in brief
20.04.2021

Selvsikker storbyfart og legesyge

Alice Archives: Caktus + Selvhenter
Maria Dybbroe i front for Caktus. Still fra video. © Alice
Maria Dybbroe i front for Caktus. Still fra video. © Alice

Caktus’ to altsaxofoner, kontrabas, cello og trommer vidner om en kvintet, der har placeret sig et sted imellem jazzen og kammermusikkens verdener. Dette kan umiddelbart lyde som en svær balancegang, men orkestret er heldigvis fortrolige med blandingsforholdene.

Fra indledningen med kun en enkelt saxofon og bas, inklusive en ultrakort (intentionel?) reference til John Coltranes »Welcome«, føres jeg gennem introspektive, opbyggende passager og udfarende, eksplosive forløsninger. Saxofonerne både hvisker og hviner, strygerne stryges og plukkes, trommerne tier og larmer. Fra storbyidyl til højhastighedstrafikinferno og alt derimellem.

Det er kompetent og selvsikkert, men indimellem savner jeg lidt mere usikkerhed i balancegangen, at orkestret trækker musikken lidt længere ud i begge retninger.

Mens Caktus spiller på vekselvirkningen mellem to traditioner, så gør Selvhenter brug af en helt anderledes tilgang. Med en besætning på altsaxofon, basun og trommer kunne man forvente en jazztrio, men Selvhenter er meget mere – eller måske noget helt andet – end det.

Begge blæsere er næsten konstant underlagt en række pedaleffekter, og det er sjældent, at de to instrumenter rent faktisk lyder som sig selv. Saxofonisten får til tider sit horn til at lyde som en Fisher-Price-plasticmelodica, mens basunisten blandt andet producerer en lyd, der bedst kan beskrives via referencer til Black Sabbath-riffs. Trommerne er til sammenligning mere konventionelle i deres lyd og funktion, og de forankrer dermed på fornemste vis de ellers højtragende idéer.

Selvhenter udviser en larmende, søgende legesyghed, og som det er kutymen i den søgende musik, så er der nogle momenter, der fanger min opmærksomhed mere end andre. Men den allestedsnærværende legesyge smitter.

© Meseguer

»To us, music is the definitive companion. As listeners, it fosters a sense of communion, bridging the gap between souls through the shared experience of sound. As creators, however, music confronts us with our own inner void, that profound solitude that nourishes the creative spirit. At the same time, it dares us to leap into the unknown to decipher the ineffable. Music anchors us to the present moment, to the 'now' shared with a live audience; yet, it also touches the eternal.«

L'arannà is an electronic folk duo. With their last project, Turmarí, the duo dives deep into the folk music traditions of the Pityusic Islands, offering – through their blend of sound exploration– a perspective on Ibiza and Formentera. Synthesizers and keyboards share the stage with traditional instruments and aesthetics inspired by the ancestral ball pagès dance. Reviving cant redoblat (a unique form of singing from these islands preserved by fewer than twenty people) the group weaves a narrative that traces the roots and lived reality of two islands that are far more than just a dreamt-of paradise. The band will be touring around Denmark and Sweden, from 27th to 31th of May, playing at venues like Turkis, Dexter, Inkonst or ALICE.

© Ana Alexandrino

»Music to me is movement, trance, transformation. The rest I won't tell you.«

Marcela Lucatelli is a vocalist and composer. Born in Brazil and based in Denmark, she has gained international recognition for her boundary-pushing performances — sensuous, politically charged, and uncompromisingly original. Described by The Wire as a composer of »scores for the limits of bodies and voice,« Lucatelli challenges conventions with her fearless vocal experimentation and bold compositions. Her works have been performed by Danish National Symphony Orchestra, Danish National Vocal Ensemble, and Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart. She has appeared at major festivals and venues, including Theatro Municipal de São Paulo, DR Koncerthuset, Donaueschinger Musiktage, Darmstadt Ferienkurse, IRCAM, Copenhagen Opera Festival, Ultima Festival, Borealis Festival, Copenhagen Jazz Festival, Jazzfestival Saalfelden, Cafe Oto, A L’ARME!, DMA Jazz – Danish Music Awards, WOMEX, and many more. Lucatelli's work has earned her several prestigious awards, including the Carl Nielsen and Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen Talent Prize (2019), Pelle Prize (2021), and the Danish Music Awards' 2023 Vocal Jazz Release of the Year, which shows that vocal jazz has many faces – and does not necessarily belong only to the soft end of the spectrum.

© PR

»What is music to me? Here’s a quote from Nietzsche: ‘The people dancing all seemed crazy to the people who couldn’t hear the music.’«

Salim Washington is a saxophonist, multi-instrumentalist, composer, academic, and activist from Detroit who has been highly active on the American jazz scene since the 1970s, and also in South Africa, where he became a central figure. The spirit of John Coltrane hovers over his music, which carries both spiritual and social dimensions.

© Aske Jørgensen

»Music for us is the perfect language that we love to speak. A language where it is the individual's feelings and imagination that determine what is right and wrong. Everyone can speak the language. You don't have to be able to write or understand, but just listen. Some music requires that you listen carefully and maybe hear it several times. A bit like when you talk to someone from Norway or Sweden, you also have to listen a little extra.«

DØGNKIOSK is a Danish punk rock band with roots in Silkeborg. The band consists of bassist and singer Anders Ejner, who has been active on the Danish underground scene for several decades. Musically, DØGNKIOSK moves in a field between classic Danish punk and alternative rock. In the spring of 2026, the band will release their second album, Tæt på kanten.

© Bastian Zimmermann
© Bastian Zimmermann

It is difficult to comprehend that Andreas Engström is no longer with us. Just a couple of months ago, he wrote – as he had done so many times before – with an ambitious proposal: he wanted to review a box set of twenty releases by Dror Feiler. In the same message, he mentioned plans to come to Aarhus for the recently concluded Spor Festival.