SÁBADO 11 NOVEMBRO - 18H30

CCVF
VEIN feat. Rick Margitza

Michael Arbenz, piano
Thomas Lähns, contrabaixo
Florian Arbenz, bateria
Rick Margitza, saxofone tenor

10,00 eur / 7,50 eur c/d

ASSINATURA 2ª SEMANA
30,00 eur
ASSINATURA 1ª SEMANA
40,00 eur
ASSINATURA GERAL
70,00 eur
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Formed by three highly-educated Swiss musicians with a solid career in jazz and in classical music, the trio VEIN will perform in Guimarães alongside with Rick Margitza, a versatile and prolific North-American saxophonist who has collaborated with great jazz artists, such as Miles Davis, Chic Corea, Maria Schneider and Martial Solal, among others. VEIN, a trio interested in exploring the classical jazz canon through an intimate music influenced by classical music, was founded in 2006, and since then has sustained a regular activity, recording and performing live in some of the most reputed European jazz festivals. Besides working on their own original compositions, the group has established long-term artistic partnerships with improvisers Dave Liebman and Greg Osby, and the collaboration with Rick Margitza appears in the context of this working method.

VEIN is formed by pianist Michael Arbenz, by drummer and percussionist Florian Arbenz and by bassist Thomas Lähns, instrumentalists of solid musical culture and remarkable technical abilities. Michael Arbenz is a pianist with a relevant career as leader and in collaboration with both jazz musicians and classical composers, having performed in concert with Pierre Boulez, a contemporary classical music luminary. Florian Arbenz, Michael Arbenz’s brother, is a very active musician in the European jazz scene, having collaborated with musicians such as Kirk Lightsey and Claudio Pontiggia. Thomas Lähns studied music in the City of Basel Music Academy, and since then he has established itself as professional musician, both as a sideman as well as in orchestra contexts, having been directed by reputed conductors such as Heinz Hollinger or Peter Eötvös.

Recognizable by its melodic and rhythmic subtlety, and by the precision and rigor of its compositions, VEIN’s music uses Rick Margitza’s tenor saxophone sound as a vehicle of sound expansion and as a mean of exploring emotional shades and intensities which are usually absent of the group’s music. The impressionist tone of VEIN’s compositions is therefore reconfigured by the expressive abilities of Margitza, an experienced improviser of remarkable technical ability. In that sense, in Guimarães Jazz it is legitimate to expect from this concert a music which allies the sophisticated jazz of European sensibility to the vibrant pulse of the jazz of North-American tradition.