Hungarian guitarist Ferenc Snétberger leads a trio with Swedish bassist Anders Jormin and US drummer Joey Baron in this warm and involving recording, produced by Manfred Eicher in Oslo, and intensely melodic improvisation draws the listener gently into its sound-world. The gracefully flowing guitar (Snétberger has a way of making even complex phrases seem effortless), the enveloping rhythmic undertow, and the highly creative playing from all participants captivate throughout Titok. There is soloistic brilliance here and high-level interplay, and the music takes the time it needs to unfold, breathing very naturally. The compound sound of the trio, with Ferenc’s acoustic nylon-string guitar partnered by bass and drums, is special. Joey Baron shades and colours the music with great subtlety using brushes, sticks and hands, and the rapport between Snétberger and Jormin is evident from the outset, as both guitar and bass explore the contours of Ferenc’s compositions. “The dialogue here between classical guitar and Anders’s way of playing the bass seems to me unique,” observes Ferenc Snétberger. “Anders has a special ‘voicing’, a special way of entering into my music. And, together, he and Joey offer inspirations which are mirrored in my playing. Manfred’s participation was also inspiring – without his ideas, and his choice of pieces and the sequencing of them, the album could not have existed in this form.”
TITOK
Ferenc Snétberger guitar
Anders Jormin double bass
Joey Baron drums
ECM 2468
Recorded and mixed by Jan Erik Kongshaug at Rainbow Studio Oslo.
Produced by Manfred Eicher
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1. COU COU 02:53 2. TITOK 02:18 3. KÉK KERÉK 04:01 4. RAMBLING 07:22 5. ORANGE TANGO 05:13 6. FAIRYTALE 05:24 7. ÁLOM 07:05 8. LEOLO 05:53 9. EASE 05:23 10. RENAISSANCE 05:14 11. CLOWN 05:09 12. RUSH 01:53 13. INFERENCE 02:16
Music by Ferenc Snétberger
except Cou Cou, Titok, Clown and Rush by Snétberger, Jormin and Baron
INTRO
Hungarian guitarist Ferenc Snétberger made a lot of new friends with his ECM solo debut In Concert (“a beautiful, assured performance” – All About Jazz) and will make many more with Titok, which features his trio with Swedish bassist Anders Jormin and US drummer Joey Baron. Recorded at Oslo’s Rainbow Studio in May 2015 and produced by Manfred Eicher, it’s a warm and involving album, with an emphasis on intensely melodic improvisation and interaction which draws the listener gently into its sound-world. The rapport between Snétberger and Jormin is evident from the outset, as both guitar and bass explore the contours of Ference’s compositions. Throughout, Joey Baron’s drums and cymbals provide shading and texture with restraint and subtlety.
Press Release ECM
Ferenc Snétberger
Titok
Anders Jormin
Joey Baron
Ferenc Snétberger: guitar; Anders Jormin: double bass; Joey Baron: drums
ECM 2468 CD 6025 5740661 0 Release: 21. April 2017 | USA 2017-06-02
The producer recommended Jormin and Baron for this project and the trio came together to play three concerts in Hungary before the session at Rainbow Studios, where spontaneity was the watchword. The album is framed by music freely created in the moment: the opening piece “Cou Cou”, the title track “Titok” and the three concluding pieces “Clown”, “Rush” and “Inference” are all improvised discoveries. The sense of searching and finding in the opening moments gives way to the clearly etched melody of “Kék Kerék”, a rather beautiful older melody of Ferenc’s. “Rambling” is the first of several pieces written for this trio, the writing leaving space for bass and drums to add their statements. The tenderly phrased “Fairytale” likewise invites Jormin to add countermelodies in the deep end. “Leolo”, dedicated to Ferenc Snétberger’s grandson Leo, begins with nursery rhyme melodic simplicity and develops into elegant chamber music, including a fine section with Jormin’s arco bass…
Ferenc Snétberger’s thoroughly distinctive guitar style has been gradually shaped through the absorption and transformation of many influences. Born in 1957 into a very musical family, Ferenc had classical guitar lessons from age 13, and studied jazz guitar in Budapest. Based in Berlin from 1988, he began to harmonize the full range of his guitaristic interests, from Django Reinhardt and Roma music to Brazilian and other Latin American musics via US jazz and European classical tradition – from the baroque to contemporary composition. “Alom” on the present disc is an adaptation of an old theme referencing Roma music, while “Orange Tango” and “Renaissance” acknowledge their inspirational sources in their titles. Yet none of these pieces sounds “eclectic”, the diverse sources are integrated organically inside Snétberger’s music, and accessed readily through the guitar. (Throughout Titok, Ferenc plays a guitar hand-built to his specifications by the late German luthier Tom Launhardt.)
Titok is the second ECM album by Ferenc Snétberger. It follows the critically-acclaimed In Concert, recorded at Budapest’s Franz Liszt Academy of Music (“A beautiful, assured performance” – All About Jazz).
Anders Jormin and Joey Baron have appeared on many ECM records, but Titok marks the first time they have played together on a session for the label (they have periodically crossed paths in live contexts – playing for instance in trio with the late John Taylor). Jormin has made several albums as a leader for ECM, most recently Trees of Light, with singer and fiddler Lena Willemark and koto player Karin Nakagawa. His other discs include Xieyi, In winds, in light, and Ad Lucem. A long-time member of the Bobo Stenson Trio, he also appears on albums with Don Cherry, Charles Lloyd, Tomasz Stanko, Sinikka Langeland and others.
Joey Baron has been John Abercrombie’s drummer of choice for two decades and appears on the Abercrombie Quartet’s newest release Up and Coming. Baron is also currently a member of the trios of Jakob Bro (album: Streams) and Gary Peacock (albums: Now This and the forthcoming Tangents, due this autumn).
Plans for further Snétberger concerts with Jormin and Baron are currently being worked on. Meanwhile, Ferenc also fronts an admirable trio with British bassist Phil Donkin and New York-based Hungarian drummer Ferenc Németh, which recently brought some of the Titok repertoire to Europe’s clubs and concert halls. In October 2017 Ferenc Snétberger will tour in trio with Anders Jormin and Ferenc Németh.
Reviews
Hallgató | Snétberger & Keller Quartett | 2021
UK
A terrific collaboration between veteran Hungarian guitarist Ferenc Snétberger and András Keller’s string quartet that takes us through
six centuries of music – from sweet settings of John Dowland’s compositions for lute to modernist classics by Shostakovich and Samuel Barber,
alongside some darkly elegant pieces by Snétberger himself.
John Lewis, Guardian
France
De la nostalgie diffuse à la déploration accentuée, chaque partition semble investir un degré spécifique de l’affliction […] l’expression instrumentale oscille entre la légèreté de la guitare (celle, très instinctive, de Ferenc Snétberger) et la gravité du quatuor à cordes (le polyvalent Quator Keller). Les principales contributions du guitariste jazz brassent trés large mais bénéficient de solos inspirés. Elles pȃtissent du voisinage de chefs-d’œuvre du XXe siècle, le célèbre ‘8e Quatuor à cordes’, de Dimitri Chostakovitch, qui alterne désolations funestes et danses macabres, et le non moins connu ‘Adagio’, de Samuel Barber, élégie à vocation hymnique.
Pierre Gervasoni, Le Monde
Le fabuleux guitarist Ferenc Snétberger et le Keller Quartet nous ouvrent les portes de l’Academie Liszt de Budapest le temps d’un programme d’une magistrale splendeur. On y apprécie Shostakovitch avec l’émouvant ‘String Quartet n° 8’ dédie aux victims de guerre et un déchirant ‘Adagio’ de Samuel Barber. Violons, violoncelle et guitar se retrouvent sur deux pieces de John Dowland et les compositions de Ferenc Snétberger, don’t le Concerto ‘In Memory of my People’ qu’il d´die à ses ancêtres manouches et Roms. […] l’heute est à la meditation mélancolique, bercée de cordes plus sensibles que jamais.
Thierry Boillot, L’Alsace
US
Recorded live in the Grand Hall of Budapest’s Liszt Academy, ‘Hallgató’ chronicles an ongoing collaboration between guitarist Ferenc Snétberger and the Keller Quartett. The concert’s program is one of memory and mourning, referencing the Holocaust and repression in Russia and Eastern Europe under Stalin. For the guitarist, whose mother was Roma and father Sinti, a sense of collective mourning, alongside a spirit of resistance, are closely intertwined aspects of his biography and musical resources. The Keller Quartett are fellow Hungarians and prove to be estimable collaborators. […] ‘Hallgató’ is a bit hard to translate, and it has different meanings in Hungarian and Roma, but it connotes a sense of listening. This release certainly invites listening, preferably many times, to savor its exhortation to remember.
Christian Carey, Sequenza 21
apple music has „Hallgató“ as one of the 10 must hears Classical Albums of the month declared
„An album of palpable sincerity and intense emotion.“
apple music editors notes, March 21
The music of Snétberger‘s In Memory of My People is infused with the spirit of the composer‘s own Romani background. Snétberger’s intensely emotional composition depicts in three movements the harrowing, moving and ultimately inspiring journey of the Roma people, whose valiant struggles, heroic survival, and noble triumph throughout centuries of persecution are relived in music at times blunt and fretful, at others profoundly sad , and all throughout melodically tonal, harmonically inventive, and open to the asperities of atonality without fully embracing that sonic world. Above all this is music that moves the listener as it reminds one of the vicissitudes of Snétberger’s paternal and maternal ancestors.(...)In Ferenc Snétberger’s artistry there is a strongly compelling quality – call it Romani melancholy if one must – that touches deeply the hearts of listeners. If the reader doubts my words just sit and listen to Your Smile, Snétberger’s musical musing on love.
https://rafaelmusicnotes.com, Rafael de Acha
Germany
Es ist der Gitarrist Ferenc Snétberger, Sohn einer Romni und eines Sinto, der ein ungewöhnliches Programm mit einer in sich schon heterogenen Eigenkomposition eröffnet, in der ihm alsbald ein Streichquartett – das ungarische Keller Quartett, zurzeit bestehend aus András Keller, Zsófia Környei, Gabor Homoki und László Fenyő – und der Kontrabassist Gyula Lázár beispringen. Das für das kleine Ensemble transkribierte Concerto für Gitarre und Orchester ‘In Memory of My People’ ist eine kuriose Melange aus Elementen des Impressionismus, des Jazz und der Folklore in drei Sätzen. […] Die Zusammenstellung des Konzerts geht zurück in der Musikgeschichte, um dann schrittweise wieder zur Gegenwart zurück zu kehren. […] Der Hörer (!) hat mit dieser Aufnahme ein ungetrübtes, wenngleich elegisches Vergnügen.
Thomas Rothschild, Kultura extra
Der Geist des ‘Memory’-Konzertes durchweht das ganze Programm, Relfektionen einer Melancholie, die an die unerträgliche Schönheit von Celan-Gedichten erinnern kann. Es ist ein großes Threnos, ein Memento aus Klage und Anklage, aus Aufstand und Widerstand, aus Blumen in Gewehrläufen, aus Heimatlosigkeit und Heimatsuche, und dem Leiden unterdrückter Minderheiten. Und Ferenc Snétbergers Gitarre erspielt den Trost zu alledem.
Alexander Schmitz, Jazzpodium
Italy
Il CD fornisce un ideale complemento ai due lavori precedenti del chitarrista per letichetta, documentandone esclusivamente laspetto classico (e come tale viene pubblicato nella New Series), mentre Titok era un lavoro per trio jazz e In Concert un recital solistico che riassume tutte le influenze che hanno contribuito al suo sviluppo come strumentista e compositore in una sintesi di diversi generi musicali. Va ricordato anche il Keller Quartett, coprotagonista dellalbum, che si conferma una formazione da camera di altissimo livello, degna erede della ricchissima tradizione musicale ungherese.
All About Jazz, Mario Calvitti | 2021. 02.18
Hungary
...A kompozíciós zene kötöttsége és a rögtönzés szabadsága harmonikus egységbe olvad Snétberger Ferenc zenéjében; ez az a minőség, amelynek alapján a megrendítő hanglemezt az ECM igényes kiadványai között is különleges hely illeti meg.
Magyar Nemzet, Turi Gábor
A jazznek a fényes oldala az improvizáció és a szabadság, a sötét oldala a laikusok számára az érthetetlenség és öncélúság.
A klasszikus zene fényes oldala a hagyományok tisztelete, a régi muzsikusok esszenciális dallamainak tovább őrzése, sötét oldala a dogmatikus, szabadságot nem ismerő szellemiség.
A klasszikus zene fényes oldala a hagyományok tisztelete, a régi muzsikusok esszenciális dallamainak tovább őrzése, sötét oldala a dogmatikus, szabadságot nem ismerő szellemiség.
Mi történne, ha valaki képes lenne ennek a két irányzatnak a fényes oldalát elhozni és egybe gyúrni? Snétberger Ferenc zenéjében mindez egyesül. Ő a híd a klasszikus és könnyűzene (jazz) között. Hiszen olyan színvonalon improvizál, hogy nincsen párja, mélyrehatóan ismeri a klasszikus zenét, az improvizációja mindig közérthető és magával ragadó. Mind klasszikus gitárosoknak, mind jazz zenészeknek abszolút példakép. Iskolájában klasszikus zenészeket improvizációra ösztönöz és jazz zenészeket a klasszikus zenék megismerésére inspirál. Ez olyan kulturális művelet, hogy nehéz lenne kifejezni ennek a fontosságát.
Nincsenek meg benne a jazz zenészekre jellemző allűrök. Csak a mérhetetlen alázat és szerénység, ami sugárzik a lényéből, és a zenéjéből..
www.artsomnia.hu, Osváth Gábor, 2021-02-13
Snétberger Ferenc és a Keller Quartet-Quintet produkciója tökéletes bizonyítéka annak, hogy a különböző világokból érkező muzsikusok milyen jól megtudják találni a közös nevezőt. A nyitottság a jazz egyik fő jellemzője, és ha a klasszikus zene képviselői is hajlandóak kitárni a kapukat, olyan zseniális felvételek születhetnek, mint a „Hallgató”.
Egyből felismerhető, szenzitív, mégis erővel-energiával teli gitározás, minden hang szívvel-lélekkel pengetve, meleg és telt hangszínt csalva elő a hangszerből, mely a Mennyországba enged betekintést a Hallgatónak. Ezt jelenti számomra Snétberger Ferenc és művészete.
A „Hallgató” kihagyhatatlan album, szóljon és szóljon!
Jazzma.hu, Gáspár Károly
Titok with Anders Jormin and Joey Baron | 2017
UK and US reviewers on the trio album Titok
Titok is the latest offering from ECM. And it is remarkable in the wholeness of ist realization. ...
He wrote all 13 songs here, and they reflect diverse influences: Roma music („Alom“); Europaen classical („Renaissance“); Latin („Orange Tango“); jazz (most of the rest). But these cultural references are almost incidental to Snétberger´s encompassing aestethic.
Titok is warm, elegant music, unassuming inits romaticism, firm in ist substance, organic in ist natural, unhurried flow. In seperable from allue of this album is ECM´s excellent recorded sound. The sonic glow of Snétberger´s acoustic nylon-string guitar is as sensual as a caress.
Five of the 13 pieces are in-studio improvisations. They sound almost a jewel-like and complete as longstanding Snétberger compositions like „Kék Kerék“ wich is a quietly dramatic unfolding of inevitable melody.
The rythm section here assures that Snétberger´s light touch will be applied in a context of intesity. Bassist Anders Jormin and drummer Joey Baron have appeared on many ECM recordings but never together.. baron´s brushes are like flickering fire. Jormin is a special atmospheric recource, offering haunting pizzicato on „Álom“, lingering arco on „Leolo“ and resonat blends with Snétberger´s guitar throughout.
Thomas Conrad, Jazztimes Magazin October 2017
What really impresses is the lovely balance struck between, on the one hand, the natural empathy between the leader and his fellow trio members, double bassist, Anders Jormin, and drummer Joey Baron, and, on the other, the ever melodic spontaneous conversations that the trio enter into. […] Quietly, this album gently gets under the skin and slowly, but surely, occupies the soul. There is nothing overtly flashy about Ferenc Snétberger’s style of playing. Just an overriding feeling of deep musicality.
Tim Stenhouse, UK Vibe
All the music is written by Snétberger and all 13 tracks are fairly concise. Some, like the delightfully melodic ‘Kék Kerék’, sound like folk songs, others have a chamber-jazz feel with the leader’s instrument inevitably reminding of the classical guitar repertoire, and some even sound like standards. Snétberger has a precise touch, flowing improvisational mind, and imparts each piece with a generous heart, a grace fully embraced by his sensitive fellows.
Peter Bacon, London Jazz News
Featuring Swedish bassist Anders Jormin and American drummer Joey Baron, the recording has a subtle balance of melodic improvisation and interaction between guitar, bass and drums. The cumulative effect is sensational with Snétberger’s classical training and his love of Latin American music permeating throughout. […] This is a recording that will delight fans not only of jazz guitar, but those who like their jazz elegant, sensitive and melodic.
Ian Lomax, Jazz Journal
‘Titok’ represents absolutely ego free playing at its highest level. The trio is adept at functioning in different roles seamlessly, as an example Snétberger is equally at home leading a melodic line or improvising out front as he is circling and enhancing the rhythmic activity of Jormin and Baron. […] ‘Titok’ is another engaging look at Ferenc Snétberger’s singing acoustic guitar tone, and substantial improvisational ideas. As noted in the review of ‘In Concert’, Snétberger’s technique is indeed formidable but it never gets in the way of the music. He is on par with the Scofield, Metheny, McLaughlin, Frisell and DeLucia and is quite underrated. Very rarely are albums this good, and with a stellar trio and material, the album makes a strong case for being one of the year’s best.
CJ Shearn, Jazz Views
Tim Stenhouse, UK Vibe
All the music is written by Snétberger and all 13 tracks are fairly concise. Some, like the delightfully melodic ‘Kék Kerék’, sound like folk songs, others have a chamber-jazz feel with the leader’s instrument inevitably reminding of the classical guitar repertoire, and some even sound like standards. Snétberger has a precise touch, flowing improvisational mind, and imparts each piece with a generous heart, a grace fully embraced by his sensitive fellows.
Peter Bacon, London Jazz News
Featuring Swedish bassist Anders Jormin and American drummer Joey Baron, the recording has a subtle balance of melodic improvisation and interaction between guitar, bass and drums. The cumulative effect is sensational with Snétberger’s classical training and his love of Latin American music permeating throughout. […] This is a recording that will delight fans not only of jazz guitar, but those who like their jazz elegant, sensitive and melodic.
Ian Lomax, Jazz Journal
‘Titok’ represents absolutely ego free playing at its highest level. The trio is adept at functioning in different roles seamlessly, as an example Snétberger is equally at home leading a melodic line or improvising out front as he is circling and enhancing the rhythmic activity of Jormin and Baron. […] ‘Titok’ is another engaging look at Ferenc Snétberger’s singing acoustic guitar tone, and substantial improvisational ideas. As noted in the review of ‘In Concert’, Snétberger’s technique is indeed formidable but it never gets in the way of the music. He is on par with the Scofield, Metheny, McLaughlin, Frisell and DeLucia and is quite underrated. Very rarely are albums this good, and with a stellar trio and material, the album makes a strong case for being one of the year’s best.
CJ Shearn, Jazz Views
Ferenc Snetberger’s style is just as distinctive in this trio setting as it was solo: blending classical, jazz, Gypsy jazz, and Latin American musics, but melded together into a singular voice. Jormin and Baron are completely attuned—nylon-string guitar fans should take note.
Mark Sullivan, All About Jazz
Hungarian guitarist Ferenc Snétberger is fairly new to the ECM Records roster, making a huge impact with his solo debut ‘In Concert’ a few years ago, but is now back in a big way with a trio that also features drummer Joey Baron and double bassist Anders Jormin. Their debut together is titled ‘Titok’, which is comprised of 13 tracks of inspired arrangements and plenty of sizzling musical interplay between the three players. From the outset, Barons steady rhythms allow Snétberger & Jormin to weave some incredible melodies around each other […] As daring as some of these compositions are, theres a certain subtlety that is also quite refreshing, as none of the players goes too far out into charts unknown but still manage to dazzle nonetheless. […] ‘Titok’ is a lovely little album with a nice mix of more exploratory pieces as well as shorter, charming compositions. Lets hope we hear more from this dazzling trio in the years to come.
Pete Pardo, Sea of Tranquility
Mark Sullivan, All About Jazz
Hungarian guitarist Ferenc Snétberger is fairly new to the ECM Records roster, making a huge impact with his solo debut ‘In Concert’ a few years ago, but is now back in a big way with a trio that also features drummer Joey Baron and double bassist Anders Jormin. Their debut together is titled ‘Titok’, which is comprised of 13 tracks of inspired arrangements and plenty of sizzling musical interplay between the three players. From the outset, Barons steady rhythms allow Snétberger & Jormin to weave some incredible melodies around each other […] As daring as some of these compositions are, theres a certain subtlety that is also quite refreshing, as none of the players goes too far out into charts unknown but still manage to dazzle nonetheless. […] ‘Titok’ is a lovely little album with a nice mix of more exploratory pieces as well as shorter, charming compositions. Lets hope we hear more from this dazzling trio in the years to come.
Pete Pardo, Sea of Tranquility
France
Ferenc Snétberger fait partie de ces rares guitaristes (avec Federico Casagrande), capables de développer des structures complexes, d’une exigence technique considérable, avec une aisance et une délicatesse dans l’interprétation qui en révèlent d’abord l’aspect mélodique. Accompagné du suédois Anders Jormin à la contrebasse et l’américain Joey Baron à la batterie, il réalise ici une œuvre toute en subtilités, finesse et profondeur.
C’est le fondateur d’ECM, Manfred Eicher, qui souffla à Ferenc Snétberger l’idée de réunir les trois musiciens, d’abord pour trois concerts en Hongrie, puis lors d’une session studio organisée dans la foulée avec le producteur allemand aux commandes. Il eut également un rôle décisif dans le choix des morceaux et l’ordre à donner à l’ensemble. Au programme, cinq titres entièrement improvisés : « Cou Cou », « Titok », « Clown », « Rush » et « Inference », auxquels s’ajoutent d’anciens titres de Snétberger « Kék Kerék » et quelques pièces écrites exclusivement pour le trio : « Rambling », « Fairytale » et « Leolo » (que la contrebasse illumine).
Treize titres au cours desquels la magie du trio opère immédiatement, comme une évidence. L’interaction entre la guitare et la contrebasse est permanente, et sur cette voix à 10 cordes, Joey Baron fait bien plus que d’ajouter du rythme : il suit les pérégrinations improvisées de ses compagnons, extrait la part mélodique de ses cymbales et de ses toms qu’il effleure parfois pour apporter sa propre voix à l’ensemble. Un soin particulier est accordé à l’esthétique acoustique, ce qui participe à la clarté de l’œuvre et en libère davantage l’expression. Quand une ré est aussi judicieuse, elle produit une unité, une personnalité musicale immédiatement reconnaissable, et en l’occurrence un disque plus que recommandable.
In Concert Solo Guitar | 2016
Guitarist Ferenc Snétberger’s new solo recording In Concert is reviewed on a US website
‘In Concert’ is the guitarist’s ECM debut, recorded in October 2013 live at the spacious Listz Academy, Grand Hall in Budapest and a staggering but absolutely melodic display of his capabilities […] Snetberger is masterful at blending improvisation and composition seamlessly, and integrating his wide array of influences into a borderless whole […] ‘In Concert’ is fantastic, and engaging for its entirety, the wonderful recording quality helps capture the spacious acoustic sound of the hall. Amazing sound pictures are created by the notes Snetberger plays, and it will be exciting to see where he goes next with his other groups.
C. J. Shearn, Jazz Views
UK review
Snétberger really is the complete guitarist, with classical baroque, Brazilian, Flamenco, jazz, tango and free styles all secure under his fingertips. His tone is immaculate, the recording sound sublime and the sense of relaxation and freedom along with such lightly-worn virtuosity makes this a thoroughly absorbing and pleasure-filled hour of music.
Peter Bacon, The Jazz Breakfast
Snétberger really is the complete guitarist, with classical baroque, Brazilian, Flamenco, jazz, tango and free styles all secure under his fingertips. His tone is immaculate, the recording sound sublime and the sense of relaxation and freedom along with such lightly-worn virtuosity makes this a thoroughly absorbing and pleasure-filled hour of music.
Peter Bacon, The Jazz Breakfast
US review
Here’s a gorgeous album by guitarist Ference Snetberger, who’s caught in a concert at Budapest’s Franz Liszt Academy of Music. He plays classical guitar here, and uses it in a variety of luscious moods. None of the titles are given a title, simply numbered as a “part” of a great whole. Rich classic sounds in “1”, rich Spanish fragrances in “3”, a dancing samba in “4” and hints of flamenco in “5” all include patience in his picking, strumming and touch. Wonderful spaciousness on the dreamy “8” , with the entire concert making you want to create your own impressionistic titles. A joy to the ears.
George W. Harris, Jazz Weekly
Here’s a gorgeous album by guitarist Ference Snetberger, who’s caught in a concert at Budapest’s Franz Liszt Academy of Music. He plays classical guitar here, and uses it in a variety of luscious moods. None of the titles are given a title, simply numbered as a “part” of a great whole. Rich classic sounds in “1”, rich Spanish fragrances in “3”, a dancing samba in “4” and hints of flamenco in “5” all include patience in his picking, strumming and touch. Wonderful spaciousness on the dreamy “8” , with the entire concert making you want to create your own impressionistic titles. A joy to the ears.
George W. Harris, Jazz Weekly
US review
It’s easy to hear the influence of Jim Hall in Snétberger’s more straight-ahead jazz playing, and it’s tempting at times to compare him to former ECM guitarist Pat Metheny, another Hall acolyte. But Snétberger’s command of flamenco, Gypsy jazz, and other syles, his ability to stitch these together so seamlessly, and the deceptively effortless manner in which he plays make it clear that this is a singular talent.
Greg Cahill, Acoustic Guitar