We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

Urban Dreamer

by LRK TRIO

/
  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.

    What happens when a European modern jazz trio travels to Japan for a concert tour, and returns home overloaded with impressions? What happens when they encounter the overwhelming Japanese urban civilization for the first time, even if they have rich experience of living in Europe’s and North America’s biggest megalopolises: Moscow and New York City? What happens when the artists who grew up on the crossroads between American jazz, modern European instrumental music, and Russian classical music tradition, immerse – however for a brief time – into a music environment where all this is also present, but in a form of a fusion with local, millennia-old culture?
    This is what happens: “Urban Dreamer,” the latest studio album recorded by LRK Trio.

    The album represents two overlapping moods: one is more illustrative, representing the journey through Japan by an overwhelming array of composed textures, prearranged contrasting episodes, and generously virtuosic improvised solos; the other more introspective and lyrical, unleashing the melodic gift of all three trio members in both composition (they all contributed a few tunes each) and improvisation, when it comes to pitched instruments such as Lebedev’s piano, keyboards, and accordion, and Revnyuk’s various basses. Several times throughout the album additional composing means are amplifying the overall richness of textures: timbres and textures are added, sometimes to an astounding effect, such as Varvara Revnyuk’s instrumental singing overdubbing the tricky Lebedev’s piano lines in Anton Revnyuk’s “Clockwork Doll,” Nikolay Solonovich’s dramatic cello episode in Kravtsov’s “Abyss,” or saxophonist Konstantin Safyanov’s surprisingly elaborated whistling in the intro for the same composer’s “Joy.” The only other time the human sounds are used (not counting the animated chatter in rapid Japanese in the background of the album’s centerpiece, “Lost in Tokyo,” where the composing credits are shared by Lebedev and Revnyuk,) is the voice of the prominent American jazz vocalist, JD Walter, who sings a few verses in another Revnyuk/Lebedev’s shared effort, “Thoughts Of…” which provides both drama and an additional verbal dimension for the album.

    The album concludes by an instrumental version of “Akatombo,” the Japanese song composed by Kosaku Yamada in 1927 which, by the end of the last century, was among the most loved art songs in Japan. The song itself is a fusion of Japanese and Western elements, as the pentatonic scale used by Yamada is at the same time the Japanese yonanuki mode and the European major scale without fourth and seventh steps, not unlike the one used in 1853 by German composer Robert Schumann in one of the main themes of his Introduction and Allegro, Op.134 (and there is a direct likeness of the “Akatombo” melody and the Schumann theme.) All of it is played by LRK Trio as modern jazz, with little or no stylization towards Oriental music, but with a totally conscious awareness of the artists’ own backgrounds. Surprisingly enough, the only sonic element that roughly winks at some “Oriental” flavor in this track is not played by LRK Trio members: it is the pedal steel guitar that overdubs part of the theme – played by Bosse “Bo” Savik, the sound engineer who mixed and mastered at his studio in Sweden the LRK Trio material recorded by Yakov Zakhvatkin and Andrei Levin at Moscow’s best recording studios: CineLab and Mosfilm. The story went full circle: Japanese, Russian, American, and European elements fused themselves in an inseparable unity.
    ... more
    Purchasable with gift card

      $9.99 USD  or more

     

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

credits

released September 21, 2018

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

LRK TRIO Milan, Italy

LRK Trio is unusual jazz trio, that organically adds electronic sounds and modern samples. LRK Trio are very modern in their sound — the way they play and sound is unmistakably 21st century; but they never let their listener forget that they inspired by a global musical culture and yet distinctly original and recognizable. ... more

contact / help

Contact LRK TRIO

Streaming and
Download help

Report this album or account

If you like LRK TRIO, you may also like: