|
Hellmut Hattler - Mallberry Moon |
||
|
||
|
Hellmut Hattler
- Bass |
||
| www.hellmut-hattler.de | ||
|
|
||
|
The first
time I saw Helmut Hattler was back in 1974; that was when he still spelt
his first name with one "L". It was the time of the big student
parties. I was fresh from a village in the isolated Eifel region, stranded
in what was still at that time the island capital of Berlin, and it was
at a party in the venerable building which housed the Technical University
at the Ernst-Reuther square that I felt at home in this city for the first
time: KRAAN were on stage, playing the strange mixture of rock and jazz
with ethno elements and long improvisations which had been turning unremittingly
on my Philips tape recorder at home for the last few months. The smell
of cannabis pervaded the air, parkas and long hair prevailed, and the
mood was good. These two events span some 28 years, a period which has seen both Hattler and myself playing at and going to hundreds of major and smaller concerts. "Has he changed in any way at all?", I hear myself asking. "No, he hasn't changed, but he has developed. He has remained true to himself", the same voice told me that had asked the question. No matter
whether it was with KRAAN, TAB TWO or HATTLER, Hellmut Hattler's music
has always been moving for the body, the mind and the soul, because it
is original, intense, generally somehow melancholic, and yet at the same
time you can invariably dance to it. It still can't be put in any of the
usual categories, continually makes use of liberal helpings of a wide
range of styles and develops a tastefully assorted and sophisticated blend
of soul, funk, jazz and dance floor. Is this "avant-garde pop"?
Or "hip jazz pop"? What about "jop"? Pity that "soul"
is already taken. So anyone who wants to can go ahead and create their
own category, but one thing I'm sure of is that once they've heard the
next HATTLER track they'll quietly forget about any such category. (Just
as I daren't say that HATTLER's music reminds me of – probably as the
only one in the whole world –Steely Dan, of all bands....). If "No Eats Yes" was the introduction, "Mallberry Moon" is now the first chapter of the new book which we may now read, and which could be called "Always Nice and Laid-Back" if it wasn't too trite a title. This new album features the same ambivalence and the resultant tension and excitement which have always been the hallmarks of Hellmut Hattler's music. You get what you expect and at the same time are caught unawares by musical facets you simply hadn't expected. The exceptional band featuring the two singers Sandie Wollasch and Nkechi Mbakwe, who sound as different as their names are spelt, form together with Hellmut HATTLER, and it was Hellmut who as usual wrote all the numbers himself and who with the help of some old friends (including ex-KRAAN musicians Jan Fride and Ingo Bischof, but also the guitarist extraordinaire Torsten De Winkel) and creative studio and programming experts (Uwe Jahnke, Tonio Neuhaus, Christian Lohr) has now brought out an album which does indeed present itself as a seductive, ripe fruit among the mundane miscellaneous mixture of CDs coming on to the market every day. Sweet, exotic, enigmatic and equally familiar and intimate: "Mallberry Moon" simply tastes good; and right at this very moment I find it a great pity that CDs don't have any smell, because this one would really smell good! And: "Mallberry Moon" opens up the way forward. Reminiscing about bygone days, projects, people and different types of music are no longer necessary when you've got musicians like Hellmut Hattler, bands like HATTLER and albums like this "Mallberry Moon". "Mallberry Moon" is positive and puts me in a good mood. So you can indeed "always remain nice and laid-back". Heinz Rebellius (musician, music journalist, author, sound-therapist) |
||
|
|