Knutdut Men Dunno

BMCCD236 2016

Artists

Béla Ágoston – tenor saxophone
Ákos Murányi – alto saxophone
Csaba Pengő – double bass
Péter Hárságyi – drums


About the album

All compositions by Béla Ágoston
Recorded at L.V. Hang Studio, Budapest on 28 December, 2015 and 19 January, 2016
Recorded and mastered by László Válik
Mixed by Gábor Brezovcsik

Artwork: László Huszár / Greenroom

Produced by László Gőz
Label manager: Tamás Bognár


Reviews

Ken Waxman - JazzWord (en)

Bernie Koenig - Cadence Magazine (en)

Hannes Schweiger - Concerto ***1/2 (de)

Robert Ratajczak - Long Play (pl)

Z.K. Slabý - UNI (cz)

Jan Hocek - JazzPort (cz)

Máté J. György - Gramofon **** (hu)

Olasz Sándor - Riff (hu)

Bereczki Bálint - JazzMa (hu)

Márton Attila - Demokrata (hu)

KomaKino (hu)

Czékus Mihály - HFP online (hu)

Komlós József JR - Alföldi Régió Magazin (hu)


3500 HUF 11 EUR

Knutdut Men: Dunno

01 Kukoté 6:57
02 The Depths of the Soul 8:09
03 Tanga 6:14
04 Dogmatics 5:56
05 Old Yoruba 5:11
06 Water Divining A 8:09
07 Water Divining B 5:43
Total time 46:19

The album is available in digital form at our retail partners



1. KUKOTÉ – The basic idea came from the bass guitar theme in John Coltrane’s composition Love Supreme. It took on its final shape during the rehearsals, where it lost its Coltranesque roots and created an entirely new mood.

2. THE DEPTHS OF THE SOUL – After ten years had passed I got the music out and put it in front of the band. Everyone seemed to be filling the music with the lonely times they’d had over the last ten years.

3. TANGA – The African feel of the title refers to the stylized tribal dances of early jazz. I imagine it on a stage on Broadway, in a Mad Max kind of environment.

4. DOGMATICS – A combination of the mood of military marches with the other extreme, the lament found in folksong. There is no middle ground: we are at the mercy of dogma.

5. OLD YORUBA – This theme has its origins in the polyphony, polyrhythm and practice of musical density of tribal music. It’s called “old” because of the slow tempo early on, and “Yoruba” because of the African feel in the melodies. Meanwhile, it got younger.

6-7. WATER DIVINING – Plainsong turns of phrase in the jungle interwoven with the music of the gambri of northern Africa. The first is free, the second is fixed.

Béla Ágoston - music navigator

Related albums