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Jan Lundgren Discography

Excerpt from "liner note" 

 

2001

"Collaboration"
Pete Jolly – Jan Lundgren Quartet
Pete Jolly, piano/ Jan Lundgren, piano/ Chuck Berghofer, bass/
Joe La Barbera, drums
Fresh Sound Records
Recorded at Entourage Studios, Hollywood, September 6-7, 2001

 collaboration.jpg
     

Swedish pianist Jan Lundgren concentrates on melding the bebop tradition and the great American Songbook with the music of his homeland. “Such a fundamental part of my love for jazz is based on American players that it´s very hard to ignore, “ he says. “Still, when I´m talking about developing the Swedish side of myself, I want to mix these things. The Swedish are very calm people, but there´s a lot of temperament beneath that might not show immediately. You know, ´Don´t wake the bear.` I´m a typical Swedish guy.” 

A typical Swede, perhaps, but by no means a typical jazz player, Lundgren has defined his musical interest on thirteen albums as a leader. He has appeared on more than forty CDs as a sideman with the likes of Herb Geller, Bill Perkins, Arne Domnérus and Conte Candoli.

…..Lundgren heard Oscar Peterson for the first time at fourteen, played in a band within a year of that experience and faced the decision at fifteen whether to become a jazz pianist or a professional tennis player. In 1978 Lundgren´s power and skill on the court won a national competition and the prize of intensive study with Björn Borg, Sweden´s winner of five straight Wimbledon championships. Tennis ultimately lost – point, set, match – to the examples of Peterson, Bud Powell, Bill Evans and McCoy Tyner. At thirty-six, Lundgren´s creativity and flexibility bring raves from musicians and critics who rarely rave.

…..When tenor saxophonist Bill Perkins was planning his 1995 tribute to Lester Young, Perk Plays Prez, he and producer Dick Bank looked for someone who understood the essence of the pianists on Young´s classic recordings. They chose Lundgren, whom more than fifty Swedish critics voted musician of the year in 1994. Perkins says that Lundgren “captured the spirit of Count Basie and Teddy Wilson superbly, without doing a slavish imitation. That would indicate to me a musician who has done a lot of listening and absorbing. Nevertheless, Jan is a thoroughly modern pianist, with an unerring grasp of harmony, rhythm and dynamics.”

(Doug Ramsey)