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Er


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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars GREAT TRUMPET PLAYER, GOOD ALBUM
Nils Petter Molvaer has made some good music over the years. His trumpetplaying is very moody and he can set an atmosphere that not a lot of people can. The beats and electronics he uses are unique. The beats and sounds he uses create a lot of space in wich he can let a solo come to full advantage. The particular Molvaer-sound is only to be heard in the group of musicians...
Published on November 7, 2005 by A.J.H. Woodcount

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3.0 out of 5 stars er
3/5. A conceptual work from Norwegian trumpeter Nils Petter Molvaer stands out for seven out of eight tracks on the album having one-word titles all ending in "er". The electronica-based nu jazz with contemporary sampling and programming technologies integrated into a hypnotic and abstract soundscape of horns, guitars, drums and hand percussion makes for a fine and...
Published 8 months ago by Sain Alizada


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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars GREAT TRUMPET PLAYER, GOOD ALBUM, November 7, 2005
This review is from: Er (Audio CD)
Nils Petter Molvaer has made some good music over the years. His trumpetplaying is very moody and he can set an atmosphere that not a lot of people can. The beats and electronics he uses are unique. The beats and sounds he uses create a lot of space in wich he can let a solo come to full advantage. The particular Molvaer-sound is only to be heard in the group of musicians Molvaer works with (the guitarist Eivind Aarset for instance; try his album Electronique Noir!).
I own three albums of Molvaer: Khmer, NP3 and ER. The first one (Khmer, 5 stars easily) is without a doubt the best. Most songs take their time to develop, but there always is a lot going on. Within the songs the tempo or volume build up. The beats are not the only things that count. And that maybe is Molvaer's trap: he manages to make his beats sound better and better, but they become so important that the rest of the music gets less attention.
NP3 had bigger beats than Khmer, but the album as a whole is a bit flat. But it's the most accessible and if possible happy one.
ER is down. Way down. And I like that. The album starts of really good. The first song is a killer! The second one is very sad. The intro's the songs lead to good beats that have a good dark atmosphere. But just like NP3 I miss the evolution of the songs beyond the beat. When Molvaer could pull that off again he could make a 6 star album.
There's one thing about the album I almost forgot to mention: there are voices on two of the songs of the album. The voice of Sidsel Endresen is a treat. She doesn't sound like a jazzsinger, and I/m glad about that. It wouldn't fitt. The singing is like a beat up Sally Oldfield or holds somewhere in the middle of Portishead and Clannad. Very tastefull!

When you don't own a Molvaer-album and you've got nothing against fantastic electronic beats, soundscapes and trumpet you must get yourself a Molvaer-album. This album for me is a five star album untill song number six. It's good enough, especialy the way the beats are recorded is good, but I believe Khmer has more to offer.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ER: Music that explores and is worth exploring, November 18, 2007
This review is from: er (Audio CD)
ER is Nils Petter Molvaer's most accomplished work to date. It is also maybe two albums in one. A first half of tracks drifting around melody, electro percussion and atmospheric sweeps. It culminates with 'Only These Things Count', a song, vocals courtesy of compatriot Sidsel Endressen; the remaining tracks are denser, exploring syncopation, rhythm and the texture of sound, electric and acoustic.

On each track Nils Petter Molvaer winds his trumpet, at times hinting at Miles Davis circa the mid-seventies or the treated sound of Jon Hassel. At other times he bends notes in an almost primitive or folkloric way. Breathing through the horn as though it were a voice. Making voice and instrument almost one. Reminding the listener perhaps of music's link with speech and language. He does all this over an atmospheric yet never overbearing palette of sound. Climaxes of instruments suddenly give way to space and the lone horn. A minimalist melody, that is plaintive or haunting.

The track titles are simple and starkly suggestive. Hover, Softer, Water, Sober, Darker, Feeder and Dancer. Only the aforementioned 'Only These Things Count' deviates from this trend.

Stand out tracks have to be 'Water', a beautiful intro, standing bass, sparse horn and electro effects, woven through with Endressen's wordless and stuttered voice. 'Hover' a subtly struck bass and rhythm syncopation, the horn drifting at times so far back into the mix, it stretches attention, as though drawing the listener into another room, only to return, breathy and warm. 'Only These Things Count', is a mixture of acoustic and treated sound framing a conventional song structure - the horn here mostly warm and intimate. And 'Dancer' a darkly rhythmic piece, with swirling guitar drones, sound loops, the trumpet here one minute, there the next, driving the music on, occasionally discordant and chaotic, but never less than compelling.

I was recently listening to this while driving out of London and up the M11 to Stanstead airport. A somewhat misty, November afternoon. Stretches of cloud and a deep autumn sun. It was the perfect soundtrack. Evoking the landscape, suggesting its history, its connections and yet so very urban and contemporary in its nature.

This is a special of music. It will bear repeated listening. It will draw you in from first listen Then reveal its thoughtfulness, its invention and depth with time. Worth your attention.


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not for all tastes (or pockets) but ineffable, enchanting, and profoundly aesthetic., December 5, 2006
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This review is from: Er (Audio CD)
Upon reading the titles of the tracks on "ER," I was prepared for a Windham Hill sampler of programmatic "nature-music" pieces. But Norwegian trumpeter Nils Petter Molvaer's muse, it soon becomes evident, is more closely related to the genius presiding over "In a Silent Way," "Bitches Brew" and similar projects by some of Miles Davis' '70s progeny. It's New Age music with a beat, but with nuanced textures mixed so deliberately and motifs insinuated so subtly that the inattentive listener is likely to miss altogether the gossamer fabric of these fragile yet frequently appealing, inviting constructions.

Molvaer's trumpet is too much in the background for this music to be mistaken for a Miles Davis session. Instead, the horn becomes another vibrant freqency floating in the sonic ether, whether producing muted plaintive sounds without the mute or suggesting a momentary chill when Molvaer blows through his mouthpiece sans horn. Even the multiple tracking of the instrument along with the layering of bird calls and human voices does little to disturb the Noh-like stillness of "Water," following "Softer" like diaphanous gauze yielding to the glimpse of a golden carp suspended in a moon-lit pool.

"Only These Things Count" is verbalized, sung moreover in English, thus threatening to rupture the listener's connection with the safe and magical harbor of the musical Zen garden. But soon the churning textures of the accompaniment lead to another quiet, intimate moment during which Molvaer's breathy trumpet supplies incandescent incantations over a single sustained pitch, a note evoking a wordless plainsong resonating with the dynamic energy field of consciousness itself.

The next piece, "Darker," momentarily establishes an almost funky groove, perhaps Molvaer's turn to run the voodoo down, but again he moves skyward, as "Feeder" offers the most extended, extreme trumpet solo on the CD--loud in dynamics or high in register only relative to its previous unobtrusive presence. The role of the trumpet as an "individual" voice is an open-ended question in music of such exacting scale and ecological balance.

"Dancer," the final piece--or, more precisely, movement of a continuous work (there are no silences between the compositions)--is descriptive of the acoustic properties of the piece itself, which emphasizes the rhythms of primitive percussion. But in its metaphoric invoking of dance, it's also an interpretive, revelatory key to Molvaer's paradoxical and poetic, even mystical, compositions that blur the lines between soloist and accompaniment, text and context, confounding any attempts at easy categorization of this music.

The listener's epiphany is that "ER" is, above all, a delicate but vital and indivisible organism, recalling if not demonstrating the understanding implicit in the poet W.B. Yeats' famous question about the relationship between the artist and his creation: "How can you know the dancer from the dance?"
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3.0 out of 5 stars er, May 8, 2011
This review is from: er (MP3 Download)
3/5. A conceptual work from Norwegian trumpeter Nils Petter Molvaer stands out for seven out of eight tracks on the album having one-word titles all ending in "er". The electronica-based nu jazz with contemporary sampling and programming technologies integrated into a hypnotic and abstract soundscape of horns, guitars, drums and hand percussion makes for a fine and delicate listening experience. The music might sound weird at first, but it grows on you to the point you can see that this is actually how a contemporary take on Miles David would sound. The centerpiece of the record is definitely the verbalized gem "Only These Things Count" with lyrics written and intimately performed by Norwegian jazz singer Sidsel Endresen. Opening with an icy piano drops by Magne Furuholmen very much in the style of his movie soundtrack collaborations, this organic piece with acoustic guitar, percussion and double bass is by far one of the most melodic and lyrical songs Nils Petter Movlaer ever recorded. The track is followed by Molvaer's trumptet solo on mournful and chilly "Sober". These two tracks seem to have the greatest potential to stand the test of time. The rest of the album has a greater deal of sampling and programming and experiments with ethnic percussion and Eastern-style sounds, but Molvaer's trumpet sounds so smoothly the end result is a mystical and paradoxical ambience that every fan of electronica going beyond pulsing beats and synthesized sounds would enjoy. --Sain Alizada
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4.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not great, October 16, 2010
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This review is from: er (Audio CD)
nils petter molvaer is terrific. his trumpet and flugelhorn playing takes you to the ice blasted, dark islands from which he hails in norway. The challenge for Molvaer is that each of his recordings will always be measured against Khmer which was a stark, busy, chunky record that gets in your face. His later recordings seem to have had the rougher and darker edges taken off them. er, is good, and good for molvaer is better than most, don't get me wrong, but it does travel along at a downbeat tempo, where i expect molvaer to get inside your head, and his collaborators, Jan BAng and Eivind Aarset with a finger in your chest
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5.0 out of 5 stars So "Out There" You Have To Get Behind It, July 16, 2007
This review is from: Er (Audio CD)
Nils Petter Molvaer is a Norwegian trumpet player and composer who drives the concept of "trumpet music" into new territory. His use of hip-hop rhythms, turntables, tape effects and elaborate productions is extremely up-to-the-minute. His tone on trumpet is occasionally reminiscent of Miles Davis, occasionally of Jon Hassell. In fact, if Miles were still alive today there's a good chance he'd dig Molvaer immensely -- he expands the repertoire of the trumpet and challenges listeners to "get with it." Very Miles.

Also (sorry Amazon!) if you have the capability you can download this album for only $7.92 from iTunes (artwork's on Molvaer's website). Beats the pricey Amazon import.
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Er
Er by Nils Petter Molvaer (Audio CD - 2005)
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