Mostrando postagens com marcador Elina Duni. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Elina Duni. Mostrar todas as postagens

17.7.22

ELINA DUNI QUARTET - Matanë Malit (2012) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

“Matanë Malit” (Beyond the mountain), Elina Duni’s ECM debut, is a homage to Albania. A singer looking at her roots from a present-day vantage point as a musician engaged in improvisational processes. Jazz experience informs her exploration of Balkan folk songs – with attention to atmosphere, the shape of the sound, the tactility of the structures, the implications of the words, … “It’s about serving the song”, she explains, “and about reclaiming and reinventing it.” Duni found her route to Albanian songs after forays into classical music, blues and jazz standards. Digging deeper into the Balkan region’s troubled history, she has uncovered many songs of real beauty and power, older songs from her homeland and from its vast diaspora. “Matanë Malit” includes songs of lovers, heroes, workers, shepherds, exiles, songs of resistance. Traditional songs arranged by Elina Duni, and new music expressively moulded in the tradition. ecm
Tracklist :
1    Ka një mot 5'11
(Muharrem Gurra)
2    Kjani trima 4'06
(Traditional)
3    Kur të kujtosh 4'06
(Elina Duni)
4    Vajzë e valëve 5'29
(Neço Muko)
5    Unë ty moj 3'55
(Traditional)
6    Erë pranverore 3'34
(Tish Daija)
7    Çelo Mezani 5'41
(Traditional)
8    Ra kambana 4'15
(Traditional)
9    Çobankat 5'14
(Traditional)
10    Kristal 4'52
(Elina Duni)
11    U rrit vasha 3'24
(Traditional)
12    Mine Peza 3'56
(Traditional)
Credits :
Elina Duni - Voice
Colin Vallon - Piano
Patrice Moret - Double Bass
Norbert Pfammatter - Drums

ELINA DUNI QUARTET - Dallёndyshe (2015) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

On Dallёndyshe (“The Swallow”), her second ECM album, Elina Duni sings songs of love and exile. The troubled history of the Balkan regions has inspired many such songs and the pieces here, primarily from Albanian traditional sources, are interpreted with intensity and insight by Elina and her band. The Tirana-born and Swiss-raised singer has become an exceptional musical storyteller embodying the songs’ narratives, in a way that transcends genre definitions and language limitations. “This time there is a sense of lightness to the feeling and energy of the album,” says Duni. “Even though we are dealing with tragic themes of exile it is not as dark as [the ECM debut] Matanё Malit.” In its sense of drive, Dallёndyshe opens up “a different groove, a different momentum. It’s become more rhythmic. Sometimes it’s almost a trance-like propulsion.” The programme of Dallёndyshe also looks to the Albanian diaspora. The last two songs on the album, “Ti ri ti ti klarinatё” and the title track are, respectively, from the Arvanitas and Arbёresh communities of Greece and Italy. In the wider world Elina still finds herself asked frequently to define her music. It has clearly become more than a hybrid of ‘jazz’ and ‘folk’. ecm
Tracklist :
1    Fëllënza 6'03
(Muharrem Gurra)
2    Sytë 5'09
(Isak Muçolli)
3    Ylberin 5'05
(Traditional)
4    Unë në kodër, ti në kodër 6'12
(Traditional)
5    Kur të pashë 4'48
(Traditional)
6    Delja rude 5'19
(Traditional)
7    Unë do të vete 4'59
(Traditional)
8    Taksirat 3'27
(Traditional)
9    Nënë moj 4'14
(Traditional)
10    Bukuroshe 4'16
(Traditional)
11    Ti ri ti ti klarinatë 2'49
(Traditional)
12    Dallëndyshe 2'46
(Traditional)
Credits :
Elina Duni - Voice
Colin Vallon - Piano
Patrice Moret - Double Bass
Norbert Pfammatter - Drums

ELINA DUNI - Partir (2018) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Personal circumstances underscore Elina Duni's fifth album and third for ECM. Unlike its predecessors, Partir finds the Albanian-Swiss singer/songwriter going it alone for the first time, apart -- perhaps permanently -- from her quartet due to the ending of a long-term relationship. In charting a new course, Duni accompanies herself on guitar, piano, and percussion, embracing these 12 songs in nine languages about love, loss, and leaving. It's a departure from the Albanian-only songs that comprised her two previous outings, and instead reflects the tenor of her solo concerts. In the short epigraph she provides in the liner notes, Duni writes, even before a word has been sung: "We are all departing, bound to be torn away, one day or another, from what we love."

She sets the stage in opener "Amara Terra Mia," an Italian waltz by 20th century icon Domenico Modugno and lyricist Enrica Bonaccorti. Duni's alternately strummed and fingerpicked guitar holds space for her vocal: "Endless skies and faces like stone/Calloused hands now hopeless. Goodbye, goodbye my love, I am leaving/Bitter land of mine, bitter and beautiful…" She follows it with her own "Let Us Dive In," a lilting ballad performed on piano where she portrays loss as a shared burden: "Let me look at you my love/As we dive under and above our 'whys'/It's been good til here/We made it through til here…." Even more powerful is the 19th century Egyptian song "Lamma Bada Yatathanna," by poet and musician Muhammad Abd al Rahim al Masloub. Duni plays a frame drum known as a daf. Her protagonist has been struck by a beauty so profound she is left confounded, desolate: "Who will alleviate my suffering of love and torment/except the King of Beauty…Mercy, mercy, mercy." She examines her themes in familial expressions, too, as in the Yiddish folk song "Oyfn Weg" and "Vishnja," a traditional song from Kosovo, about the bond that exists between mother and daughter. Both are leaving songs, but in the former, the leaving child may or may not be speaking from beyond the pale. In "Kanga e Kurbetit," another song from Kosovo, she sings as a mother and bereft lover raising a son alone. Its time frame spans more than 20 years. As it develops, her sense of loss deepens, not dissipates, as she alternates carving and cleaving meaning from her life. The totality of separation experienced through exile is rendered as ravaged beauty in her reading of Jacques Brel's "Je Nai Sais Pas."

In the music made with her quartet, Duni consistently blurred lines between jazz, folk, poetry, chanson, and other traditions. In performing solo, these already thin lines vanish; they're replaced by the intimate, authoritative weight of her voice writing a mapped, annotated language that juxtaposes tender abundance (the past) with the raw experience of lack (the present). On Partir, Duni enters the realm of the profound: Her voice does not hold within it the grain of separation, but is instead that grain personified.
>This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa'<
Tracklist :
1    Amara Terra Mia 4'17
(Domenico Modugno)
2    Let Us Dive In 4'44
(Elina Duni)
3    Meu Amor 4'28
(Alain Oulman)
4    Lamma Bada Yatathanna 4'16
(Muhammad Abd al Rahim al Maslub)
5    Vishnja 4'07
(Traditional Kosovo)
6    Lusnak Gisher 4'46
(Traditional Armenia)
7    Oyfn Veg 6'19
(Philip Laskowsky)
8    Kanga e Kurbetit 3'27
(Traditional Kosovo)
9    Ani Kaj Lulije 2'19
(Traditional Albanians from Macedonia)
10    Vaj Si Kenka 3'40
(Traditional Albania)
11    Je Ne Sais Pas 4'20
(Jacques Brel)
12    Schönster Abestärn 2'56
(Traditional Switzerland)
Credits :
Elina Duni   Voice, Piano, Guitar, Percussion

e.s.t. — Retrospective 'The Very Best Of e.s.t. (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

"Retrospective - The Very Best Of e.s.t." is a retrospective of the unique work of e.s.t. and a tribute to the late mastermind Esb...