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Guys ..
I think I'll send these to his email if i can find it. I hope the mail gets to him i literally grew up with his music he's onw of my favorites 💔
One on top is an official photo and the other one is a screenshot from the 1991 Hamburg live
Edit: I took a better pic and increased contrast
Eleni Karaindrou, Adagio for Saxophone (Saxophone Jan Garbarek), 2010
Iyi geceler olsun ☕🚬🚬
"Saksafon, ruhun melodilerini şarkı gibi söyler, notaları ışıldatır ve kelimeler olmadan hikayeler anlatır."
10X CD Selected Recordings I-VIII (2002, ECM) includes "Cego Aderaldo", originally found on Folk Songs (1981, ECM). w/ my father, guitarist Egberto Gismonti, saxophonist Jan Garbarek.
Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek (born March 4, 1947)
Jan Garbarek, Bill Frisell, Eberhard Weber, Jon Christensen – “Paths, Prints” vinyl cover front and back (1982)
Design by Barbara Wojirsch Photography by Petra Nettelbeck
Cristóbal de Morales : Parce mihi, Domine ( Lux aeterna: A Sequence for the Souls of the Departed).
Parce mihi, Domine by Cristóbal de Morales is a work that demands restraint. Composed in the mid-sixteenth century on a passage from the Book of Job, its language is not one of sacred drama or easy consolation, but of the weight of a wounded existence. In this recent version by The Gesualdo Six, included in the album Lux aeterna (Hyperion, 2022), the piece is revealed with rigorous clarity and a kind of austere depth that is rare and welcome.
The direction of Owain Park, who also sings as a countertenor in the group, avoids any interpretative gesture that might distort the text. There are no embellishments or expressive flourishes. The polyphony unfolds slowly, with clean intonation and almost liturgical attention to detail. Each line is audible, each voice has its place, and the ensemble moves as a single breath. In this reading, emotion is not imposed. It is allowed to emerge through the structure itself.
Compared to the more widely known version of the motet, the one recorded by The Hilliard Ensemble with Jan Garbarek, this reading is more direct and more human. Garbarek, with his saxophone floating above the plainchant, created an atmosphere of contemplation, amplified by reverberation and mystery. It was an aesthetic reimagining that marked an era. But The Gesualdo Six return the piece to its original scale. No effects. No distance. Just six voices facing the text. The result is more intimate, more severe, and perhaps for that reason, more faithful to the spirit of Morales. A solemn plea, not spoken from heaven, but from the earth.