NEW YORK, NY.- Following the death of Esbjörn Svensson, a pianist and one of Europes most influential jazz musicians, in a scuba diving accident in 2008, his wife, Eva, spent some time in the family basement, backing up all of his tapes. Among them, she and sound engineer Åke Linton found a corrupted Logic file and a scratched CD, both named Solo.
Svensson recorded 11 studio albums with his trio E.S.T. over a 15-year recording period, but never solo work. Its a different experience to hear her husbands music outside the trio, Eva Svensson said in a recent video interview.
Its a new landscape to explore. And of course, a new landscape inside too, she said, pointing to her heart.
Both the intriguingly named CD and file were initially unusable, but in 2017, following Eva Svenssons decision to revisit the tapes, Linton rescued the audio files, revealing nine near-pristine solo piano tracks, recorded a few weeks before Esbjörn Svenssons death. The record, Home.s., was released Nov. 18 and is just one of a recent series of projects exploring Svenssons legacy as a genre-bridging artist.
In 1993, Svensson and his childhood friend Magnus Öström, a drummer, met bassist Dan Berglund and formed the Esbjörn Svensson Trio. The group added the initials E.S.T. on its early albums, to shift the focus from Svensson and project a sense of equality among the three players.
It became a cooperative, jazz journalist and author Stuart Nicholson said in a telephone interview, adding that is partly how the sound of the trio developed in such a distinctive manner.
The trio was best known for its international breakthrough albums From Gagarins Point of View and Good Morning Susie Soho, which synthesized pop, rock and Nordic folk influences, and approached that blend in the spirit of jazz (the motto adopted by their label, ACT). Svensson may have wanted to share the spotlight, but E.S.T. gigs were high-production performances, combining tasteful light displays and smoke machines with accessible melodies to create an atmosphere closer to a rock gig.
You didnt need to be a jazz lover to like their tunes, Linton, who was E.S.T.s longtime sound engineer, said in a recent video interview. The instrumental trios success meant jazz-based music became popular in the European mainstream. The 2005 record Viaticum charted on the German and French pop charts and went platinum in Sweden, where it debuted at No. 5, just above U2 and John Legend.
In 2006, the groups first DownBeat Magazine cover bore the headline Europe Invades!, evidence of the slightly frosty reception the trio received from the jazz establishment in America, where it never had a high profile.
No one around Svensson knew he was working on Home.s., which was named by Eva Svensson. It was clear that tracks werent simply ideas destined for later exploration with the trio because of the files labeling and the precise compositional structures. He was a private person, Linton said, adding that he didnt talk to anyone about it, not even his wife.
The album which offers a handful of reference points from classical music and Nordic jazz, including Frederic Chopin and Dmitri Shostakovich, as well as Jan Johanssons popular 1963 album Jazz På Svenska finds Svensson alone, in a melancholic musical space and has the distinct feeling of an artist delving into his private, interior language. Were almost privy to his innermost musical thoughts, Nicholson said.
But the sound of Home.s. was still familiar to those close to Svensson. His wife described the albums music as kind of the soundtrack to our daily lives. After E.S.T. was done with a soundcheck, Svensson would always stay playing stuff in the hall, Linton said. And now when I think of it, probably what was going on is that he was practicing this stuff without knowing it, but he would never talk about it.
Nicholson remembered spending time at an E.S.T. recording session in Stockholm, when Svensson warmed up with music by Shostakovich that demonstrated the full extent of his classical education, in a way he didnt show with E.S.T. When we met, I said, How come you dont reveal that part of you? Nicholson said. He said, Thats not me. I can do it, but thats not how I feel things, and how I understand music.
Despite the intimate feel of her husbands solo work, when I found the album, I had this strong feeling that I wanted to share it, Eva Svensson said.
To premiere Home.s., she wanted to create a shared experience, like an album listening party. It was first played in September at Stockholms Sven-Harrys Museum, in surround sound and accompanied by a new hanging sculpture by Jennie Stolpe, and later paired with visuals conceived by David Tarrodi (the director of the 2016 documentary, A Portrait of Esbjörn Svensson) and Anders Amrén (E.S.T.s regular lighting designer) as part of an online event.
The visuals arranged by Tarrodi and Amrén pick up on the melancholic tone of Esbjörn Svenssons solo album. The pairs 36-minute video piece began with small piles of sand, contorted kaleidoscopically through different lenses; then, sun-bleached footage of a family emerged; next, grainy footage of America, all soundtracked by the album. The sound was melancholic, the visuals muted, but the combination never descriptive or poetic.
Andrew Mellor, the author of The Northern Silence: Journeys in Nordic Music and Culture, described melancholy in the region as a discipline. Its also a kind of pastime in Scandinavia.
One way to survive the brutal winter is through art, he added: Theres literature from Ibsen and Knut Hamsun, films by Lars von Trier, and theres music by Bent Sørensen.
On Home.s., the melancholy twists inward. It says, This is about me looking into myself, more than it is about me telling you a story, Mellor said.
When Eva Svensson first heard the album, she thought, Wow, this is his voice, she said. It couldnt be anybody elses.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.