Fun House

Benoît Delbecq, Fred Hersch Double Trio

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What is most striking about this session is the way that all six artists luxuriate in the ensemble’s collective sound and the spaces in between. There is a stunning sense of ambience around each note, and every wisp of melody is held in fragile suspension by each musician’s sensitive contribution. — Shaun Brady, Jazziz

Fun House highlights the rare double-trio configuration is a ground-breaking encounter between jazz piano and the sonic resources of contemporary classical music, between American tradition and the European avant-garde, but above all between two fantastic pianists (coincidentally, both winners of the Grand Prix du Disque for jazz).

Fred Hersch’s quest for absolute beauty and impeccable virtuosity have become legendary. Benoît Delbecq is one of Europe’s most prominent jazz keyboardists; his compositions and elegant, complex improvisations build on John Cage’s prepared piano techniques. Add to this Steve Argüelles’ stealthy ‘assistance and obstacles’ live sampling, and three of the most celebrated rhythm section players of today, and the result is a multi-faceted collaboration, with opportunities for various combinations of duos and trios as well as full-group interaction. The music has its moments of abstraction, its moonlit soundscapes such as “One is Several,” but also embraces a jazzier aesthetic, for example the Monkish/Lacyish “Night for Day.”

The project was sparked in 2008 when Fred came to a New York gig Benoît was playing with the John Hébert Trio. They had only met once before but had been digging each other’s playing on record. Fred: “The first time I listened to Pursuit I was completely mesmerized – it is an amazing project and it showed me that Benoît is a completely unique pianist, composer and conceptualist.” Benoît: “I had a few albums with Fred including Chicoutimi (with Michael Moore and Mark Helias) which had an immediate and very special effect on me: there was something in Fred’s playing I felt more connected to than ever. I’ve always so admired his rare musicianship and subtle touch and the rhythmicity in his playing.” Benoît came up with the idea of a double trio including his longtime collaborators Jean-Jacques Avenel and Argüelles, and Fred had a long history with Mark Helias and Gerry Hemingway. Benoît: “The personnel came very naturally. Everybody knew each other already. The first minutes of the first rehearsal I remember very precisely, they just showed we’d made a great choice! The music found its flow and freedom from the beginning.”

Most of Delbecq’s pieces here were written for the group. “I was imagining scenarios and road maps for each tune, although leaving a lot of space for everyone’s creativity. I believe I imagined it as a sextet, trying to find enough ideas to make the ideas blossom in an original way for each tune…And Steve’s electronics are always bringing something unexpected we react to.” (“Tide” is an Argüelles remix.) “Lonely Woman” was played as a duo encore one night and worked so well they decided to record it that way at the studio as the final track.

The recording took two days. Benoît: “Drums were in booths on the first day but we agreed it was important to record the whole thing once again the second day but this time all together in the same room. A big part of the record comes from day 2. Not that the music was less strong on day 1, simply the drummers felt less isolated and the music found itself even more easily in term of blending all together.” The pianos are somewhat panned in the mix (Hersch left, Delbecq right). Fred: “When I listened back for the first time to the recording, I was struck by both the similarities and the differences between us, especially regarding tone. But there were also places where I was not sure who was playing what! I think we stepped into each other’s musical/pianistic world so well.” Benoît: “What makes us close at certain designated moments is that, I think, we have a related way of breathing inside the lines, or might I say between the lines…Every great player has a sense of dynamics of his/her own – like, creativity in sounds and accents, in phrasing, in ways to play with time or silence. Every parameter has a dynamic relation to every other parameter in music.”


Benoît Delbecq, Piano
Fred Hersch, Piano
Jean-Jacques Avenel, Bass
Mark Helias, Bass
Steve Argüelles, Drums & Live Electronics
Gerry Hemingway, Drums

Tracklist

Please note that the below previews are loaded as 44.1 kHz / 16 bit.
1.
Hushes
03:19
2.
Ronchamp
03:14
3.
Strange Loop
07:55
4.
Fun House
05:54
5.
Le Rayon Vert
06:50
6.
Night for Day
05:51
7.
One is Several
05:13
8.
Tide
05:13
9.
Two Lakes
05:13
10.
Lonely Woman
03:13

Total time: 00:51:55

Additional information

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SKU

PWSGL16002

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Original Recording Format

Release DateSeptember 27, 2024

Press reviews

Jazz Wrap

A fantastic intersection of classical tradition, jazz ethos and soundscapes. Delbecq known for his complex patterns and sparse ambience. Hersch renown for his creativity, elegance and agility to move the jazz tradition forward. These elements are pulled, stretched and expanded through Fun House in various hues by an amazing double trio.

Jazz music archives

Overall, this is a very modern well balanced mix between European classical and American jazz avant-garde traditions, with touches of non-elevator ambient sound. “Fun House” is one of the best examples of a continuing evolution in jazz.

JazzWise

The French pianist-composer Benoît Delbecq is probably best known over here for his exciting, cutting-edge projects (Ambitronix, The Recyclers) with long term collaborator Paris-based drummer-electronics Steve Argüelles. In a quite unique setting of a double-piano trio (a French-American collaboration funded by FAJE) Argüelles joins Delbecq’s French trio alongside the brilliant ex-Steve Lacy-collaborator Jean-Jacques Avenel.

S. Victor Aaron

King Crimson, of all things, was the ensemble that first demonstrated (to the wider public, at least) the greater possibilities introduced by a double trio. And now, a Frenchman and an American extend this thrilling concept into jazz. But Benoit Delbecq, the Frenchman and Fred Hersch, the Yankee, made Fun House into a 3+3 album that couldn’t be farther away from Robert Fripp’s approach to the idea.

 

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