Havard Wiik Archives - NativeDSD Music https://www.nativedsd.com/artist/havard-wiik/ Highest DSD Resolution Audio Downloads (up to DSD 1024) Mon, 30 Dec 2024 09:59:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://media.nativedsd.com/storage/nativedsd.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/13144547/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Havard Wiik Archives - NativeDSD Music https://www.nativedsd.com/artist/havard-wiik/ 32 32 175205050 Aves https://www.nativedsd.com/product/sgl16012-aves/ https://www.nativedsd.com/product/sgl16012-aves/#respond Fri, 20 Sep 2024 07:00:09 +0000 https://www.nativedsd.com/?post_type=product&p=271235 The Aves project came about when Ken Pickering, the late artistic director of the Vancouver International Jazz Festival, programmed a duo concert at the 2011 festival. Clarinetist François Houle, based in Vancouver for almost 25 years then but originally from the Montreal area, and pianist Håvard Wiik, Norwegian but living in Berlin, had performed together […]

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The Aves project came about when Ken Pickering, the late artistic director of the Vancouver International Jazz Festival, programmed a duo concert at the 2011 festival. Clarinetist François Houle, based in Vancouver for almost 25 years then but originally from the Montreal area, and pianist Håvard Wiik, Norwegian but living in Berlin, had performed together before a few times, but this was their first program as a duo. They both brought new compositions to the project, as well as playing a number of free pieces and one by pianist Benoît Delbecq. The result, according to Pickering, is “an incredible set of music, a triumph”.

What’s unique about this duo is partly the timbral qualities and partly the players’ different but compatible approaches to composing and improvising. Houle brings his arsenal of extended techniques, including slap tonguing (“Woodhoopoe”), flutter-tonguing, playing without a mouthpiece (“Ged’s Shadow”), and, in “Fallen Angel”, creating a melody softly shadowed a 12th below (this ‘duo tone’ is actually the fundamental with the 5th partial emphasized). But he uses these effects rather sparingly. Wiik’s often dynamic free/modal approach brings out Houle’s melodic gifts to the full. Charged rhythmic interplay and subtle textural shadings further display their mutual understanding. As Houle puts it, “I felt, as I listened back to the session’s music, that there was this undercurrent of things unsaid, that we as musicians feed off of. A lot of fleeting shadows of ideas flying by, with the two of us trying to catch on to, play with, and release.” (“Ged’s Shadow” references Ursula Le Guin’s Earthsea trilogy and specifically his detached shadow that eerily stalks the young mage Ged/Sparrowhawk.)

As for the clarinet-piano combination, there are only a few precedents in jazz, though many in classical music – what makes it so satisfying? François: “Having had a serious training as a classical musician [M.M from Yale] my relationship to the piano is deep, having had to learn most of the traditional repertoire, as well as playing tons of chamber music. Timbre is key here. Both instruments are basically metal tagged to a wooden resonating chamber, so they blend well together. There are very few instances for sure: Kuhn Brothers, Jimmy Giuffre with Paul Bley. Most influential recordings I know have bass or drums in addition. But the duo format that really caught my ears was the long-term relationship of Steve Lacy with two very different pianists, Mal Waldron and Gil Evans. Both really shed light on different aspects of Lacy’s playing. What I like about playing with piano is how it re-contextualizes what you do melodically into a harmonic framework. It forces you to listen more closely to how you connect notes.” Håvard adds: “I’ve always felt that the instruments blend very well sonically, the clarinet takes up less sonic space than the saxophone which gives some more space for the piano. Not many pure clarinet-piano duos in the jazz-canon but some strong combinations, including Tony Scott and Bill Evans.”


François Houle, Clarinet
Håvard Wiik, Piano

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