Dark Intervals | |
Type: | live album |
Artist: | Keith Jarrett |
Cover: | Dark Intervals.jpg |
Released: | October 1988[1] |
Recorded: | April 11, 1987[2] |
Venue: | Suntory Hall Tokyo, Japan |
Length: | 58:16 |
Label: | ECM ECM 1379 |
Producer: | Manfred Eicher |
Prev Title: | Still Live |
Prev Year: | 1988 |
Next Title: | Personal Mountains |
Next Year: | 1989 |
Dark Intervals is a live solo album by American jazz pianist Keith Jarrett recorded at the Suntory Hall in Tokyo on April 11, 1987 and released on ECM the following year.[1]
Dark Intervals was recorded during the Japan leg of Jarrett's 1987 solo tour playing nine concerts in the U.S., Japan and Brazil.[3]
Down Beat author Josef Woodard, on his introductory notes to a 1989 Jarrett interview, states that:
Dark Intervals, particularly, is a testament to Jarrett’s recent objective of broadening his scope while paring down to the essence of music—and being. So, while he plots courses in parallel universes—planning to record Bach’s Goldberg Variations on harpsichord and new works by Lou Harrison and Alan Hohvaness in the classical world, and reviving jazz standards in his trio—Jarrett is also searching for new meaning in a basic E minor chord. He’s thinking about the river’s source as well as its effects.[4]The Stereophile review by Richard Lehnert gave the album the "Recording of March 1989" award, stating:
This album of often profound beauty, had it been released by anyone else, would call for much more acclaim; as it is, it's just another Jarrett solo masterpiece in the tradition of Staircase and The Moth and the Flame.The AllMusic review by Richard S. Ginell awarded the album 3 stars and states that, "it sounds like a formal recital of individual compositions [...] Keith is often in an introspective, even dark mood [...] The Jarrett devotee will want this; others should use caution".[6] A review in The New York Times called Jarrett's playing on this album "more spare and austere than on his 1975 solo masterpiece The Köln Concert."[7]The CD's DDD sound is some of the most natural solo piano sound I've heard (assuming you listen with your ears nearly touching the soundboard), entirely without harshness or glare. But, good as the CD is, the LP is better in the usual ways—deeper, rounder, more full, with greater three-dimensionality."[5]
All compositions by Keith Jarrett
The original liner notes state:
Touch is only possible at the edge of spaces.Light is only precious during dark intervals.