Norwegian trumpeter
Mathias Eick opts for a different approach on
Midwest. Four years after the song-like
Skala, his sophomore
ECM date that has attained "classic" status in European critical circles, he employs notions of history, folk tradition, and dislocation. This album was inspired by
Eick's time spent playing the American continent; his tour began on the West Coast. When he entered the rural, upper Midwest and encountered its vast open spaces, he began to feel a sense of "home." He later learned that over the past two centuries of immigration, over a million Norwegians had settled there. After conceiving a "road" album that would begin in Hem, the village of his birth, and traverse the ocean to America,
Eick enlisted violinist
Gjermund Larsen (a folk musician who has contributed to Christian Wallumrød's
ECM recordings), pianist
Jon Balke, double bassist
Mats Eilertsen, and percussionist
Helge Norbakken. The compositions are all lyrical, in typical
Eick fashion, but with
Larsen they take on a rougher, more earthen quality. The violinist's attention to the instrument's early, raw, root sound lends balance to these melodies, and the interplay between violin and trumpet throughout is not only alluring, but often arresting. On the title track, there is a gently euphoric feel as the lyric unfolds, which, via
Larsen's violin and
Norbakken's hand shakers (he's a member of the
Batagraf ensemble), offers rhythmic and melodic traces of Native American song in contrast. "March," with gorgeous ostinato playing from
Balke and halting arco work from
Eilertsen, is much more open, embracing mode and rhythm along an improvisational line while
Eick's horn takes on a flute-like quality in its lyricism. The tune's feel is not unlike those heard on
Pat Metheny's early records for
ECM, despite obvious textural and tonal differences. "Dakota"'s percussion evokes the thunder of bison hooves crossing the plains, as the ghostly, minor-key harmonic interplay suggests the spooky, imposing Black Hills. "Fargo," in an obvious nod to the Coen Brothers film, strings together a gentle, lullaby-esque folk song with strains of drama and humor. The darker violin meets
Eick's trumpet in the head to contrast the familiar with the mysterious.
Balke's lovely solo is particularly suggestive of the latter. Despite the obvious nods to America,
Midwest is deliberately more Norwegian in its musical outlook than some of
Eick's other recordings. Therefore, it perfectly illustrates the thematic frame of the journey he set out to portray: that of the immigrant encountering the unknown and embracing it, and in the process, creating a new personal and cultural history without forsaking the old one. ~ Thom Jurek