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Stoa / Nik Bartsch's Ronin
Stoa / Nik Bartsch's Ronin
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Nik Bärtsch's Ronin
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Product Details

  • Artist: Nik Bärtsch's Ronin
  • Binding: Audio CD
  • EAN: 0602498736319
  • Label: ECM
  • Manufacturer: ECM
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Product Group: Music
  • Publisher: ECM
  • Release Date: 2006-05-02
  • Studio: ECM
  • Title: Stoa / Nik Bartsch's Ronin
  • UPC: 602498736319
Avg Customer Rating: 4 stars


Customer Reviews


5 stars Jazzy, minimal, and even a little funky...
Jazz evolved in the US as a unique amalgamation of African sources and European ones. When Jazz was shipped to Europe, it created its own unique forms, and European jazz has taken different tracks from its American counterparts. Nik Bärtsch's Ronin has found a unique version that is distinctly cool and artsy and compelling. People compare this stuff to Steve Reich (who also recorded on ECM for some years), but in fact there is at least one track on this CD that sounds like a clone of Philip Glass's "Music with Changing Parts" - right down to the slightly wonky intonation. American Minimalism (another amalgamation) clearly influences this music, but that doesn't prevent it from having its own voice, one that is capable of being sexy and interesting on its own terms, whatever its references to its sources.


5 stars Weird. Beautiful.
First you will want to know what genre Stoa is. Give it up. It lives in the traffic circle of minimalism, jazz and funk. Steve Reich would get Bartsch's vibe. But this is not jazz. It leaps the fence of minimalism and runs to the mountains. Too precise for funk. And too tectonic to be atmospheric. Bartsch pioneers new space with this suite. And what a wonderful space it is. Some indie film maker should produce a movie just to feature this sound track.
- Chuck Crouse


4 stars Meditative and Muscular
This is immersive and thought-provoking music: contemplative without being fragile or shy, informed by electronica but played on mostly acoustic instruments, minimal in construction while delivering a visceral punch, classic mind-stretching ECM music that isn't at all twee or precious.

Nik Bartsch and his crew build compelling atmospheres from deceptively simple patterns played on piano, Fender Rhodes, clarinet, bass and percussion; and one of the attractions of this music are the uncanny effects caused by the intricate interlocking rhythms, harmonies, and overtones. At times, these lapidary intricacies produce the sounds of ghost instruments (or even growling jungle beasts) in the mix. Fans of Steve Reich's masterpiece "Music for 18 Musicians" should give this a listen -- at times, Ronin's music creates similarly oceanic waves of tension and release. Listening to this recording late at night brought back some of the thrills of hearing my first genre-transcending ECM music in the 1970s, such as Eberhard Weber's magnificent "Yellow Fields" or Ralph Towner's Solstice albums.

Not everyone will love this music. It's not jazz, it doesn't exactly swing, and it may be too in-your-face for those who prefer more delicate realms of introspection. People who hate the minimalisms of Reich and Philip Glass may find Bartsch's compositions repetitive. But anyone who is interested in muscular new sounds that seem both timeless and very contemporary should check it out.


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