account
basket
Challenge Records Int. logo
Pacific

Frank Kohl

Pacific

Price: € 19.95
Format: CD
Label: OA2 Records
UPC: 0805552222029
Catnr: OA2 22220
Release date: 07 June 2024
Buy
1 CD
✓ in stock
€ 19.95
Buy
 
Label
OA2 Records
UPC
0805552222029
Catalogue number
OA2 22220
Release date
07 June 2024
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN
DE

About the album

Over the many years, Frank Kohl has thoroughly explored the fine art of solo jazz guitar. From his NY upbringing to his years at Berklee, time spent in the Bay Area to his last 30 years in Seattle, the influences of Wes Montgomery, Jim Hall, Pat Martino, and particularly Joe Pass informed his path. Kohl's evolved approach strives to connect the guitar to the great solo piano traditions where he stretches the time, colors the tone and uses the melody to guide him, often to destinations unknown. Through Pacific, his seventh recording and the second of all solo guitar, Kohl holds close to his heart the voices and journeys of his musical guides.
Im Laufe der Jahre hat Frank Kohl die hohe Kunst der Solo-Jazzgitarre gründlich erforscht. Von seiner Ausbildung in New York über seine Jahre in Berklee, seine Zeit in der Bay Area bis hin zu seinen letzten 30 Jahren in Seattle haben die Einflüsse von Wes Montgomery, Jim Hall, Pat Martino und insbesondere Joe Pass seinen Weg geprägt. Kohls weiterentwickelter Ansatz strebt danach, die Gitarre mit den großen Solo-Piano-Traditionen zu verbinden, indem er die Zeit dehnt, den Ton färbt und sich von der Melodie leiten lässt, oft zu unbekannten Zielen. Mit Pacific, seiner siebten Aufnahme und der zweiten, die ausschließlich der Sologitarre gewidmet ist, hält Kohl die Stimmen und Reisen seiner musikalischen Wegbegleiter in seinem Herzen fest.

Artist(s)

Frank Kohl (guitar)

Jazz guitarist Frank Kohl was born and raised in the NYC metro area. He began playing guitar at age 7. He started his journey into jazz by joining his award-winning high school jazz band. Musicians such as Wes Montgomery, George Benson, Pat Martino and Jim Hall were milestones along the way of his musical development. One of his greatest influences was at a jazz club in NY called Rapsins. Here he could listen to uncompromised, cutting-edge jazz of the highest level with musicians like Linc Chamberlin (guitar), Lyn Christie (bass), and Dave Liebman (saxophone). Later Frank became a student of Linc and soon he was performing with Lyn Christie.  'I remember around this time going to see Tony Williams Lifetime with...
more
Jazz guitarist Frank Kohl was born and raised in the NYC metro area. He began playing guitar at age 7. He started his journey into jazz by joining his award-winning high school jazz band. Musicians such as Wes Montgomery, George Benson, Pat Martino and Jim Hall were milestones along the way of his musical development. One of his greatest influences was at a jazz club in NY called Rapsins. Here he could listen to uncompromised, cutting-edge jazz of the highest level with musicians like Linc Chamberlin (guitar), Lyn Christie (bass), and Dave Liebman (saxophone). Later Frank became a student of Linc and soon he was performing with Lyn Christie. "I remember around this time going to see Tony Williams Lifetime with John McLaughlin and organist Larry Young. My idea of what jazz was forever changed. I knew then that anything was possible in jazz." In 1972 Frank attended Berklee College of Music and graduated in 1976 with honors. Students and teachers at that time at Berklee included John Scofield, Pat Metheny, Steve Swallow and Gary Burton. After Berklee, Frank moved back to NY and performed professionally. In 1981, he released his first LP: Reform by The Frank Kohl Quartet featuring bassist Michael Moore. Around 1983 Frank moved to the San Francisco Bay Area and performed his music for years and became a member of Don McCaslin Sr.'s band Warmth. In 1990 Frank moved to Seattle where he lives today performing at NW jazz clubs such as Tula's, Boxley's, Egan's, and The Jazz Station. Frank also spends time in NY recording and performing at clubs like Small's, The Metropolitan Room, and The Bean Runner. In 2008 Frank recorded his second quartet CD, Coast to Coast, in NY with brother and pianist, Tom Kohl. It received rave reviews from Cadence Magazine, All About Jazz, and Mike Stern, to name a few. In 2013 Frank recorded his third quartet CD, Invisible Man on Pony Boy Records featuring NY bassist Steve LaSpina. Members of Frank's quartet vary. In Seattle you can hear him with Bill Anchell, John Hansen, Jeff Johnson, Steve Luceno, Matt Jorgensen, Greg Williamson, and others. In NY, Steve LaSpina, Tom Kohl, Steve Roane, Jon Doty, and others.

less

Composer(s)

Keith Jarrett

Keith Jarrett’s ECM discography embraces solo improvisation, duets, trios, quartets, original compositions, multi-instrumental ventures, masterpieces of the classical repertoire and wide-ranging explorations of the Great American Songbook. Jarrett was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, in May 1945. He took his first piano lesson before his third birthday and gave his debut solo recital aged seven. “I grew up with the piano,” he has said, “I learned its language while I learned to speak.” His earliest training was classical, but by the age of 15 his piano lessons had ceased and Jarrett’s interest in jazz was burgeoning. He turned down an opportunity to study with Nadia Boulanger in Paris and in 1964 took the decisive step of moving to New York to establish himself...
more
Keith Jarrett’s ECM discography embraces solo improvisation, duets, trios, quartets, original compositions, multi-instrumental ventures, masterpieces of the classical repertoire and wide-ranging explorations of the Great American Songbook.
Jarrett was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, in May 1945. He took his first piano lesson before his third birthday and gave his debut solo recital aged seven. “I grew up with the piano,” he has said, “I learned its language while I learned to speak.” His earliest training was classical, but by the age of 15 his piano lessons had ceased and Jarrett’s interest in jazz was burgeoning. He turned down an opportunity to study with Nadia Boulanger in Paris and in 1964 took the decisive step of moving to New York to establish himself in the jazz world. After a spell touring with Art Blakey’s New Jazz Messengers, Jarrett joined Charles Lloyd’s quartet in 1966. He also played organ and electric piano with Miles Davis in 1970 and 1971.
Jarrett’s association with ECM dates from November 1971, when he and producer Manfred Eicher first collaborated on the hugely influential solo piano album Facing You, eight short pieces which, in Eicher’s words, “hold together like a suite”. The album also prefigured the solo piano concerts which would be such a defining aspect of Jarrett’s career.
In 1973 ECM organised an eighteen-concert European tour, consisting solely of Jarrett’s solo improvisations. The Köln Concert (1975) has unsurprisingly passed into legend: a multi-million-selling album that has been the subject of books and a complete transcription. But Köln should not eclipse the achievement of the whole sequence of improvised concerts, a genre which Jarrett effectively created. After the success of that first solo tour, Jarrett has continued to pursue the improvised solo concert format, the decades of his career studded with records of his endlessly fertile imagination, usually referred to simply by where they took place: Paris, Vienna, Lausanne, Carnegie Hall, La Scala...
Jarrett has been a member of several outstanding groups. In the mid-1970s he began recording with his so-called “European Quartet” consisting of saxophonist Jan Garbarek, bassist Palle Danielsson and drummer Jon Christensen. Their recordings include Belonging, My Song, Nude Ants, Personal Mountains and Sleeper. No less essential is his contemporaneous “American Quartet” work with Charlie Haden (bass), Paul Motian (drums) and Dewey Redman (sax), whose output included The Survivors’ Suite and Eyes of the Heart (both 1976). The American Quartet extended the range of Jarrrett’s trio with Haden and Motian. The early trio’s work is documented on Hamburg ’72.
In the early 1980s Jarrett formed his “Standards Trio” with bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Jack DeJohnette, which proved to be one of the most fertile and long-lasting partnerships in jazz history. Over the years they have toured and released an unparalleled series of albums of standards and freely improvised sets, including the 6-CD set At the Blue Note, an extraordinary record of three extraordinary nights in June 1994, about which the New York Times wrote: "Jarrett makes each new note sound like a discovery... The music whispered and glimmered, seeking a pure, incorporeal song.” In 1987, Jarrett initiated a series of recordings of some of the great monuments of the classical keyboard repertoire with Bach’s Wohltempierte Klavier, Book I, which was followed by the Goldberg Variations (1989) and the second book of Wohltempierte Klavier (1990). For a pianist with such a fine command of voicing, Shostakovich’s 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op. 87, was perhaps a natural next step: "It didn't feel like I was playing someone else's music," Jarrett said of his first encounter with these works. "[The pieces] are coming from some strange quirky place that I'm familiar with.” The New York Times was just one of many to hail this award-winning recording: no mere crossover curiosity, “Jarrett has finally staked an indisputable claim to distinction in the realm of classical music”.
40 years on from his ECM debut, Facing You, Rio (2011) blazed with as much energy and invention as any of his solo concerts from the past four decades, while his duet sessions with the late bassist Charlie Haden (Jasmine and Last Dance) reveal the players at their most intimate and introspective: “When we play together it's like two people singing,” Jarrett said of these recordings.
ECM marked Jarrett’s 70th birthday with two simultaneous releases, a mid-80s recording of Barber’s piano concerto and Bartok’s third, and Creation, a nine-piece suite drawn from concerts in the pianist’s 2014 concert tour. Creation is amongst the most strongly lyrical of Jarrett's recent solo releases, the choice of music emphasizing pieces in which there is a sense of song being born, voices striving to be heard. It also offers the most up-to-the minute account of Jarrett's uncanny capacity to construct compelling music in real-time: his melodic-harmonic imagination as an improviser and his ability to consistently find and shape new forms remain, after all these years of solo concerts, remarkable
less

Frank Kohl (guitar)

Jazz guitarist Frank Kohl was born and raised in the NYC metro area. He began playing guitar at age 7. He started his journey into jazz by joining his award-winning high school jazz band. Musicians such as Wes Montgomery, George Benson, Pat Martino and Jim Hall were milestones along the way of his musical development. One of his greatest influences was at a jazz club in NY called Rapsins. Here he could listen to uncompromised, cutting-edge jazz of the highest level with musicians like Linc Chamberlin (guitar), Lyn Christie (bass), and Dave Liebman (saxophone). Later Frank became a student of Linc and soon he was performing with Lyn Christie.  'I remember around this time going to see Tony Williams Lifetime with...
more
Jazz guitarist Frank Kohl was born and raised in the NYC metro area. He began playing guitar at age 7. He started his journey into jazz by joining his award-winning high school jazz band. Musicians such as Wes Montgomery, George Benson, Pat Martino and Jim Hall were milestones along the way of his musical development. One of his greatest influences was at a jazz club in NY called Rapsins. Here he could listen to uncompromised, cutting-edge jazz of the highest level with musicians like Linc Chamberlin (guitar), Lyn Christie (bass), and Dave Liebman (saxophone). Later Frank became a student of Linc and soon he was performing with Lyn Christie. "I remember around this time going to see Tony Williams Lifetime with John McLaughlin and organist Larry Young. My idea of what jazz was forever changed. I knew then that anything was possible in jazz." In 1972 Frank attended Berklee College of Music and graduated in 1976 with honors. Students and teachers at that time at Berklee included John Scofield, Pat Metheny, Steve Swallow and Gary Burton. After Berklee, Frank moved back to NY and performed professionally. In 1981, he released his first LP: Reform by The Frank Kohl Quartet featuring bassist Michael Moore. Around 1983 Frank moved to the San Francisco Bay Area and performed his music for years and became a member of Don McCaslin Sr.'s band Warmth. In 1990 Frank moved to Seattle where he lives today performing at NW jazz clubs such as Tula's, Boxley's, Egan's, and The Jazz Station. Frank also spends time in NY recording and performing at clubs like Small's, The Metropolitan Room, and The Bean Runner. In 2008 Frank recorded his second quartet CD, Coast to Coast, in NY with brother and pianist, Tom Kohl. It received rave reviews from Cadence Magazine, All About Jazz, and Mike Stern, to name a few. In 2013 Frank recorded his third quartet CD, Invisible Man on Pony Boy Records featuring NY bassist Steve LaSpina. Members of Frank's quartet vary. In Seattle you can hear him with Bill Anchell, John Hansen, Jeff Johnson, Steve Luceno, Matt Jorgensen, Greg Williamson, and others. In NY, Steve LaSpina, Tom Kohl, Steve Roane, Jon Doty, and others.

less

Press

Play album Play album

You might also like..

Anchor Points
Russell Kranes | Alex Levine | Sam Weber | Jay Sawyer
Circular Motion
Francesco Crosara
Destiny Calling
Charlie Apicella & Iron City meet The Griots Speak
Road to Nowhere
Stephen Jones & Ben Haugland
Shaw's Groove
Jason Keiser
Thousands of Ways
Susan Reed
Space Bugs
Wil Swindler's Elevenet
Interleaved
Andrew Moorhead
Refuge
George Cotsirilos Quartet
Puppets: The Music of Gregg Hill
Randy Napoleon
Pocket Guides
Ben Morris
Seaside
William Flynn