
Toivanen Joona Trio
Gravity
Label: We Jazz
Genre: Jazz / Avant Garde
Availability
- LP €24.99 In Stock
Joona Toivanen says:
"In a way, looking back to all our albums this far, it’s like going through a diary that’s written at an extremely slow pace. The debut album Numurkah was sort of a result of the time as a house band in Jazz Bar. We brought more and more original tunes on the bandstand and people told us we should record them. The same year Numurkah was released we also won a Nordic Jazz contest for young bands in Reykjavik, Iceland. Musically we worked more or less in the same way throughout the albums Numurkah, Lumous, Frost, At My Side, and November: we wrote tunes, arranged them, and rehearsed a lot. We had a lot of fun playing the music live, but came to a point where we questioned if we should keep playing as a trio.
Due to some misunderstandings, when we were on another tour in Finland, there was a two-day hole in the tour calendar. A bit too short for traveling home, but just enough for a studio session along the way. We booked a small Finnish countryside studio, Lammaskallion Audio, and recorded whatever came into our minds. This time we didn’t have a single clue what this recording would be. We used the instruments we had on the tour and whatever we could find in the studio: a beautiful old Steinway upright piano, tribal drums, a toy piano, old organs, and synths. This is what became the Gravity album.
We really wanted to try out different things in the studio. It was a kind of sonic exploration: what kind of sounds could we create together as a trio? We wanted to go beyond the classic piano-bass-drums-idiom and see the possibilities we could do as three musicians playing whatever instruments and sounds we had at hand. Already when booking the studio, it was clear to us there would be no grand piano. All we had heard was that it was an old Steinway & Sons upright, but the instrument was actually a nice surprise with a very pleasant sound and nice touch. But it’s also very different from a classical “big pristine concert grand” sound heard on many piano trio recordings.
I think the music sense because we’ve known each other since we were kids. We know we have each other and there’s no need to rush things. Right now it feels like we’re into something new and inspiring, something we are eager to discover more about."