
If each year of ECM releases can be said to possess its own internal climate, then 2008 may be remembered as a year of strength, though not strength in the crude sense of volume or muscular display. Here, strength begins in the ability to receive old forms and return them breathing and incandescent. The label’s Autumn 2008 sampler gathers some of its most powerful players insofar as they move with the strange authority of those who understand that tenderness can exert its own pressure.
Gianluigi Trovesi’s Profumo di Violetta offers the most immediate proof. Set within the grand banda tradition of his native Italy, the album places him among wind and percussion forces that seem to rise from a village square and a metaphysical pageant at once. From the sub-suite “Il Mito,” drawn from Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo, we are given five of six movements, re-sequenced into a private mythology in which Renaissance source material becomes less an object of homage than a living root system. Trovesi grafts his own imagination into that ancient trunk with panache so that it sprouts impossible angles. The result moves from delicacy to profanity while preserving a curious sweetness, as though the sacred had been caught wandering through carnival dust with violets hidden in its sleeves.
From this ceremonial blaze, Vassilis Tsabropoulos, at the piano, enters with Anja Lechner’s cello and U.T. Gandhi’s discreet percussion for their rendition of G. I. Gurdjieff’s “Sayyid Dance,” one of two Gurdjieff pieces to appear on the trio’s Melos. The performance is tender, though its tenderness has weight, turning in circles that feel less decorative than devotional. Tsabropoulos sets the music in motion with a lucid, revolving touch, while Lechner draws the cello into a fluid line of inward speech. Gandhi’s brushed drums lay tracks beneath, giving the piece a quiet locomotion toward some center of humility that refuses to name itself. Nothing here pleads for transcendence; the music simply walks toward it, carrying its brilliance as one might carry a bowl filled to the trembling rim.
A different form of inhabitation animates Savina Yannatou’s Songs Of An Other, which was her third ECM outing. Backed by Primavera en Salonico, she navigates “Za lioubih maimo tri momi,” a song of Bulgarian Macedonia, with an intimacy that never collapses into possession. Yannatou’s gift is neither imitation nor mere cosmopolitan elegance. Her voice becomes a hospitable threshold through which folk instincts pass without being stripped of their mystery. She sings across cultures with organic care, and in doing so suggests that universality is not a flattening principle, but a chamber of resonances where difference can remain sovereign. In the context of this sampler, her contribution deepens the discipline of letting another world speak through one’s own breath.
The cultural axis shifts again with Julia Hülsmann’s “The End of a Summer,” the title track from her trio recording with Marc Muellbauer and Heinrich Köbberling. It blossoms from late Romantic stirrings before settling into the nocturnal assurance of a smooth ballad, yet its polish never feels merely decorative. Hülsmann’s touch winds toward the heart by refusing theatrical anguish, intimate enough to bruise without raising its voice. “Yeraz,” the album title track from saxophonist Trygve Seim and accordionist Frode Haltli, intensifies that inwardness from another angle. Their loose treatment of the Armenian traditional opens a field of intimate freedom, with Haltli’s drone providing a deep surface over which Seim stretches his duduk-hued tone.
New York Days places Italian trumpeter Enrico Rava in the company of Mark Turner, Stefano Bollani, Larry Grenadier, and Paul Motian, a group whose authority comes from the way each musician leaves room for the others to become inevitable. On “Lady Orlando,” Rava lays on the nostalgia thick. The rhythm section and piano open with a lush fragrance in the air, after which Rava enters with searching lines that appear to ask questions the city has been avoiding for decades. Turner follows through a corridor of breath, his tenor patient and trustworthy, while Bollani’s lyricism receives an expansive berth. Motian and Grenadier render each turn of phrase in painterly motions that feel at once provisional and final, the sonic equivalent of ink deciding whether to become handwriting or shadow.
The same diurnal undertow carries us into Live At Belleville, where bassist Arild Andersen, saxophonist Tommy Smith, and drummer Paolo Vinaccia take on Duke Ellington’s “Prelude to a Kiss.” The melody surrenders to invisible strings, pulled forward through alleyways of hunger and half-lit recognition. Smith’s saxophone gives the piece its bruised body, while Andersen and Vinaccia create a ground that shifts between pavement and pulse. What emerges is not merely a standard reimagined, but a nocturnal civic document, a map of longing drawn on the inside of a window. Somewhere in its slow advance, a thin screen keeps desolation and consummation in a state of unresolved proximity.
The collection closes with “Song Of Ruth,” a variation of which also serves as the final track on Cantando, one of the most deeply realized statements from the Bobo Stenson Trio. With Anders Jormin on bass and Jon Fält on drums, Stenson turns Czech composer Petr Eben’s melody into a frost-covered meditation on mortality. It has the tenderness of a hand resting on a closed book, aware that its pages may contain both judgment and mercy. Jormin’s bass gives the piece a grave interior, while Fält’s percussion seems to tap at the membrane between existence and disappearance. By this point, the sampler has become more than a seasonal document from a singular label. It serves as a study in how beauty withstands its own weight in a world of mounting conflict.









