Jan Garbarek

Jan Garbarek - Visible World (1996) {ECM 1585} [Repost]  Music

Posted by tiburon at Dec. 12, 2012
Jan Garbarek - Visible World (1996) {ECM 1585} [Repost]

Jan Garbarek - Visible World (1996) {ECM 1585} [US Pressing]
EAC 0.99pb5 | FLAC tracks level 8 | Cue+Log+M3U+MD5 | Full Scans 600dpi | 372MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Jazz

Apart from David Sanborn, probably no living saxophonist has a more instantly recognizable voice than Jan Garbarek; actually, given the fact that Sanborn's sound is so widely copied, Garbarek's may be easier to identify in a blindfold test. This album in particular puts that sound front and center. Garbarek's the show; he composed all of the music, and is essentially the only soloist. The music (much of which was composed as soundtrack material for film or video) is quintessential Garbarek, full of the world music influences that have characterized his work since the 1970s.

Jan Garbarek - Visible World (1996) {ECM 1585}  Music

Posted by tiburon at Oct. 7, 2019
Jan Garbarek - Visible World (1996) {ECM 1585}

Jan Garbarek - Visible World (1996) {ECM 1585} [US Pressing]
EAC 0.99pb5 | FLAC tracks level 8 | Cue+Log+M3U+MD5 | Full Scans 600dpi | 372MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 183MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Jazz, World Fusion

Apart from David Sanborn, probably no living saxophonist has a more instantly recognizable voice than Jan Garbarek; actually, given the fact that Sanborn's sound is so widely copied, Garbarek's may be easier to identify in a blindfold test. This album in particular puts that sound front and center. Garbarek's the show; he composed all of the music, and is essentially the only soloist. The music (much of which was composed as soundtrack material for film or video) is quintessential Garbarek, full of the world music influences that have characterized his work since the 1970s.
Jan Garbarek, Arild Andersen, Edward Vesala - Triptykon (1973/2023) [Official Digital Download 24/96]

Jan Garbarek, Arild Andersen, Edward Vesala - Triptykon (1973/2023) [Official Digital Download 24/96]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 42:56 minutes | 827 MB
Jazz | Studio Master, Official Digital Download

Triptykon is the fourth album by Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek, his third release on the ECM label, and is performed by Garbarek with Arild Andersen and Edward Vesala.

Jan Garbarek - Triptykon (1973) {ECM 1029}  Music

Posted by tiburon at May 19, 2019
Jan Garbarek - Triptykon (1973) {ECM 1029}

Jan Garbarek - Triptykon (1973) {ECM 1029}
EAC 0.95b3 | FLAC tracks level 8 | Cue+Log+M3U | Full Scans 600dpi | 291MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 99MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Jazz, Avant-Garde Jazz

Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek took several intriguing stylistic turns early in his career, none more extreme than that shown on Triptykon. While he had always shown an affinity for the work of Albert Ayler and other free jazz musicians who came of age in the '60s, his prior albums retained a more straight-ahead rhythmic drive and more than a passing nod to experimental rock and fusion. Here, he jettisoned guitarist Terje Rypdal and replaced the sometimes overly delicate percussion work of Jon Christensen with the more earthy and heavy sounding Edward Vesala. The result is an expressionist trio drawing on both free improvisation and Scandinavian folk tunes, roaring, stumbling, and reeling, evoking an aural equivalent of Edvard Munch.
Jan Garbarek Group - Dresden: In Concert (2009) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Jan Garbarek Group - Dresden: In Concert (2009)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time - 122:24 minutes | 4,07 GB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital booklet

This one is very eagerly-awaited: it has been six years since Jan Garbarek’s last album as a leader. And, moreover, this double-album - recorded in Dresden’s Alter Schlachthof in October 2007 - is also the first-ever live set from the highly-popular Garbarek Group. The band, now including Brazilian bassist Yuri Daniel, powers through repertoire old and new, and the Norwegian saxophonist is in top form, his exchanges with Manu Katche’s bold, emphatic drums particularly exciting. Material includes “12 Moons”, “There Were Swallows”, “Voy Cantando”, an ecstatic version of “Paper Nut” (last heard on Shankar’s “Song for Everyone”) and much more. Released in time for Jan’s extensive autumn tour.
Jan Garbarek & Hilliard Ensemble - Officium Novum (2010) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Jan Garbarek, The Hilliard Ensemble - Officium Novum (2010)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time - 61:08 minutes | 971 MB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Front cover

The inspired bringing together of Jan Garbarek and the Hilliard Ensemble has resulted in consistently inventive music making since 1993. The unprecedented “Officium” album, with Garbarek’s saxophone as a free-ranging ‘fifth voice’ with the Ensemble, gave the first indications of the musical scope and emotional power of this combination.
Jan Garbarek - Magico: Carta de Amor (2012) [Official Digital Download]

Jan Garbarek, Egberto Gismonti, Charlie Haden - Mágico: Carta de Amor (2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/48 kHz | Time - 107:59 minutes | 1,2 GB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital booklet

"Magico: Carta de Amor" is a fascinating set of previously unreleased live recordings from three outstanding musicians: Jan Garbarek, Egberto Gismonti and Charlie Haden. The album documents music captured at Munich’s Amerika Haus in April, 1981 and highlights the trio’s improvisational empathy and sensibilities. Each musician contributes pieces to this repertoire which includes five pieces by Gismonti, Garbarek’s “Spor” and Charlie Haden’s “La Pasionaria”.

Jan Garbarek – I Took Up The Runes (1990)  Music

Posted by boogie-de at Dec. 3, 2013
Jan Garbarek – I Took Up The Runes (1990)

Jan Garbarek – I Took Up The Runes (1990)
XLD Flac+Cue+Log = 290 MB | Mp3 VBR0 = 121 MB | Scans 400 dpi jpg | RAR
CD | ECM 1419 | Jazz | Norway

Outstanding folk-jazz album. I think this is my favourite Garbarek album; it is tightly-focused, composed and performed. The whole album evokes life in the northwoods and carries a real outdoors feel. The best tracks are Molde 4, His Eyes Were Suns, and the title track, but each cut is interesting and moving. My only complaint is that the production is somewhat suspect. I find myself needing to adjust the volume constantly – either the sax is too loud or the background too quiet. I own the original CD, though, not the remaster. Maybe the remaster is normalized a little better.

Jan Garbarek, The Hilliard Ensemble - Officium Novum [2010]  Music

Posted by Juma at Sept. 23, 2010
Jan Garbarek, The Hilliard Ensemble - Officium Novum [2010]

Jan Garbarek, The Hilliard Ensemble - Officium Novum
FLAC (EAC rip) & mp3 @ 320 kbps | tracks | Log+CUE | cover scans | 265 MB (FLAC) & 145 MB (mp3) incl. 3% recovery
Genre: Classical, Jazz, Crossover | Label: ECM New Series (ecm 2125) | Year: 2010

… this new collaboration, whose familiar sound-world takes a slight sideways step into a more Eastern-influenced, Armenian direction, along with pieces by Pérotin and Arvo Pärt, offers a natural extension to the 1994 original. It's also strikingly beautiful, whether listened to attentively or as superior audio wallpaper. (Phil Johnson in The Independent, 12 September 2010)
Jan Garbarek & The Hilliard Ensemble - Remember Me, My Dear (Live in Bellinzona - 2014) (2019) [24/48]

Jan Garbarek & The Hilliard Ensemble - Remember Me, My Dear (Live in Bellinzona - 2014) (2019)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/48 kHz | Time - 77:33 minutes | 825 MB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital Booklet

25 years on from the release of Officium, the groundbreaking alliance of Jan Garbarek and The Hilliard Ensemble, comes Remember me, my dear, recorded during the final tour the group made in October 2014. The program is emblematic of the range of repertoire the Norwegian saxophonist and British vocal quartet explored together– from Pérotin, Hildegard von Bingen, Guillaume le Rouge, Antoine Brumel to Komitas , Arvo Pärt and more. It could be said that the Hilliard/Garbarek combination, in concert, transcended its source materials, with early music, contemporary composition and improvisation interfused in the responsive acoustics of sacred spaces. And this final album reminds us that the unique Garbarek/Hilliard combination, and its unprecedented exploration of sound, was consistently breathtaking.