Dolfijn02: Wolter Wierbos: Deining

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Wolter Wierbos trombone
Wilbert de Joode double bass (tracks 1-6, 18)
Franky Douglas guitar (tracks 7, 11, 17)
Ab Baars tenor saxophone, no-kan (tracks 8-10)
Han Bennink snare drum, toys, voice, mouth organ and sopranino saxophone (tracks 12, 14, 16)
Mary Oliver viola (tracks 15, 16)

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Wolter Wierbos trombone
Wilbert de Joode double bass (tracks 1-6, 18)
Franky Douglas guitar (tracks 7, 11, 17)
Ab Baars tenor saxophone, no-kan (tracks 8-10)
Han Bennink snare drum, toys, voice, mouth organ and sopranino saxophone (tracks 12, 14, 16)
Mary Oliver viola (tracks 15, 16)

Wolter Wierbos trombone
Wilbert de Joode double bass (tracks 1-6, 18)
Franky Douglas guitar (tracks 7, 11, 17)
Ab Baars tenor saxophone, no-kan (tracks 8-10)
Han Bennink snare drum, toys, voice, mouth organ and sopranino saxophone (tracks 12, 14, 16)
Mary Oliver viola (tracks 15, 16)

TRACK LISTING
1. aan lager wat 05:22
2. op stoom raken 01:11
3. voor de wind 02:27
4. loefzijde 03:45
5. in het want 05:18
6. fuik 01:02
7. visions 06:35
8. buitengaats 02:05
9. peer's counting song 03:29
10. dageraad 02:14
11. innermission 02:42
12. op de werf 04:34

Recorded by Niels Brouwer
Mixed and mastered by Niels Brouwer
Artwork by Niels Brouwer and Wolter Wierbos
Cover photo by Fieke Broekhuizen
Produced by Wolter Wierbos

Thanks to: Ab, Wilbert, Han, Mary, Franky, stichting dOeK and Fieke.

LINER NOTES
For trombonist Wolter Wierbos, it’s all about fluidity: of tone, and time, of line and strategy and setting. It’s been said he can sound like a whole Ellington trombone section, from plunger-muted ya-yas to gorgeous melody statements, to dark shadings in the corners. He improvises free-associative solo concerts that suggest still more avenues to investigate. Even in composed music, he may improvise—might make up a better trombone line than the one written for him. No wonder he’s a 30-year linchpin of Misha Mengelberg’s ICP Orchestra, where the players are always re-arranging the tunes. But he’ll always nail a part if the harmonies depend on it.

“I see myself as a sort of sculptor or painter,” Wierbos says, “putting sound, rhythm and form into the music. This mostly happens very intuitively and on the spot. My range goes from totally improvised music to material that’s mostly written out. The music I like to play most has a lot of my own invention in it—and improvised forms, the principle of instant composing. When music is 100% written out, I lose interest.”

For a quicksilver player, he’s had long tenures in the co-op Available Jelly, and the bands and orchestras of Gerry Hemingway, Maarten Altena, Guus Janssen, and Sean Bergin. The groups he puts together for concert presentations at dOeK festivals (or his Amsterdam houseboat concerts) may improvise from scratch, or he may invite himself into another composer/performer’s concept: the rhythmically fiendish guitarist Franky Douglas, or the Moluccan-Dutch singer Monica Akihary.

“Communicating with my fellow musicians, that’s the whole idea. I try not to be a show-off. Musical communication in improvised form is very difficult, and calls for a lot of openness from the players. It’s always work in progress. With some musicians it’s easy because you speak the same language. With others it’s almost impossible—but even then it can be an adventure.”

Kevin Whitehead