Skip to content

About Jazz and Blues in European Union

  • BLUES
  • Our Jazz Festivals
  • Our Blues Festivals
  • INTERVIEWS
  • CD Review
  • CONCERTS
  • Woman in Jazz & Blues
  • MUSICIANS
  • Our Team
    • New CD’s ADs
    • NEWSFEEDNEWSFEED
    • FESTIVALS
    • VIDEOS
    • BOOKS
  • Home
  • 2025
  • August
  • 25
  • Contrary to a cynical early view, they don’t all sound the same: Here are four of them, judge for yourself: Videos, CD covers
  • BOOKS
  • MUSICIANS
  • New CD's Review
  • NEWSFEED
  • VIDEOS

Contrary to a cynical early view, they don’t all sound the same: Here are four of them, judge for yourself: Videos, CD covers

https://JazzBlues.EU August 25, 2025

In the 55 years since the discreet arrival of the first ECM album, Mal Waldron’s Free At Last, Manfred Eicher’s label has released somewhere north of a thousand albums.

Contrary to a cynical early view, they don’t all sound the same. They are, however, distinguished by the presence of set of qualities — musical, aesthetic and philosophical — that appear, in varying proportions, in just about every one of them.

You can detect those qualities in four of their recent releases, each of which exemplifies a certain characteristic taken to the very highest level.

1 Vijay Iyer / Wadada Leo Smith: Defiant Life

American jazz from the tradition continues to make its presence central to ECM’s output. Smith’s trumpet and Iyer’s keyboards and electronics weave their way through spellbinding duets subtextually infused with a sense of history. Smith’s “Floating River Requiem” is a dedication to Patrice Lumumba, the Congolese independence leader murdered by colonial forces in 1961, while Iyer’s “Kite” acknowledges Refaat Alareer, a leading Palestinian poet killed along with two siblings and four nephews during an Israel air strike on Gaza in late 2023. Sorrow and outrage are present in this music, but it also serves, in Iyer’s words, as a statement of “faith in human possibility.”

Defiant Life - ECM Records

2 Anouar Brahem: After the Last Sky

Modes from all over the world find their way into the ECM matrix. The Tunisian oud player and composer Anouar Brahem first recorded for the label 35 years ago. On his latest album he is in the company of three of the company’s regulars: the cellist Anja Lechner, the pianist Django Bates and the bassist Dave Holland.

Taking its title from a book by the late Edward Said, this album, too, is driven by reflections on the suffering, recent and historic, of the people of Gaza, as outlined in Adam Shatz’s fine sleeve essay. Unfolding with patience and elegance, metabolising elements from Arabic maqam, jazz and European classical music, these quartet pieces ache with grief.

After the Last Sky - ECM Records

3 Alexander Knaifel: Chapter Eight

By cultivating a widespread audience for the work of the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt via its New Series offshoot, ECM helped create the genre known as “holy minimalism”. Alexander Knaifel (1943-2024), born in Tashkent, studied cello with Rostropovich in Moscow in the 1960s before making a reputation writing operas and film music.

A kind of an Uzbek version of Anthony Braxton, he also wrote an extended piece for 17 double basses and another for 35 Javanese gongs. But the pieces on this album, performed by an ensemble of three Latvian choirs and the Swiss cellist Patrick Demenga, are settings of verses from the Song of Solomon.

Proceeding with great deliberation under the baton of Andres Mustonen, they achieve the required meditative glow to very satisfying effect, fully exploiting the acoustic resonance of the Jesuit church in Lucerne, where they were recorded in 2009.

Alexander Knaifel: Chapter Eight - ECM Records

4 Arve Henriksen / Trygve Seim / Anders Jormin / Markku Ounaskari: Arcanum

The crucial role played by ECM in the emergence of Nordic jazz needs no acknowledgement. Here are four leading players — the trumpeter Henriksen and the saxophonist Seim from Norway*, the bassist Anders Jormin from Sweden, and the Finnish drummer Ouaskari — at the height of their powers, taking memories of Ornette Coleman’s quartet as a starting point from which to develop conversations of great beauty and originality. All four of these albums are outstanding, but this is the one that sounds to me like a future classic.

Arcanum - ECM Records

Related

Post navigation

Previous Concert review: Journey through jazz history: Joe Lovano featuring The Marcin Wasilewski Trio at Jazz Open Stuttgart: Photos
Next New CD – 2025: Mika Stoltzman – Memories of Tomorrow: Review, Video, CD cover

Related Stories

New CD – 2026: City Blues Connection – Live At Rockhouse Salzburg: Review, Video, CD cover
  • BLUES
  • MUSICIANS
  • New CD's Review
  • NEWSFEED
  • VIDEOS

New CD – 2026: City Blues Connection – Live At Rockhouse Salzburg: Review, Video, CD cover

January 13, 2026
Classic soul and language of the Blues – Comb Becomes a Harmonica: New single, Video, Photos
  • BLUES
  • MUSICIANS
  • NEWSFEED
  • VIDEOS
  • Woman in Jazz & Blues

Classic soul and language of the Blues – Comb Becomes a Harmonica: New single, Video, Photos

January 10, 2026
Jazz has never been a musical genre, but rather a way of life, and it still is. Art Kane’s art in Genoa: Video, Photos
  • MUSICIANS
  • NEWSFEED
  • VIDEOS

Jazz has never been a musical genre, but rather a way of life, and it still is. Art Kane’s art in Genoa: Video, Photos

January 8, 2026

Our website view statistics

Get new posts by email: JazzBluesEU@gmail.com
Powered by follow.it

Newsfeed

  • New CD – 2026: City Blues Connection – Live At Rockhouse Salzburg: Review, Video, CD cover January 13, 2026
  • Classic soul and language of the Blues – Comb Becomes a Harmonica: New single, Video, Photos January 10, 2026
  • Jazz has never been a musical genre, but rather a way of life, and it still is. Art Kane’s art in Genoa: Video, Photos January 8, 2026
  • A compact and experienced jazz combination in 2025, enjoy! Videos, Photos January 6, 2026
  • The best Soul and R&B albums of 2025: Short reviews, CD covers, Videos January 4, 2026
  • 10 Best Blues Albums of 2025 – Buy directly here – Promotion in EU: CD covers January 2, 2026
  • 15 Best Jazz Albums of 2025 – Buy directly here – Promotion in EU: CD covers December 30, 2025
  • The Girls of Kilimanjaro: Others sensed that something significant was happening: Video, Photos December 28, 2025

You may have missed

New CD – 2026: City Blues Connection – Live At Rockhouse Salzburg: Review, Video, CD cover
  • BLUES
  • MUSICIANS
  • New CD's Review
  • NEWSFEED
  • VIDEOS

New CD – 2026: City Blues Connection – Live At Rockhouse Salzburg: Review, Video, CD cover

January 13, 2026
Classic soul and language of the Blues – Comb Becomes a Harmonica: New single, Video, Photos
  • BLUES
  • MUSICIANS
  • NEWSFEED
  • VIDEOS
  • Woman in Jazz & Blues

Classic soul and language of the Blues – Comb Becomes a Harmonica: New single, Video, Photos

January 10, 2026
Jazz has never been a musical genre, but rather a way of life, and it still is. Art Kane’s art in Genoa: Video, Photos
  • MUSICIANS
  • NEWSFEED
  • VIDEOS

Jazz has never been a musical genre, but rather a way of life, and it still is. Art Kane’s art in Genoa: Video, Photos

January 8, 2026
A compact and experienced jazz combination in 2025, enjoy! Videos, Photos
  • MUSICIANS
  • NEWSFEED
  • VIDEOS

A compact and experienced jazz combination in 2025, enjoy! Videos, Photos

January 6, 2026
E-mail address: JazzBluesEU@gmail.com - Olivia Peevas, Brussels, Belgium, EU - Editor in chief of the this website: Jazz Blues European Union website - Chairman of the Board of Directors of the European Jazz and European Blues Festivals | DarkNews by AF themes.