DW Jazz Concerts: Christopher Dell and trio with Bob Degen
Manasi Gopalakrishnan
February 26, 2023
In this episode of DW Jazz Concerts, we'll be listening to the German vibraphonist and composer Christopher Dell and his other two trio members, drummer Christian Lillinger and contrabassist Jonas Westergaard.
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DW Jazz Concerts: Christopher Dell and Trio with Bob Degen
Legendary American pianist Bob Degen joined Christopher Dell, Christian Lillinger and Jonas Westergaard, the members of the DLW trio, for this episode, which is a live recording of their concert at the 2021 Jazzfest in Bonn.
Dell is not just a vibraphonist and composer. He's also an urban design theorist. His work is influenced by motives, themes and questions of the contemporary city.
According to him, the city is an improvisational process affected by actors, things, actions, discourses and so on. "Being driven by [these] motives, his work can take on different forms — such as writing a book, teaching urban design and architecture theory, playing or composing music..." according to his website.
Jazz from Germany, the US and Denmark
Dell's fellow musician, Christian Lillinger, was also part of the trio that played at the 2021 Jazzfest. He was born in 1984 in Brandenburg, in eastern Germany, and studied with the famous German drummer and percussionist Günter Sommer, who is considered one of Europe's first Free Jazz musicians, with a focus on harmonically and rhythmically free improvisation. Lillinger was part of the German youth jazz orchestra, the Bundesjazzorchester, from 2001 to 2003. He also composes music and has been a member of the DLW trio since 2018, when it was formed under the name of Ensemble Stefanovich Dell Lillinger Westergaard (SDLW).
Contrabassist Jonas Westergaard is from Copenhagen and has been active in the Danish and German jazz and improvisation scenes since the 1990s. He's played extensively with several jazz musicians, including German pianist Michael Wollny, Danish saxophonist and composer Benjamin Koppel, and German pianist and composer Marc Schmolling, among others.
The legendary jazz pianist Bob Degen was born in Pennsylvania, US, in 1944. He began learning the piano when he was only four years old and had his first public performance at 10 with his father, who was also a musician. In 1961, he went to the Berklee College of Music in Boston and took lessons with pianist Margaret Chaloff, who had instructed such musicians as Herbie Hancock and Steve Kuhn. Degen has played extensively in Europe since the 1960s and usually performs in trios. He moved to Germany in 1974.
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What you'll be listening to
The concert in Bonn included a world premiere of Dell, Lillinger and Westergaard's newly composed music, inspired by the likes of Ludwig van Beethoven and Richard Wagner. The first piece is a "suite" dedicated to the album "Third Stream" (1960) by The Modern Jazz Quartet. The group, which traced its roots to jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie's big band in the 40s and 50s, played a combination of cool jazz, bebop and classical music. Its members included the pianist John Lewis, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, double bassist Percy Heath and drummer Conny Kay.
Next you will be listening to some abstract "sketches" by the trio and Bob Degen, followed by a final piece called "Superloader."
That's all for this edition of DW Jazz Concerts hosted by Manasi Gopalakrishnan. The show was produced by Thomas Schmidt and Christian Stäter, with editorial support from Anastassia Boutsko. DW and Jazzfest Bonn own all rights to the music recorded at this concert in Bonn, 2021.
If you have any questions, feedback or suggestions related to the program, do send them to us at music@dw.com.
10 great jazz films
Whether based on real-life music legends or fictional characters, these 10 movies are a tribute to the power of jazz.
Image: Alamode Film
'Born to Be Blue'
The American trumpeter and vocalist Chet Baker (1929 - 1988) is a jazz legend. Baker was one of the few white musicians to find a place among jazz greats such as Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk. The Canadian filmmaker Robert Budreau focused on the last years of Baker's life in his film "Born to Be Blue," starring Ethan Hawke.
Image: Alamode Film
'Let's Get Lost'
Among the different films about the world's greatest jazz musicians, there are also several remarkable documentaries. "Let's Get Lost" (1988) is an exceptional one. It covers several decades of Chet Baker's career. The film was nominated for an Oscar.
This film did win an Oscar, in 1955. Directed by Anthony Mann, "The Glenn Miller Story"
stars James Stewart as the big band leader and trombonist Glenn Miller. The film tells a melodramatic love story, but music naturally plays a leading role in it. It is also a great Technicolor movie.
Image: picture-alliance/akg-images
'Sweet and Lowdown'
Woody Allen, who's also an avid clarinet player, demonstrated with this 1999 film that a jazz film can be captivating without being based on real-life musicians. "Sweet and Lowdown" tells the story of a gifted swing and jazz guitarist (Sean Penn) in the 1920s. The comedy also humorously integrates documentary-style interviews with critics and biographers of the fictional musician.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
'The Cotton Club'
Francis Ford Coppola likewise looked back at the 1920s jazz scene in his film "The Cotton Club" (1984), which was also the name of a famous New York City night club from 1923 to 1935. Combining music and a gangster story, the film starred among others Richard Gere and Diane Lane (picture). The film was nominated for several awards, but flopped at the box office.
Image: imago/United Archives
'Kansas City'
A decade later, Robert Altman directed a film with a similar concept as that of his colleague Coppola. "Kansas City" also tells a gangster story set in a jazz scene hot spot - this time in Kansas City in 1934. Harry Belafonte and Jennifer Jason Leigh (picture) were among the movie's stars.
Image: picture-alliance/United Archives
'Round Midnight'
One of the best films about jazz ever made is by French director Bertrand Tavernier. "Round Midnight" (1986) is set in Paris in the 1950s and tells the story of an alcoholic saxophone player. The director (right) wanted authentic music in the film, and it features several musicians, among them Dexter Gordon (left) in the lead role.
Clint Eastwood paid tribute to the legendary saxophonist Charlie Parker in his 1988 biopic, "Bird." Forest Whitaker's performance in the lead role was brilliant, earning him the best actor award in Cannes. The movie features atmospheric sequences covering Parker's life between music and drugs, up until his early death at the age of 34.
Image: picture-alliance/KPA Honorar & Belege
'Mo' Better Blues'
Director Spike Lee is also a great jazz fan. His musical drama "Mo' Better Blues" (1990) is set in Brooklyn in 1969 and portrays the career of the fictional trumpeter Bleek Gilliam, played by Denzel Washington (left), pictured here with the filmmaker, who also starred in the film.
Image: picture alliance/kpa
'La La Land'
And finally, this year's great winner at the Oscars is a film about jazz - even though "La La Land" most famously borrows from Hollywood's musical genre. The story of Sebastian Wilder, the struggling jazz pianist depicted by Ryan Gosling, is also a tribute to the history of jazz and its commercialization over the last decades.