Trip to the Mars (Remastered) Orchester Roland Kovac

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2014

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
10.06.2022

Label: MPS

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Modern Jazz

Interpret: Orchester Roland Kovac

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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FLAC 88.2 $ 8,80
  • 1Space Station I02:26
  • 2Service I01:28
  • 3Heat01:13
  • 4Sound Barrier01:08
  • 5Marasonde03:05
  • 6Northern Lights00:49
  • 7Service II01:07
  • 8The Green Star02:00
  • 9Munich On the Mars01:23
  • 10Power Start02:59
  • 11Milky Way02:59
  • 12Colossus01:39
  • 13Service III01:12
  • 14Computer01:40
  • 15Mooncrater00:37
  • 16Blue Dance03:38
  • 17Space Station II03:33
  • Total Runtime32:56

Info zu Trip to the Mars (Remastered)

Endlich ist diese sehr seltene Konzept-LP des Pianisten und Arrangeurs Dr. Roland Kovac wieder erhältlich. Das Coverphoto ist eine Augenweide, so wie die Musik ein Genuss für die Ohren ist.

Ursprünglich war die Musik als Werbegag für ein Atomkraftwerk aufgenommen worden. Dieses wurde jedoch nie in Betrieb genommen, aber Roland Kovac konnte glücklicherweise die Firma SABA überzeugen, die Produktionskosten und die Tonbänder zu übernehmen.

Die Solisten stammten aus der Kurt Edelhagen Big Band beim WDR und sind hervorragende Interpreten dieser schwierigen Collage von kurzen Melodiefragmenten.

Die Jazzfreunde werden besonders an Service II ihre Freude haben, für den nötigen Humor sorgt Munich On The Mars. Derek Humble, einem der wohl besten Saxophonsatzführer der Big Band Geschichte, bieten die Themen Raum für kleine musikalische Kostbarkeiten. Insgesamt ist die LP nicht nur ein Zeitdokument, sondern kann auch vierzig Jahre nach dem Aufnahmedatum dem futuristischen Coverphoto entsprechenden hochmusikalischen Inhalt bieten.

Orchester Roland Kovac
Jimmy Deuchar, trumpet
Cliff Hardy, trombone
Derek Humble, alto saxophone
Charles Drewo, tenor saxophone
Johnny Fisher, bass
Francis Coppieters, piano
Jimmy Pratt, drums
Stuff Combe, percussion

Digitally remastered




Roland Kovac
was still a teenager when this and his own combos began working, but it was hardly the beginnings of his musical activities. He had begun piano lessons at six, clarinet at 13. From 1935 through 1938 he was a member of the Vienna Boys' Choir and remains one of the few instrumentalists listed in international jazz reference works who can make such a claim. During the war he played for an audience that included Jews on the run, soldiers on official as well as unofficial leave from their units, and locals with their eyes cocked for secret police. Among the military swingers was saxophonist Hans Koller, a follower not of the Third Reich but of Lee Konitz. Kovac and Koller began working together, their impulses toward playing pure forms of jazz at odds with the sway of public taste once life in Vienna began getting back to normal.

Kovac followed Koller out of the country looking for appropriate gigs. They really didn't have to go very far, finding opportunities in both the film and broadcast mediums as well as concert venues on the considerably larger German jazz scene. The MPS label, associated with one of the largest tape manufacturers in the world, had plenty of resources with which to document the eventual turn toward progressive jazz stylings, most notably the electric jazz and fusion of the '60s and '70s. Trip to the Mars from 1964 is without a doubt this artist's most unique venture, credited to the Orchester Roland Kovac and featuring a style some have described as "science-fiction jazz." The Roland Kovac New Set came along in the early '70s, basically a collaboration between Kovac and guitarist Siegfried "Sigi" Schwab. The latter used his fuzzbox in an eventually shortfall attempt to drown out first drummer Charly Antolini, then Keith Fisher. Keyboardist Brian Auger, no slouch, joined in on the second of this group's efforts. In 1981 Kovac recorded Piano Symphony -- Selected Sound 92 for the Deutsche Austrophon imprint.



Dieses Album enthält kein Booklet

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