Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Kjetil Mulelid: Agoja
Kjetil Mulelid: Agoja
ByAgoja (the word is the first one Mulelid heard his infant son say) confirms the early promise. This time Mulelid leads a trio augmented on six of the eight tracks by one, two or three guest musicians. The cast list is Signe Emmeluth on alto saxophone, Trygve Seim on tenor saxophone, Martin Myhre Olsen on tenor or soprano saxophone, Sasha Berliner on vibraphone, Selma French on violin, Lyder Roed on trumpet, Mathias Eick on trumpet and Arve Henriksen on trumpet and effects.
Mulelid dazzles on an array of keyboardsacoustic piano, Wurlitzer, Rhodes and synths. But most of the dazzling is done while in an ensemble role. The guests take much of the solo space and Mulelid concentrates instead on composing and arranging. When he does occupy centre stage, on the trio tracks "Alone" and "Thousands Of Lost Stories" with bassist Barbour Reinert Poulsen and drummer Andreas Winther, his overdubbed multi-keyboards are a baroque delight. Favourite trio-plus tracks on a rewarding album are the heartfelt "A Prayer For Peace" (check the YouTube below), featuring saxophonists Emmeluth and Seim, and the trippy "Waiting Song," featuring Berliner's vibraphone.
Track Listing
Alone; Song For Elijah; Heroes; Thousands Of Lost Stories; A Prayer For Peace; Waiting Song; Chapter Ø; Kingdom Slowly Disappearing.
Personnel
Additional Instrumentation
Kjetil Mulelid: piano, Wurlitzer, Rhodes, synths; Barbour Reinert Poulsen: electric and acoustic bass; Signe Emmeluth: alto saxophone (5); Trygve Seim: tenor saxophone (2, 5); Martin Myhre Olsen: tenor saxophone (1), soprano saxophone (3); Sasha Berliner: vibraphone (6); Selma French: violin (1); Lyder Roed: trumpet (7); Mathias Eick: trumpet (2); Arve Henriksen: trumpet and effects (1).
Album information
Title: Agoja | Year Released: 2024 | Record Label: Odin Records