school, graduating from Toneheim Folk High School and then taking up jazz studies at Tronheim Musikkonservatorium where he became the driving force behind many successful bands to emerge from Trondheim. Among them was Vesletrekk which became the band Supersilent, Farmers Market, and the Maria Kannegaard Trio.
Vespestad joined the Tord Gustavsen Trio for its debut recording, Changing Places, released on ECM Records in 2003, and has remained Gustavsen’s creative partner for the eight albums that followed including the most recent entitled Opening. The kind of sublime minimalism, married to a distinct sense of groove, that Vespestad stands for has very few, if any, parallels in the world of drummers. His lyrical emphasis and the highly responsive interplay developed between Gustavsen and himself over the years are essential elements of the band’s musical texture. If you hear someone singing when the band plays live, it’s probably Vespestad.
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