Wolf Rune - ECM Records (2024)

In der Beschränkung auf Gesang und Kantele entwickelt die Aufnahme im Zusammenspiel der manchmal etwas spröden Stimme und der kargen Instrumentierung enen ganz eigenen meditativen und spirtuellen Reiz – eine Andacht zu Ehren der Natur.    Die Klänge wurzeln in archaischen Vorzeiten, weisen aber gleichzeitig mit experimentellen Elementen in die Zukunft. […] Nebenbei ist das Album ein eindrucksvolles Plädoyer für die Vielseitigkeit der Kantele.

Guido Diesing, Jazzthetik

Auf ihrer 39-saitigen, sich über fünfeinhalb Oktaven erstreckenden Konzert-Kantele lässt sie farbenreiche, raumfüllende Klangbilder entstehen, während sie sich auf der fünfsaitigen Kantele mit zwei kurzen ‘Kantele Prayers’ im äußerst reduzierten Musizieren übt. Dazwischen liegt eine fünzehnsaitige Variante dieser sehr ursprünglich klingenden finnischen Kastenzither – in einzelnen Stücken kombiniert sie auch die unterschiedlichen Instrumente miteinander. In die üblichen stilistischen Schubladen passen Sinikka Langelands zwischen Archaischem, Folklore, Jazz und Experimentellem liegenden Klangwelten 0hnehin längst nicht mehr hinein. Auf ‘When I Was The Forest’ erweitert sie mit einem E-Bogen zusätzlich das Farbspektrum zur Untermalung eines von Meister Eckhart inspirierten Textes. Der musikalische Output korrespondiert auf perfekte Weise mit ihren lyrischen Vorlieben, die sich auf diesem Album vom Spätmittelalter bis zu den zeitgenössischen norwegischen Dichtern Olav H. Hauge und Jon Fosse erstrecken. Gesanglich ist sie mit ihrer ausdrucksstarken Stimme tief in der nordischen Tradition verwurzelt, der Titelsong geht auf ein altes Runenlied zurück. Sinikka Langeland pur – ein faszinierendes Erlebnis!

Peter Füssl, Kultur

In my review of Langeland’s The Half-Finished Heaven I wrote that ‘the sound of the table harp lacks the dynamic variation to hold the attention…’, and with this new album for kantele and voice I have now been forced to eat my words as Sinikka produces an album that is full of beauty, timbral interest, and yes dynamic variation. Once again, Langeland has taken her inspiration from Finnskogen, Norway’s ‘Finnish forest’ and the kantele player’s home. Spells, incantations, rune songs are intertwined with religious tunes and traditional folk dances in music that is often time rooted yet paradoxically timeless. […] The music brings forth a more contemporary note with the delicious use of space on ‘I See The Light’ performed by Langeland on the 15-string kantele and the relaxed and gentle charm of ‘Don’t Come To Me With The Entire Truth’, but herein lies the beauty of the music in that it appears inherently timeless. This is a wonderous album that in its conception and execution is flawless, and full of meaning and hidden depths.

Nick Lea, Jazz Views

Se una musica va dritta al Centro, non ci sono tante parole da spendere. […] Siamo nella stanza senza pareti della musica finnica dove vibra la forza ancestrale delle leggende runiche. […] Ma la voce condivide la magia in cui siamo immersi con il suono di cristallo di tre diversi kantele […] che lanciano scintille di mistero anche più abbaglianti. E gallegiano nell’eco imperiosa quanto naturale di un altro capolavoro del Rainbow Studio di Oslo, dove Manfred Eicher cesella da anni gioielli dall’acustica inimitabile.

Carlo Maria Cella, Classic Voice

I am completely captivated by the entrancing, meditative music of the Norwegian folksinger and kantele player Sinikka Langeland […] Here, she plays three different kantele instruments (a zither-family table-harp with rich tones), being more rooted in the incantatory and poetic tales of the Finnskogen folklore tradition than in jazz. Yet, a contemporary feel inundates these 12 tracks made of rune songs, folk hymns and dances, and mystic religious chants. Each of them works its own magic, generating a marvel of sounds that search for the elemental beauty in nature. […] On the stunning ‘Winter Rune’, Langeland adds the 5-string kantele to the concert one, making a case for an ambient spaciousness that develops into occasional abstract textures that she sculpts (briefly using the bow) and molds with quill-plucked grace. When her voice is embedded in the last section, it comes with a pleasurably shivering sensation.

Filipe Freitas, Jazz Trail

Langeland’s music blends folk, jazz and improvised music. She has been recording for ECM since 2007 but ‘Wolf Rune’ is her first solo album. […] she plays the 39-string concert kantele, with its extraordinary 5 1/2-octave range. From the ethereal e-bow on the bass strings, to rhythmic strumming and quavery instrumental sections, it has a luxuriant sound. In contrast, two short evocative instrumental pieces ‘Kantele Prayer I & II’ are on 5-string kantele, with a dry sound, like a Japanese koto. […] The songs engage with the natural world. ‘Row My Ocean’ sets a contemporary poem by Jon Fosse. Langeland has been influenced by kveder, an old Norwegian folk song style, as well as jazz singers like Sidsel Endresen and Radka Toneff. She’s talked about how Miles Davis’ microtonal style has influenced her singing too. Sometimes the voice is strong and impassioned, and sometimes intimate. It’s full of artistry and completely without artifice. ‘Winter Rune’ has elements of free improv, with eerie bow creaks and Reichian patterns. She improvises euphorically over waves of shimmery strings. […] It’s a very beautiful, original, thought-provoking album, played and sung by a highly accomplished musician who’s absolutely herself.

Alison Bentley, London Jazz News

Armed only with three varieties of kantele (a Finnish table harp that’s like an autoharp, but with a much wider range) and her rich voice, Langeland essays a program of traditional and original tunes, plus poetry set to her own music. […] After almost forty minutes of drawing us into a unique Nordic universe, Langeland draws the program to a close with the title track, a melodic benediction that sends the listener back out into the mundane world, changed for the better for the experience.

Michael Toland, The Big Takeover

‘Wolf Rune’ is the first solo outing in Langeland’s catalogue, shedding new light on the multifaceted work of the Norwegian folk singer and kantele player. Incorporating rune songs, spells and incantations, religious tunes and traditional folk dances, it’s fair to say that few artists embody the spirit of place as resolutely as Langeland, her musical interpretations, arrangements, original poems and songs, embodying the mysteries of Finnskogen, Norway’s ‘Finish Forest’, which has long been her home and inspirational source. […] Powerful imagery requires appropriate musical settings, and on ‘Wolf Rune’ Langeland expands the range and reach of her instruments accordingly. Ancient tones can be heard here, as well as sonorities that take the kantele toward new expressive areas. This journey, from the archaic through the worlds of Nordic folk and into the realms of experimentation, are performed as instrumental and as sung pieces, Langeland’s voice echoing the tradition of the kantele with poem, prose and song, her stirring vocals a fine accompaniment to the atmosphere created with her kantele playing. […] I have listened over and over to these tunes and I can honestly say this has been a revelatory experience. I am totally hooked on the stunning sound of the kantele. In the hands (and mind, spirit, heart and soul) of Sinikka Langeland, I have discovered a musician totally at one with her instrument.

Mike Gates, UK Vibe

Being in a room with Sinikka Langeland is like being charmed into a northern forest under a night sky. Her presence and her voice are magical enough, but when she plays her kantele you can almost feel nature itself quivering with joy. […] On ‘Wolf Rune’ she plays three different kanteles: the seductively earthy 39-string five-and-a-half octave concert kantele, the 15-string kantele whose bell-like tones shimmer in the hymn-like ‘I See Your Light’, and the small but gently bewitching five-string kantele. This is a must-have release, with Langeland casting an exquisite spell over every track.

Fiona Talkington, Songlines

In der Beschränkung auf Gesang und Kantele entwickelt die Aufnahme im Zusammenspiel der manchmal etwas spröden Stimme und der kargen Instrumentierung enen ganz eigenen meditativen und spirtuellen Reiz – eine Andacht zu Ehren der Natur. Die Klänge wurzeln in archaischen Vorzeiten, weisen aber gleichzeitig mit experimentellen Elementen in die Zukunft. […] Nebenbei ist das Album ein eindrucksvolles Plädoyer für die Vielseitigkeit der Kantele.

Guido Diesing, Jazzthetik

Auf ihrer 39-saitigen, sich über fünfeinhalb Oktaven erstreckenden Konzert-Kantele lässt sie farbenreiche, raumfüllende Klangbilder entstehen, während sie sich auf der fünfsaitigen Kantele mit zwei kurzen ‘Kantele Prayers’ im äußerst reduzierten Musizieren übt. Dazwischen liegt eine fünzehnsaitige Variante dieser sehr ursprünglich klingenden finnischen Kastenzither – in einzelnen Stücken kombiniert sie auch die unterschiedlichen Instrumente miteinander. In die üblichen stilistischen Schubladen passen Sinikka Langelands zwischen Archaischem, Folklore, Jazz und Experimentellem liegenden Klangwelten 0hnehin längst nicht mehr hinein. Auf ‘When I Was The Forest’ erweitert sie mit einem E-Bogen zusätzlich das Farbspektrum zur Untermalung eines von Meister Eckhart inspirierten Textes. Der musikalische Output korrespondiert auf perfekte Weise mit ihren lyrischen Vorlieben, die sich auf diesem Album vom Spätmittelalter bis zu den zeitgenössischen norwegischen Dichtern Olav H. Hauge und Jon Fosse erstrecken. Gesanglich ist sie mit ihrer ausdrucksstarken Stimme tief in der nordischen Tradition verwurzelt, der Titelsong geht auf ein altes Runenlied zurück. Sinikka Langeland pur – ein faszinierendes Erlebnis!

Peter Füssl, Kultur

Armed only with three varieties of kantele (a Finnish table harp that’s like an autoharp, but with a much wider range) and her rich voice, Langeland essays a program of traditional and original tunes, plus poetry set to her own music. […] After almost forty minutes of drawing us into a unique Nordic universe, Langeland draws the program to a close with the title track, a melodic benediction that sends the listener back out into the mundane world, changed for the better for the experience.

Michael Toland, The Big Takeover

‘Wolf Rune’ is the first solo outing in Langeland’s catalogue, shedding new light on the multifaceted work of the Norwegian folk singer and kantele player. Incorporating rune songs, spells and incantations, religious tunes and traditional folk dances, it’s fair to say that few artists embody the spirit of place as resolutely as Langeland, her musical interpretations, arrangements, original poems and songs, embodying the mysteries of Finnskogen, Norway’s ‘Finish Forest’, which has long been her home and inspirational source. […] Powerful imagery requires appropriate musical settings, and on ‘Wolf Rune’ Langeland expands the range and reach of her instruments accordingly. Ancient tones can be heard here, as well as sonorities that take the kantele toward new expressive areas. This journey, from the archaic through the worlds of Nordic folk and into the realms of experimentation, are performed as instrumental and as sung pieces, Langeland’s voice echoing the tradition of the kantele with poem, prose and song, her stirring vocals a fine accompaniment to the atmosphere created with her kantele playing. […] I have listened over and over to these tunes and I can honestly say this has been a revelatory experience. I am totally hooked on the stunning sound of the kantele. In the hands (and mind, spirit, heart and soul) of Sinikka Langeland, I have discovered a musician totally at one with her instrument.

Mike Gates, UK Vibe

Langeland’s music blends folk, jazz and improvised music. She has been recording for ECM since 2007 but ‘Wolf Rune’ is her first solo album. […] she plays the 39-string concert kantele, with its extraordinary 5 1/2-octave range. From the ethereal e-bow on the bass strings, to rhythmic strumming and quavery instrumental sections, it has a luxuriant sound. In contrast, two short evocative instrumental pieces ‘Kantele Prayer I & II’ are on 5-string kantele, with a dry sound, like a Japanese koto. […] The songs engage with the natural world. ‘Row My Ocean’ sets a contemporary poem by Jon Fosse. Langeland has been influenced by kveder, an old Norwegian folk song style, as well as jazz singers like Sidsel Endresen and Radka Toneff. She’s talked about how Miles Davis’ microtonal style has influenced her singing too. Sometimes the voice is strong and impassioned, and sometimes intimate. It’s full of artistry and completely without artifice. ‘Winter Rune’ has elements of free improv, with eerie bow creaks and Reichian patterns. She improvises euphorically over waves of shimmery strings. […] It’s a very beautiful, original, thought-provoking album, played and sung by a highly accomplished musician who’s absolutely herself.

Alison Bentley, London Jazz News

On peut tomber raide amoureux des chansons de Sinikka Langeland. Malgré leur abord si mistérieux. Ou à cause de cela. De ce genre de beauté qui vous frappe sans qu’il soit nécessaire de saisir ses ressorts. Nul doute que ce cristal d’harmonies, aux confins du folk et du jazz et qu’on ne songerait à étiqueter ni d’un côté ni de l’autre, résulte d’une compréhension musicale embrassant aussi bien Bach qu’un folklore norvégien dont on ignore à peu près tout. L’éventuel savoir musicologique importé dans sa matière par la joueuse de kantele ne pèse plus très lourd quand on adhère instinctivement à sa limpidité d’expression […] Douze fragments d’une symphonie solitaire et dans chacun d’eux un trésor de sensations enfouies.

François Gorin, Telerama

I am completely captivated by the entrancing, meditative music of the Norwegian folksinger and kantele player Sinikka Langeland […] Here, she plays three different kantele instruments (a zither-family table-harp with rich tones), being more rooted in the incantatory and poetic tales of the Finnskogen folklore tradition than in jazz. Yet, a contemporary feel inundates these 12 tracks made of rune songs, folk hymns and dances, and mystic religious chants. Each of them works its own magic, generating a marvel of sounds that search for the elemental beauty in nature. […] On the stunning ‘Winter Rune’, Langeland adds the 5-string kantele to the concert one, making a case for an ambient spaciousness that develops into occasional abstract textures that she sculpts (briefly using the bow) and molds with quill-plucked grace. When her voice is embedded in the last section, it comes with a pleasurably shivering sensation.

Filipe Freitas, Jazz Trail

Die Klangfarben changieren nuancenreich zwischen Laute und Gitarre, Harfe und Bass, Zither und Cembalo. Der Reichtum an Ausdrucksmöglichkeiten ist schier überwältigend. […] Ein zauberhaftes Album.

Jens-Uwe Sommerschuh, Sächsische Zeitung

Das Album basiert auf Runenliedern, Zaubersprüchen und Beschwörungen, religiösen und traditionellen Melodien, Volkstänzen und naturverbundener Lyrik. Sie vertont und singt dabei Texte von Meister Eckhart, Jon Fosse und Olav Håkonson Hauges bis zu eigenen. Damit kreiert Sinikka Langeland ihre völlig markante, faszinierende Musikwelt, die gleichzeitig uralt, archaisch und neu erklingt und ganz aus ihrer Zeit spricht. Sie verbreitet einen eigenartigen Zauber, dem sich kaum entziehen kann, wer offene Ohren hat.

Steff Rohrbach, Jazz’n’more

In my review of Langeland’s The Half-Finished Heaven I wrote that ‘the sound of the table harp lacks the dynamic variation to hold the attention…’, and with this new album for kantele and voice I have now been forced to eat my words as Sinikka produces an album that is full of beauty, timbral interest, and yes dynamic variation. Once again, Langeland has taken her inspiration from Finnskogen, Norway’s ‘Finnish forest’ and the kantele player’s home. Spells, incantations, rune songs are intertwined with religious tunes and traditional folk dances in music that is often time rooted yet paradoxically timeless. […] The music brings forth a more contemporary note with the delicious use of space on ‘I See The Light’ performed by Langeland on the 15-string kantele and the relaxed and gentle charm of ‘Don’t Come To Me With The Entire Truth’, but herein lies the beauty of the music in that it appears inherently timeless. This is a wonderous album that in its conception and execution is flawless, and full of meaning and hidden depths.

Nick Lea, Jazz Views

Se una musica va dritta al Centro, non ci sono tante parole da spendere. […] Siamo nella stanza senza pareti della musica finnica dove vibra la forza ancestrale delle leggende runiche. […] Ma la voce condivide la magia in cui siamo immersi con il suono di cristallo di tre diversi kantele […] che lanciano scintille di mistero anche più abbaglianti. E gallegiano nell’eco imperiosa quanto naturale di un altro capolavoro del Rainbow Studio di Oslo, dove Manfred Eicher cesella da anni gioielli dall’acustica inimitabile.

Carlo Maria Cella, Classic Voice

Being in a room with Sinikka Langeland is like being charmed into a northern forest under a night sky. Her presence and her voice are magical enough, but when she plays her kantele you can almost feel nature itself quivering with joy. […] On ‘Wolf Rune’ she plays three different kanteles: the seductively earthy 39-string five-and-a-half octave concert kantele, the 15-string kantele whose bell-like tones shimmer in the hymn-like ‘I See Your Light’, and the small but gently bewitching five-string kantele. This is a must-have release, with Langeland casting an exquisite spell over every track.

Fiona Talkington, Songlines

Wolf Rune - ECM Records (2024)
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