A typically serious and highly detailed new work from Austrian guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel.
He’s a world class player.
If you are serious about listening to the best practitioners anywhere he’s someone you need to know about.
We’ve heard Muthspiel, 59, a few times. In London circa 2001 playing with Bass Desires genius Marc Johnson and the acclaimed Shorterian Brian Blade.
That was a fairly mindblowing gig. It was in the old Vortex on Stoke Newington Church Street.
We visited the club there and in Dalston where it later moved many times since.
And I would say that the Muthspiel, Johnson and Blade gig is up there with our very best experience in the club.
Hearing Vijay Iyer there multiple times and Wynton jamming are the other gigs that looking back also blew us away in very different ways.
Muthspiel we also caught in Coventry in 2008 playing radiantly with Dhafer Youssef in a beautiful Guildhall venue and more recently interviewed him for this blog some years ago.
If push were to come to shove Real Book Stories issued on a label we really liked at the time, an Austrian indie called Quinton more than 20 years ago and Driftwood (ECM) again with Blade significantly at the kit are our favourites of Muthspiel’s work. We like this a whole bunch too and it grows more meaningful with every listen.
Playing his customised Jim Redgate guitar this latest isn’t meant to be if you like a typical Muthspiel record.
That’s because it’s partly a study, partly in its mood a kind of retreat.
And there’s huge discipline in this.
And yet it is not dry.
A typically serious and highly detailed new work from Austrian guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel.
He’s a world class player.
If you are serious about listening to the best practitioners anywhere he’s someone you need to know about.
We’ve heard Muthspiel, 59, a few times. In London circa 2001 playing with Bass Desires genius Marc Johnson and the acclaimed Shorterian Brian Blade.
That was a fairly mindblowing gig. It was in the old Vortex on Stoke Newington Church Street.
We visited the club there and in Dalston where it later moved many times since.
And I would say that the Muthspiel, Johnson and Blade gig is up there with our very best experience in the club.
Hearing Vijay Iyer there multiple times and Wynton jamming are the other gigs that looking back also blew us away in very different ways.
Muthspiel we also caught in Coventry in 2008 playing radiantly with Dhafer Youssef in a beautiful Guildhall venue and more recently interviewed him for this blog some years ago.
If push were to come to shove Real Book Stories issued on a label we really liked at the time, an Austrian indie called Quinton more than 20 years ago and Driftwood (ECM) again with Blade significantly at the kit are our favourites of Muthspiel’s work. We like this a whole bunch too and it grows more meaningful with every listen.
Playing his customised Jim Redgate guitar this latest isn’t meant to be if you like a typical Muthspiel record.
That’s because it’s partly a study, partly in its mood a kind of retreat.
And there’s huge discipline in this.
And yet it is not dry.
Mindful reveries
Celebrating the acoustic guitar, this year other icons of jazz guitar have done the same and I think the main album of high calibre to have been released and that can be mentioned in the same sentence is the nevertheless very different Moondial from Pat Metheny.
You can’t really compare the two idiomatically at all, however.
But certainly I prefer the Muthspiel to the Metheny because for solo Metheny New Chautauqua from the 1970s is far more preferable and something of a masterpiece.
Craft and graft
A live affair recorded in Vienna at the national radio network ORF (Österreichischer Rundfunk)’s RadioKulturhaus, the mix, audiophiles will be cheered to know, is by La Buissonne genius engineer Gérard de Haro.
A foreverness
A J. S. Bach sarabande partly improvised in the interpretation and ‘Abacus’ by the legendary Bill Evans drummer Paul Motian – the second track in on the 1979 recorded ECM studio album Le Voyage – (Motian on that recording made in Germany with J. F. Jenny-Clark and Charles Brackeen) are also included.
Etudes/Quietudes is easily more rewarding than your daily date with mindfulness. Being recorded is like dancing in the dark with destiny. And you lean given that sobering thought in the more intense moments just as much that work as humane and dignified as this is forever.