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"Open Opus" is the second release by this intercontinental trio, consisting of pianist and composer Søren Kjærgaard, versatile bassist Ben Street and legendary drummer Andrew Cyrille. In 2008 Kjærgaard-Street-Cyrille released the album ”Optics”, which caught the attention of music critics around the world, calling it: ”...minimalistic bliss!” (Jazz Times, U.S.), ”...a beautiful and fascinating recording...” (All About Jazz, New York), ”...terse & ruminative music...” (New York Times), ”...iconoclastic sonorities...” (Jazzman, France), ”...masterpiece of epic dimensions.” (Geiger, Denmark).
As with ”Optics”, ”Open Opus” was recorded at the renowned Sear Sound studios in New York City under the auspices of sound engineer James Farber. With only one year between the two sessions, the albums are in many ways interrelated, sonically and aesthetically. As the album title suggests, a ground element of ”Open Opus” is openness: not only to exploring new sonic fields but also to the interweaving of the generations and traditions. (When recording, Cyrille, of Montclair, New Jersey, was 68; Street, of Brooklyn, New York, was 43; Kjærgaard, of Copenhagen, Denmark, was 30.)
The compositions, which except for two group improvisations were written by Kjærgaard, create an atmosphere, a musical state of being, with room for each individual voice to unfold. Accordingly, and preserving a kind of freshness and spontaneity in the music, most of ”Open Opus” was done in first takes. Throughout ”Open Opus” are textures of transparency and density, of airiness and water-like buoyancy – a meeting of three musicians in vibrant interplay, sharing a deep involvement with the expanse of sound.
♥♥♥♥♥ - Politiken (Denmark)
★★★★★ – Jyllandsposten (Denmark)
★★★★ – Gaffa (Denmark)
★★★1/2 - Downbeat (US)
Honorable Mention: Best Of 2008 Release - All About Jazz, NYC (US)
“Søren Kjærgaard's Optics is a study in movement and sound. Echoes of Andrew Hill and Cecil Taylor permeates throughout this bold, adventurous release.” – Jakob Baekgaard, All About Jazz (01/2009)
"Quiet, atmospheric, fascinating, enchanting, three-dimensional impro-jazz". – Ivan Rod, Gaffa (Denmark 10/2008)
"Søren Kjærgaard and his to American companions, who will embark on a small European tour, were to my ears one the greatest experiences on the festival. Solely, but not just because of Kjærgaard’s extraordinary sense of sound and his art of touch in all dynamic ranges and in all registres of the piano. If Claude Debussy had been born a 100 years later and as a jazz musician in Jutland, his music could very likely have sounded like this. And as a composer and musical director, Søren Kjærgaard is spanning from the very articulate to the very open, from total unpredictability to something that could be printed in a kinky version of the Danish folk school songbook. And even more so, it seems like he, with the solid Street and the visionary veteran Cyrille, has found something that sounds like a dream trio." – Jakob Levinsen, Jyllandsposten (Denmark 07/2008)
“There is a somnambulant quality to Optics, a kind of walking life feeling. Søren Kjærgaard, 29-year-old Danish pianist, recruited bassist Ben Street and the phenomonal drummer Andrew Cyrille for this trio, and boy, do they listen to one another. … this is minimalistic bliss” – Steve Greenlee, Jazztimes (US 08/2008)
"The title track of Optics provides a good overview to this beautiful and fascinating recording. While some young musicians seek to capture their audience with a fusillade of notes, pianist Søren Kjaergaard’s trio proceeds with the flowing confidence of a Zen master… Both “Elegy” and “Radio House Requiem” might be described as ballads and they are both gorgeous CD highlights. The latter does portray a sense of loss, but the sophisticated harmonies played at a slow, steady tempo make for riveting listening." - Francis Lo Kee, All About Jazz (NYC 06/2008)
“...Kjærgaard’s music is a rather special mixture of expressive minimalism and beautiful elegic ballads with a classic (European) cut. But the music does not degenerate into empty weaving; it is spinned into a fine artwork in a structure, which in contradiction to other contemporary trios refrains from “hip grooves” or neo romantic Brad Mehldau lyricism. The free improvisations are of a destinctive delicacy and are from the hands of the pianist carried by his fine touch, showing a little of Cecil Taylor’s dancing, eruptive keyboard treatment.” - Ib Skovgaard, Weekendavisen (Denmark 06/2008)
“The title tracks is in itself a masterpiece of epic dimensions…There is delicate lyricism; broad, melancholic strokes and eruptive waves, that flushes towards the listener with a dramatic effect. Always with a sense of the pause and the silence in the music, the gradual touch. The interplay is supreme, and nobody masters the abstract rhythms as Cyrille…The best part of Optics is probably the union of the lyrically lingering / dwelling and the constant moving and challenging. Kjærgaard and his co-players can play right into the heart as in “Elegy”, a ballad, which simply does not get any better, but they are also able to move into abstract and intricate compositions as “Mallets” and “Work Of Art”, which draws lines to Andrew Hill and Cecil Taylor.”- Jakob Bækgård, Geiger (Denmark 06/2008)
“The music never drowns in superficiality, but on the contrary it is always stimulating and audacious. Iconoclastic sonorities somewhere between avantegarde and minimalism.”- Pascal Rozart, Jazzman (France 05/2008)
“Kjærgaard is a canny improviser and an explorer of the piano’s interior sound-world.” - Signal To Noise (US 07/2008)
“Having released a number of records, Kjaergaard now releases "Optics", something that in my opinion, sees full realization of his own, unique style… Subtle with a particular focus on the lyrical side, "Optics" is bound to shine a brighter spotlight on Kjaergaard outside of his native Denmark.” - Tom Sekowski, Gaz-Eta (Poland 05/2008)
"This is a record you have to sit down and listen to in order to get the full picture… And play it loud! If the trio is performing on a festival or a club near you, then be there!” - Jan Granlie, Jazznytt (Norway 04/2008)
“Optics is an album that will become a personal “secret masterpiece” that if someone was to ask if people still make incredible, forward-thinking jazz in the 21st century, I'll have to bring this album up in conversation.”- John Book, The Run Off Groove (US 03/2008)
“Their collective outing is packaged as Optics, an enchanting soundscape that explores the complexities of Kjærgaard's eight compositions… Optics is a release that invites structure, but satisfies creative freedom. It really pays tribute to Kjærgaard's vision and caliber of musicianship. Kjærgaard is equally harmonious and dissonant, lyrical and jagged, accentuating his statements with rapidity and force that is reminiscent of Misha Mengelberg. Kjærgaard is aware of his originality and seems determined to mine his own territory.” - Peter Sanchez, All About Jazz, LA (US 03/2008)
“The music on this one is built around rhythm in the form of brooding percussion rattles and tense little piano figures that either stay quiet and hypnotic or build into something larger when Cyrille starts flexing his muscles and really working his drum kit as he does on “Cyrille Surreal,” “Mallets,” and “Work Of Art.” Kjaergaard and Street work around this, adding layers of melody and tension in a set that is alternately serene and stormy.” – Jerome Wilson, Cadence (New York, 10/2008)