Quotes about the album TOKYO

Quotes about the album
TOKYO

Perfect Saturday Morning Listen
Raw materials become finished artefacts in the space of seconds and minutes in the studio released into the air. You gravitate to this great trio’s work for its capturing of contemplativeness, quiet rhapsodies and intricate flourishes.
Marlbank

Wolfgang Muthspiel Trio – Tokyo
Recording of the Week 26th September 2025 Share
Muthspiel’s ensemble encapsulates everything a dynamic trio should be, and nowhere is that clearer than on Tokyo. It overflows with subtlety and style that only magnifies with repeated listens, and is a testament to a group that have put in the hours to obtain an incredibly refined sound. Another solid addition to Muthspiel’s ever-growing ECM discography.
Presto Music

 

There’s a sense of real relaxation here, and space is allowed to almost swallow the music whole while everyone seems to be trying things out in a genuine spirit of experimentation: it’s an effective way to close an album so generously stocked with nutritious melodies, dense harmonic structures and ensemble interaction of rare delicacy.
Liam Noble, UK Jazz News

Tokyo thus presents itself as a coherent work—at times mysterious—that rigorously demonstrates how contemporary jazz can still renew its paradigms. Can we speak here of an aesthetic of complexity? Perhaps yes, provided we understand “complex” not as “complicated,” but as something composite—diversely shaded, yet ultimately unified by a higher vision, an almost metaphysical perception of totality, reaffirming the sense of connection among the musicians.
Riccardo Talamazzi, OffTopic, Italy

Kammermusikalisches Jazz-Trio mit Sinn für unorthodoxe Ideen
Mit “Tokyo” legen Gitarrist Wolfgang Muthspiel, Bassist Scott Colley und Schlagzeuger Brian Blade bei ECM Records ihren dritten und bisher abenteuerlichsten Geniestreich als Trio vor.
JazzEcho

Es ist eine große Freude, den dreien dabei zuzuhören, wie sie die überraschenden, oftmals abrupten Wendungen in den Stücken des Bandleaders in zwingende Selbstverständlichkeiten verwandeln. Von den Melodien zehrt man noch lange. Nicht nur für Fans der Gitarrenkunst in all ihren Ausprägungen ein perfektes Album.
Josef Engels Rondo Magazin

“Tokyo” presents a mature synthesis, a balance of narrative clarity and harmonic adventure. Produced with trademark clarity by Manfred Eicher, the album highlights three master musicians weaving a tapestry of sound that is uniquely there own.
Mike Gates, UK VIBE

Der steirische Musiker Wolfgang Muthspiel hat mit seinem elitären Lieblingsformat ein Meisterwerk des subtilen Gitarrenjazz unter die Leute gebracht. Tokyo war eine Reise wert.
Otmar Klammer, KLEINE ZEITUNG

Auf seiner neuen Platte „Tokyo“ hebt Wolfgang Muthspiel die klassische Gitarre im Jazz auf ein neues Level von Sebastian Meißner, SOUND AND BOOKS
Das jüngste Album dieses grossen Trios,«Tokyo», enthält keineswegs irgendwelche Japonaiserien, sondern nicht weniger als Muthspiels sehr eigene Vision der Gitarre. Und des Zusammenspiels in der intimsten Formation des improvisierten Jazz. Dieses Trio ist ein Verbund von drei ausgeprägten Persönlichkeiten und dennoch als ein lebendiger Organismus unteilbar.
Peter Rüedi, Weltwoche

Dieses feine und berührende Album ist das Ergebnis einer sensiblen wie intensiven Gruppenarbeit, in der die Dynamik des Miteinanders der einzelnen Bandmitlieder die alles entscheidende Rolle spielt. Denn was hier der österreichische Gitarrist Wolfgang Muthspiel, der aus Los Angeles stammende Bassist Scott Colley und der in Louisiana beheimatete Schlagzeuger Brian Blade musikalisch auf die Beine stellen, klingt wie der konspirative Austausch von Seelenverwandten.
Jörg Konrad, Kulturkomplott

DISQUE COUP DE CŒUR
PAR FRED GOATY
Ça vient de sortir ou d’être réédité, c’est déjà dans les bacs ou sur les plateformes de streaming, c’est notre Disque coup de cœur du jour. Aujourd’hui :
WOLFGANG MUTHSPIEL
Tokyo (ECM)
Deux ans après “Elders”, revoici Wolfgang Muthspiel avec Scott Colley, contrebasse, et Brian Blade, batterie, et sur les fondations jadis posées sur le même label par Pat Metheny avec Jaco Pastorius et Bob Moses, ce guitariste autrichien continue de faire évoluer cette singulière esthétique du trio et signe un magnifique carnet de voyages dont la diversité d’approches fait toute la richesse : voici l’un des meilleurs disques de l’année.
Jazzman

Clean, precise, and tight to the point of telepathic, here’s a jazz trio album that gets past taking turns at solos in favor of an effort to tell the story collectively. Individual improvisational virtuosity, while still important, takes a back seat to group maneuvers. And Wolfgang Muthspiel is indeed a virtuoso.
Minor 7th

Al di là di questo, il trio conferma il proprio ruolo tra i più interessanti del periodo: raffinatezza, leggerezza e maturità nell’interplay evocano a tratti un trio evansiano in chiave moderna e chitarristica. Muthspiel dimostra ancora una volta di essere uno dei migliori chitarristi contemporanei, soprattutto quando, in acustico, mette in luce il suo background classico e l’eleganza del tocco.
Sentireascoltare, ITALY

Zusammenspiel auf höchstem Niveau: Dafür steht Wolfgang Muthspiel in der Trio-Konstellation mit Scott Colley (Kontrabass) und Brian Blade (Schlagzeug). Und alles klingt wieder so vertraut, als würden die drei seit Ewigkeiten miteinander
musizieren. Was das in zahlreichenTourneen zusammengeschweißte Dream-Team ja auch tut. Und was bedeutet:
sehr intim, viel Akustikgitarre,singender Kontrabass, dezent gestreichelte Drums, viel Raum für alles und jeden.
Werner Rosenberger, KURIER

This is the third album from Muthspiel’s tightly knit trio and gives a perfect indication of the progress of what is arguably one of the most integrated units in jazz. With Tokyo the group show how far they have come, while still retaining the spontaneity of their initial meeting and covering a wide range of material that acknowledges the source yet having the unmistakeable stamp of the collective written all over it.
Jazz Views

The formidable jazz trio of guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel, bassist Scott Colley, and drummer Brian Blade have returned with a new album called Tokyo on ECM Records. The group’s third recording also proves to be their most adventurous,Their rapport is evident in the musical risks they take across the album. For instance, the album begins with a version of Keith Jarrett’s “Lisbon Stomp,” which showcases the near-telepathic connection between Muthspiel and Colley.
No Treble

Wolfgang Muthspiel gilt seit Jahren als eine der prägenden Stimmen der europäischen Jazzgitarre. Mit Tokyo legt er nun
das dritte Album seines Trios mit Scott Colley (Bass) und Brian Blade (Drums) vor. Aufgenommen im Oktober 2024 in
einem kleinen Studio in Japans Hauptstadt und von Manfred Eicher im Februar 2025 in München gemischt, steht die
Platte exemplarisch für das, was dieses Ensemble auszeichnet: subtile Interaktion, weite stilistische Bögen und eine
verblüffend organische Klangsprache.
Concerto

Tokyo is one of the best jazz albums of the year just because of the seamlessness of the playing by Blade, Colley and Muthspiel.
Cultural Attache

Indeed, over the past years the Austrian guitarist has grown increasingly close and fluent with his trio mates Scott and Brian – a development that has been refined over several tours across Europe, the US and Japan. The latter has also been the recording location for all of the group’s output on ECM, including, as the title reveals, this album. Tokyo, the trio’s third studio date, is a testament to the profound dynamics and subtle interplay that perhaps only a working band can muster.
Different Noises

The invigorating “Roll” serves as a mid-album palate-cleanser, begi9nning with drummer Brian Blade’s introduction, which gins up a fizzy excitement. Guitarist Muthspiel and bassist Scott Colley maintain that energy as they enter with unison lines, played at dizzying speed.
Jazziz

Both renditions (Lisbon Stomp by Keith Jarrett and Abacus by Paul Motian) are emotionally honest and musically inspired, yet the real treasures lie in Muthspiel’s writing. “Paradela” glows in the dark as a resplendent rubato meditation, folding jazz and classical elements into a clear song form. Similarly, “Flight”—a piece in seven that layers arpeggiated passages, quick-witted chordal sequences, and smoky electric guitar lines—displays the guitarist’s emotive reach and the trio’s remarkable synergy. Colley’s breathing cadences and Blade’s enveloping cymbals add luminous depth.
Jazz Trail

Across the ten tracks, assertively jagged hooks and streamlined forms alternate. Colley and Blade are given space at times to add their own touches. Muthspiel himself switches between electric and acoustic guitar. Remarkably, on Christa’s Dream he manages to manipulate the sound of his instrument in fascinating ways. Another highlight of his skill can be heard in the nerve-racking Roll!
Jazz Halo

Manche Musiker schaffen es, sich immer wieder neu zu finden. Wolfgang Muthspiel beispielsweise hat sein ausgezeichnetes Trio und könnte sich in die Gemeinsamkeit des Flows mit seinen Partner zurücklehnen. Er will aber weiterhin über sich hinausreichen, wie mit seinem neuen Album.
Ralf Dombrowski, BR-Klassik

His intent to produce a recording that is as vibrant and spontaneous a s a live performance is obviously a top consideration for the artist. On TOKYO, there is little doubt that he and his bandmates have certainly been successful in recreating the vibe, excitement and spontaneity of a live performance on this excellent studio album.
Ralph A. Miriello, Notes On Jazz

Wolfgang Muthspiel wiederum, aus Judenburg stammend, in Wien lebend, in der Welt zuhause, legt mit “Tokyo” ein weiteres ECM-Album seines grandiosen Trios mit Bassist Scott Colley und Drummer Brian Blade vor – und besticht mit lyrischen Eigenkompositionen, in denen er seine E-Gitarre melodiös singen lässt.
Andreas Felber, Radio Ö1

Tout tourne autour du jeu, de l’improvisation subtile, élégante comme une pièce de haute couture, jusque l’abaque final – « Abacus » de Paul Motian – construit comme un jeu arithmétique dont le trio s’empare avec délice. Un album à se repasser pour en saisir toutes les subtilités.
Jean_Pierre Goffin, JazzMania

Tokyo is a very enjoyable album of guitar-fronted trio communication. Where some guitar trios collapse into leader-with-rhythm-section, here each member is an equal partner in shaping sound. Muthspiel’s writing and playing are thoughtful, Colley’s bass is grounding and lyrical, Blade’s drumming is endlessly inventive without overshadowing. Together, they take listeners from Jarrett’s sprightly swing through European chamber lyricism, into folk textures, fusion colors, and Motian’s spacious abstraction. Tokyo is not just for ECM devotees but for any jazz fan interested in how a trio can stretch idiom into new forms while never losing groove, song, and soul.
by Nolan DeBuke, The Jazz Word

Tokyo heißt die Produktion. Dahinter stehen der österreichische Gitarrist Wolfgang Muthspiel und sein Trio mit Scott Colley am Bass und Brian Blade am Schlagzeug. Es ist ihr bereits drittes Aufnahmeprojekt, und die vielleicht abenteuerlichste Trio-Aufnahme der Gruppe. Das Album ist nach der japanischen Hauptstadt benannt, wo es im Oktober 2024 aufgenommen wurde. Prädikat: absolut hörenswert. Erschienen bei ECM.
ORF Kulturwoche

Erneut pflegt Wolfgang Muthspiel’s Trio dort (in Tokio) Gesprächskultur auf hohem kammermusikalischem Niveau. Die Unterredung, an der der Gitarrist, Bassist Scott Colley und Drummer Brian Blade teilhaben, entzündet sich an der lebendigen, ja fetzig gestalteten Erinnerung an Keith Jarretts frühe Jahre.
Wolfgang Gratzer, Jazzpodium

Eigentlich muss man 2025 keine andere Jazzgitarristen-Platte mehr hören als „Tokyo“. Denn mit dem, was der Österreicher Wolfgang Muthspiel auf elektrischer und akustischer Gitarre da von sich gibt, ist alles gesagt, ausgedrückt und ausgelotet. Vor allem in dem, was Muthspiel nicht spielt und an seine langjährigen US-Gefährten Scott Colley und Brian Blade an Kontrabass und Drums auf dem dritten gemeinsamen Album delegiert – Themen zwischen Blues, Bauernweisen und Beethoven, Grooves zwischen Rock-Lässigkeit, Walzer-Widerborstigkeit und Zählzeit-Verflüssigung.
Josef Engels, Rondo

I’ve been a fan of Austrian guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel since at least 2016, when I absolutely loved his quintet recording Rising Grace. I’ve also been on board with this particular trio of Muthspiel’s, with Americans Scott Colley on bass and Brian Blade on drums, for their previous two outings Angular Blues (2020) and Dance of the Elders (2023). Maybe it’s just recency bias, but I think I like their latest Tokyo best of the three. Tokyo is going to keep me busy exploring its various moods and virtuosic performances for a long time to come. And it’s also a reminder to delve back into this trio’s earlier works. So, win-win!
Gary Whitehouse, Green Man Review

Wo andere Gitarristen die Saiten ihres Instruments anreissen oder zupfen, scheint Wolfgang Muthspiel sanft über das Griffbrett zu gleiten. In Verbindung mit seinem glasklaren Ton verleiht das seiner Musik oft etwas Schwebendes, Schwereloses…
Ein Schmankerl für Gitarrenliebhaber.
Münchner Merkur

In the end, Tokyo feels less like a document and more like a meditation in motion of three travelers translating memories into sound. What Muthspiel, Colley, and Blade achieve here is an equilibrium between structure and spirit. It is jazz as weather: unpredictable, fleeting yet timeless.
Tyran Grillo, Between Sound and Space

Interessant, wie Stücke manchmal entstehen. “Ich habe Traversia während einer Wanderwoche mit Freunden in Spanien geschrieben”, erzählt Wolfgang Muthspiel. “Ich hatte nur eine sehr leichte Kindergitarre dabei, die eine Quarte höher gestimmt war als gewöhnlich. Diese Einschränkung prägte die harmonische Welt, und ich denke, es klingt sehr nach mir.” Melodien ruhen sich in abstrakten Akkorden aus, bis Bassist Scott Colley und Drummer Brian Blade sanft einsteigen. Ja, es klingt sehr persönlich; besonders intim aber auch Pradela, eine balladeske Komposition, in die der Gitarrist subtil eintaucht.
Ljubisa Tosic, Der Standard

Among Muthspiel’s original compositions on this record, standouts include ballads such as “Pradela” and “Traversia,” a tribute to Kurt Weill titled “Weill You Wait,” and a lively, swinging track called “Roll.”There is also another cover, “Abacus,” by Paul Motian—a gem that closes the album, where Muthspiel’s guitar sound remains ever-present.
A Esquina do Rio

A luminous conversation between three master improvisers, where melody, rhythm, and intuition intertwine to produce an album that breathes with living musical empathy.​​
sunneversetsonmusic.com

Hier herrschen ein ausgeprägter Sinn für Ästhetik, die nie gekünstelt wirkt, eine perfekte Balance zwischen ausgeklügelten Kompositionen und inspirierten Improvisationen, eine außerordentliche Sensibilität und ein sicheres Gespür für feinste Nuancen, die selbst für den ausgebufften Jazz-Fan beim x-ten Anhören noch überraschende Trouvaillen bereithalten.
Peter Füssl, Kulturzeitschrift

Tokyo is going to keep me busy exploring its various moods and virtuosic performances for a long time to come. And it’s also a reminder to delve back into this trio’s earlier works. So, win-win!
Gary Whitehouse, A Greenman Review

Musik *****
Klang *****

Stereo

Etudes / Quietudes

Muthspiel is one of ECM’s signature artists of the past decade-plus. The dozen pieces he performed were revelatory, both for his astonishing facility on nylon-string acoustic and the variety of moods and soundscapes he generated, all seemingly from memory (he occasionally looked down to a single sheet of paper that had a few introductory bars for each composition). The performance was only 33 minutes but felt like a lifetime of musical narrative.

The etudes incorporated explosive flourishes or the juxtaposition of speedy fingerstyle figures and slower single-note melody lines. One exuded ECM-like clarity while another detoured into gruff, rhythmic chord progressions. Muthspiel explored both acoustic harmonics and electronic effects, using the latter to reverse a loop while adding a counterline — the most surreal and compelling moment of the evening. The density moved from whisper to whirlwind but never at the expense of absolutely perfect articulation. That, in combination with the church’s hushed sonic profile, made it feel like Manfred Eicher was hovering overhead

Andrey Henkin, Jazztimes

ETUDES / QUIETUDES

Depending on the musician, etudes can be rigorous technical exercises or meditative koan-like compositional worlds. Thankfully, in the hands of intuitive Austrian guitarist Wolfgang muthspiel, they are both. Etudes/Quietudes features 17 etude- miniatures performed by the prodigy-turned-jazz- firebrand on solo acoustic guitar. Underpinned by a fiery, sine-wave-like drone, “etude Nr. 1 Tremolo” is an impressive opening invocation, conjuring classical and jazz motifs into a circular sonic vortex. The ghost-like extended, chiming chords and dynamics of “etude Nr. 8 melting Chords” recall the mystical peaks of John Fahey. muthspiel pays tribute to the elders with his rendition of bach’s Sarabande BWV 995. originally written for lute, he slows the piece down to half-speed, sculpting a glacial block of minimalist sound forms. Album closer “For bill evans” is a fitting homage to the pianist- composer, with muthspiel offering an impressive piano-to-guitar translation of evans’ signature left- hand comping offset by ruminative high-register embellishments.

New York City Jazz Record /
Daniel A. Brown

ETUDES / QUIETUDES

Man mag es ob der überwältigend fein durchgezeichneten Klangpräsenz seiner akustischen Gitarre kaum glauben, dass dieses imposante Soloalbum das Ergeb- nis einer live gespielten „Ö1 Radioses- sion“ aus dem ORF RadioKulturhaus Wien ist. Doch wer Wolfgang Muth- spiel einmal mit seinen „Etudes / Quie- tudes“ auf der Bühne erlebt hat, weiß, dass der 59-Jährige sein Publikum der- art ergreifend zu bannen versteht, dass man eine Stecknadel im Saal fallen hören könnte. Sind diese Etüden doch in weiterem Sinne die großmeisterlich ausgeformte Präsentation exzellenten Handwerks als meditative Synthese klassischer Gitarrenkunst und jazziger Improvisation. So erweisen sich die 13 Miniaturen, denen Bezeichnungen wie „Tremolo“, „Chords“ oder „Arpeggio“ zugeordnet sind, als duftige Kleinode von betörendem Liebreiz, in denen man ferne Echos von Egberto Gismonti und Ralph Towner mehr ahnt als wirklich spürt. Es ist nur konsequent, dass Wolf- gang Muthspiel danach mit der „Sara- bande“ aus der Bach’schen Lautensuite BWV 995 in drei Variationen auch auf seine klassischen Wurzeln zurückgreift, um schließlich den Bogen zum Jazz zu … natürlich: zupfen. Mit „Abacus“ von Paul Motian als delikater Huldi- gung an den großen Drummer sowie einer feinfühligen Verbeugung „For Bill Evans“, die seine „Etudes / Quietu- des“ – ein traumhaft zartes, gleichwohl klanggewaltiges Meisterwerk moderner Gitarrenmusik – in stimmiger Farbig- keit entzückend abrunden.

Fonoforum / Sven Thielmann

Etudes / Quietudes

Austrian guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel returns to his classical roots with Etudes/Multitudes – well, sort of. While he composed the eleven etudes that form the heart of this program, Muthspiel didn’t set aside the improvisation in which he’s been soaked in his jazz world. Not only that, but some of the etudes – written as practice exercises, until it became clear they were actually pieces – are named after functions not usually associated with classical guitar performance: “Pedal,” “Tremelo,” the aptly titled “Vamp.” Combined with other etudes like “Schildehen” and the gorgeous “Melting Notes,” it makes for a beautiful series of interconnected musical moments.
His jazz elements really come to the fore on the additional works. He takes a sarabande (music written for a dance in triple meter) by Johann Sebastian Bach and adds a wistful improvisational section entitled “Between Two Sarabandes.” The contemplative “Abacus” comes from the pen of maverick jazz drummer Paul Motian, its stately improv sounding as elegiac as it does joyful. Muthspiel ends the program with “For Bill Evans,” a romantically melodic piece that pays tribute to the genius pianist who’s long had an outsized influences on master guitarists (cf. John McLaughlin and Ralph Towner). These pieces compliment the etudes perfectly, making Etudes/Multitudes a nice encapsulation of the way Muthspiel – a man steeped in both classical and jazz visions – practices his art.

by Michael Toland , The Big Takeover

Etudes / Quietudes 

Etude Nr. 6 (Triplets) is the fifth of some 16 new solo tracks from Wolfgang Muthspiel, the great Austrian guitarist and our track of the week.

The full Etudes/Quietudes from which the highly disciplined, absorbing track is drawn is out on Friday on the Clap Your Hands label.

A live affair recorded in Vienna at the national radio network ORF Österreichischer Rundfunk’s RadioKulturhaus, the mix is by La Buissonne genius engineer Gérard de Haro.

Bach and Motian

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 celebrate craft’ – Wolfgang Muthspiel

Marlbank, Track Of The Week

Etudes / Quietudes 

One of my favorite contemporary artists on guitar is the overlooked Austrian Wolfgang Muthspiel. Usually associated with ECM, this time around he’s on a different label, but the style is similar in that he’s playing acoustic guitar in a gorgeously classical fashion. He mixes originals with some classical themes, all ranging between 1-4 minutes, and feeling like a Baroque festival. He shows rich ideas on Bach’s “Saraband” as well as taking some ideas from Brahms on “Etude NR 7”,  Paul Motian on  “Abacus” and a dedication to Bill Evans. His fingerwork is well tempered, with most of the pieces even describing what to expect, with “Etude NR 6” spotlighting triples, “NR 13” arpeggios and so on. The music itself becomes a rich Raphael tapestry of strings, woven together richly. Look for this one!

Jazz Weekly, by George W. Harris

Etudes / Quietudes 

Austrian guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel’s two previous recordings were from his successful trio with bassist Scott Colley and drummer Brian Blade: Angular Blues (ECM, 2020) and Dance Of The Elders (ECM, 2023). The guitarist opts for a new label and format on the solo exposition Etudes / Quietudes. Etudes are functional compositions intended as exercises for students, typically concentrating on a single musical element to develop skill in performance. In classical music, pianists Muzio Clementi, Johann Baptist Cramer, Ignaz Moscheles, and Carl Czerny were best known for composing etudes for student instruction. Frédéric Chopin recast the etude as an artistic statement.

Muthspiel takes both to heart. The guitarist states, “I wrote my own etudes to practise certain technical aspects. Then I fell in love with the compositional process they inspired.” Muthspiel says, “Etudes celebrate craft!” Craft is a central point for me – all the musicians I admire have spent a lifetime working on their personal sound.” Etudes / Quietudes comprises eleven etudes, each bearing a descriptive subtitle. Enigmatically, Etudes NRs 2 and 3 are missing.

“Chords” is the subtitle of Etude NR. 5; the piece made up of all chords similar to what Keith Jarrett accomplished on his recording Creation (ECM, 2015). The guitarist modulates through a series of chords, making up the composition. On Etude NR. 8 “Melting Chords,” Muthspiel plays chord groups interlaced with one another so to sound like a slow cascade. Interspersed among the Etudes is the brief piece “Triplet Droplet” which sounds exactly as titled. Following Etude NR. 13 “Arpeggio,” Muthspiel presents several short pieces.

There is the triptych made up of Bach’s “Sarabande” from his Lute Suite BWV 995) which is followed up with the guitarist’s improvisation of the Bach piece, ending with a reprise of the original composition. Thoughtful and provocative, Muthspiel ends the recital with his angular improvisation on a theme by Paul Motian entitled “Abacus.” The guitarist closes the disc with an original composition, “For Bill Evans.” This is the most melodic and dramatically dynamic of all the performances making up this fine recording.

Wild Mercury Rhythm

Etudes / Quietudes

On his first solo acoustic guitar album, Wolfgang Muthspiel couples eleven self-penned concert etudes with others of diverse character, including a tribute to jazz legend Bill Evans, a partly improvised elaboration on material by drummer and one-time Evans associate Paul Motian, and a treatment of a sarabande by Johann Sebastian Bach. In keeping with the basic idea of the etude, Muthspiel’s eleven were conceived as exercises designed to help the developing student refine specific skills. Their focal points are identified in titles that variously reference tremolo, triplets, chords, arpeggio, and the like; they’re never one-note exercises, however, when the Austrian guitarist smartly builds them into full-fledged compositions, despite being only two to three minutes at a time. “Etude Nr. 10 Sixths” illustrates the idea when it builds on the technical foundation to become a pretty, folk-styled expression.

It’s an interesting album for its trajectory too, as Muthspiel sequenced it to reflect his own path from violinist to classical guitarist to jazz musician, and it therefore makes sense that it culminates in the Motian and Evans settings. Muthspiel was first trained to play classical music on violin before switching to guitar at the age of thirteen and in the years that followed developed the ability to improvise in addition to read from a score. While elements of both classical and jazz surface during the album, it never organizes itself into clear-cut divisions between the styles; instead, the dimensions blur together in the performances such that drawing lines of demarcation becomes impossible. Recorded with care at the Vienna Radiokulturhaus, the material sparkles with pristine clarity.

Being a solo guitar recording, Etudes / Quietudes is naturally intimate, but it’s not always quiet and neither is it restful. The opening “Etude Nr. 1 Tremolo” moves at light-speed as Muthspiel drapes slow melodic lines across a torrential base that morphs into an even more dazzling picking episode. “Triplet Droplet,” “Etude Nr. 6 Triplets,” and “Etude Nr. 11 Vamp” similarly awe for the precision with which he executes challenging exercises with such seeming ease. Flowing gracefully, the lilting tapestries crafted for “Etude Nr. 8 Melting Chords” and “Etude Nr. 13 Arpeggio” are wondrous to behold.

Styles regularly change, with the lovely “Etude Nr. 4 Pedal” exuding a soothing folk-meditation character and Motian’s “Abacus Theme” receiving a deep bluesy reading. Muthspiel’s classical side moves to the fore for the gentle “Etude Nr. 7 Brahms Minor” and Bach’s stately “Sarabande” (the adjoining “Between Two Sarabandes” retains that classical quality whilst extending it into improvisational territory). In being titled after a scenic place in Austria, “Etude Nr. 9 Schildlehen” is one that less references a technique and more focuses on nostalgically evoking a scenic locale. Speaking of affection, Muthspiel’s admiration for Evans comes through loud and clear in the heartwarming tribute that ends the release, “For Bill Evans.”

Throughout the recording, the guitarist’s virtuosity is called upon but necessarily so in order to realize and demonstrate the skill in question. One comes away from the recording as impressed by Muthspiel’s versatility and the ease with which he performs in different stylistic contexts and articulates a range of moods. Adding to the project’s appeal for developing guitarists, Etudes / Quietudes is available in CD and LP formats, but the score for the eleven etudes can also be purchased as a download or in the form of a printed music book that includes the CD.

Textura

Dance of The Elders

Jazz CD der Woche, ****
Das zweiteilige, meditative Eingangsstück «Invocation» zählt mit dem «Folksong», der die unwiderstehliche Eingängigkeit mancher Keith-Jarrett-Kompositionen hat, zu den Glanzlichtern des Albums. Neben Muthspiels eigenen Stücken überzeugen auch eine nachdenkliche Improvisation, die in Bachs Choral «Oh Haupt voll Blut und Wunden» mündet, eine Variation über das «Liebeslied» von Weill/Brecht und eine weitere über Joni Mitchells «Amelia». Muthspiel, ein Mann von vielen Talenten, zeigt sich auf diesem Album vor allem als versonnener Klangpoet.
NZZ, Manfred Pabst

Dance of The Elders

In a musical landscape often dictated by genre-bending fusion and high-octane virtuosity, Wolfgang Muthspiel’s latest album, ‘Dance of the Elders’, offers a refreshing blend of complexity and coherence. The Austrian guitarist, long revered for his intricate compositional techniques and nuanced guitar work, reunites with bassist Scott Colley and drummer Brian Blade in a follow-up to their lauded previous release, ‘Angular Blues.’ Together, they have crafted an opus that defies modern jazz’s limitations and encapsulates folk, classical, and world music elements. Muthspiel is a jazz guitarist with an expansive musical palette. He is flanked by Colley, a bassist whose reputation for innovative playing precedes him, and Blade, a drummer known for his textural approach and dynamic range. Together, the trio presents a unique blend of skills, bound by a chemistry honed through years of collaboration and extensive touring. Their partnership shows what’s possible when musicians of this caliber come together, creating a canvas that allows each artist to paint with their unique palette of sounds. ‘Dance of the Elders’ arrives as a significant statement in Muthspiel’s discography. Building upon the successes of previous works, it broadens the ensemble’s explorations into new musical territories. At its core, the album seeks to engage listeners in a journey—one that incorporates a wide array of influences while offering a cohesive narrative that only seasoned musicians could present. This creative vision comes to life in a meticulous track-by-track narrative that is a singular accomplishment in today’s jazz landscape.

Illiam Sebitz, 5 Finger Reviews

Dance of The Elders

Deeply imbued in classical music (jazz came later), it’s no surprise to hear Muthspiel embracing a Bach chorale, although typically he starts from an improvisational space pitched against Colley’s arco bass. The Bach theme magically appears only briefly at the climax, resolving the steel acoustic’s meditation […] And when you thought the gentle giant could fly no higher, in flows Joni’s ’Amelia’. Here and throughout Blade’s spacious yet precise drums give Muthspiel all the room he needs yet never cease to surprise with colours and shapes that reflect the decade or so that he and Muthspiel have collaborated. A gift of an album, which words are too clumsy to describe. Just buy it.

Andy Robson, Jazzwise (Editor’s choice)

Dance of The Elders

Not that any validation of these delicately-nuanced forty-four some minutes is necessary —the harmonic notes that most appropriately decorate this title song come from all three instrumentalists—but co-production and mixing by the label founder himself Manfred Eicher, along with with the artist and Gérard de Haro — stands as affirmation of the unity of effort on the part of all involved. Both acoustic and electric textures benefit from the sonic definition and, as a result, the album conjures an altogether mesmerizing effect

Doug Collette, All About Jazz

Dance of the elders

Das in zahlreichen Tourneen zusammengeschweißte Dream-Team, das mittlerweile das frühere Trio mit Larry Grenadier und Jeff Ballard als Working-Band abgelöst hat, präsentiert einmal mehr ein kammermusikalisch anmutendes Kleinod. Drei viertel Stunden lang lässt es sich in angenehmer Ruhe und Schönheit schwelgen, wobei der ästhetische Feinspitz Muthspiel bei genauem Hinhören nicht nur mit seinem sicheren Gespür fürs Melodische zu begeistern vermag, sondern auch mit zahlreichen Raffinessen harmonischer und rhythmischer Art, die dem Wohlklang die dazugehörende Würze verpassen. Colley und Blade verleihen dem rhythmischen Grundgerüst Stabilität und Leichtigkeit zugleich und scheinen selbst vertrackteste Passagen locker aus dem Ärmel zu schütteln. In Muthspiels Spielweise auf der akustischen und elektrischen Gitarre verbinden sich Jazz-, Klassik- und Folk-Elemente zu atmosphärisch angenehmen und emotional ansprechenden Klangbildern und lässigen Grooves, die weit entfernt sind von gitarristischen Eitelkeitsdarbietungen oder schierem Virtuosentum. […] Ein durch und durch gelungenes Album, von Manfred Eicher in gewohnter Weise souverän produziert.

Peter Füssl, Kulturzeitschrift AT