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Max Frankl - Fernweh (2015)

Max Frankl - Fernweh (2015)
  • Title: Fernweh
  • Year Of Release: 2015
  • Label: Unit Records
  • Genre: Jazz, Contemporary Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 41:30
  • Total Size: 258 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Zürich (06:16)
2. Aufbrechen (09:02)
3. Copy/Paste (04:07)
4. 80's (05:56)
5. Schweben (04:53)
6. Second Thoughts (04:34)
7. Fort Greene Park (06:43)

ECHO-Prize Winner Max Frankl is only 32 and already catapulting his way into the top league of European jazz guitarists. “Fernweh” is the fifth album he has produced as band leader. It is his most personal work yet, in which the German-born guitarist presents himself as a personally and musically mature artist. In the seven compositions, Max Frankl and his fellow musicians oscillate effortlessly between jazz and rock, garnished with a pinch of bossanova and a few psychedelic sounds. Distorted guitars, echo effects, tape-recorder-like delays and loops - all of these belong to Frankls new sound, with which he takes his listeners on a musical journey.

Liner Notes by Bill Milkowski

"It is always gratifying to discover a new voice in jazz. Of course, for jazz fans throughout Germany, Max Frankl is hardly a new voice at all. His previous four releases -- 2005’s Frankzone, 2008’s Sturmvogel, 2011’s Francis Drake: Stories and 2012’s Home -- earned critical acclaim while establishing Frankl as a rising star in Germany (he was named “Best Guitarist“ in the 2012 ECHO JAZZ Awards and was a nominee for the 2014 German Music Composers Award). But to these Stateside ears, Fernweh is an auspicious introduction to a gifted guitarist-composer worthy of wider recognition.
Fueled by the highly interactive rhythm tandem of bassist Dominique Girod and drummer Claudio Strueby and bolstered by the complementary flights of saxophonist-clarinetist Reto Suhner, Frankl showcases his considerable fretboard facility and improvisational daring on this outstanding release. And while he may be steeped in the jazz tradition (he grew up listening to his father’s Chet Baker and Miles Davis records, had Charlie Parker posters on his bedroom wall and ended up playing with such inveterate swingers as saxophonists Lee Konitz, Benny Golson and Emil Mangelsdorff), he is not above dealing with dissonance, audacious rock and funk beats or stomping on a fuzz box now and then. In that regard, Frankl is part of the modernist six-string lineage that begins with early inspirations like John Scofield, Mike Stern and Pat Metheny and continues with the next generation of guitarists who followed in their wake, including Wolfgang Muthspiel, Kurt Rosenwinkel and Ben Monder (all three of whom Max studied with at different points in his musical development).



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