So 23. Januar 2005
20:00

Robert Bachner Quintet „Heart Disc“ (A)

Robert Bachner: trombone
Christian Maurer: tenor-, soprano-saxophone
Reinhard Micko: piano
Uli Langthaler: bass
Christian Salfellner: drums

Austrian low brass expert Robert Bachner is best known for his contributions to Mathias Rüegg’s Vienna Art Orchestra, the similarly inclined (but less well-known) Upper Austrian Jazz Orchestra, and bassist Achim Tang’s quintet. In each of these settings, the consistent and inspired excellence of Bachner’s trombone and euphonium improvisations have clearly marked him as a player to watch on the European jazz scene.
Heart Disc demonstrates that Euro-jazz can cook with all the fire of, say, Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers or Horace Silver’s late 50s/early 60s quintets, while employing the sort of harmonic language that typifies the post-free output of European based jazz labels such as ECM and Soul Note/Black Saint during the 70s and 80s. The gutsy-yet-cerebral sound of Bachner’s quintet - dominated by Christian Salfellner’s superb drumming and a very fat front line of trombone and Christian Maurer’s saxophones - is rather reminiscent of some of Dave Holland’s recent quintet projects, albeit with piano instead of vibes.
On every track, the ensemble digs in deeply, playing with unrelenting fire and urgency. Bachner’s playing is as cogent as his writing - his affable trombone sound combines the expressionistic bluster of, say, Roswell Rudd and Gary Valente with the limber precision of Glenn Ferris, J. J. Johnson
and Julian Priester. Drummer Salfellner has worked with Bachner in Achim Tang’s group - and the flexible, swinging beauty of his playing here is a large part of this disc’s success. Christian Maurer - who plays soprano saxophone on most of Heart Disc - is also a versatile and accomplished player. He tends to be more expressive and abstract on the smaller horn, with an overall sound that is not unlike Dave Liebman’s. On tenor, Maurer has a cooler, Rollins-derived approach - somewhat like
that of his countryman, Hans Koller. Heart Disc is a varied and engaging debut CD - Bachner remains a player to watch. (Dave Wayne)
Gilt Nils Wogram, der am folgenden Tag mit seiner Band „Root 70“ auftreten wird, als das deutsche Posaunisten-Ausnahmetalent, so trifft dies hierzulande wohl auf Robert Bachner zu, der an diesem Abend seine ausgezeichnete und von kundigen Kritikern vielfach gelobte CD „Heart Disc“ einem wohlgesonnenen Publikum vorstellen wird. Heimat bist du grosser Söhne! CH