- Digital
Andreas Tschopp
What If We Align Our Breath
Kit Records
- Cat No: KR89
- Release: 2026-03-20
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Andreas Tschopp - The Lake Will Give You Everything You Need
02:45 -
2. Andreas Tschopp - Sounding the Voice
04:09 -
3. Andreas Tschopp - The Poetry of the In-Between
03:25 -
4. Andreas Tschopp - Iqhude: A Tale of Horns and Bones
03:42 -
5. Andreas Tschopp - I Am Because You Are
03:07 -
6. Andreas Tschopp - Portals
02:42 -
7. Andreas Tschopp & Andreas Tschopp - A Basic Guide to String Theory
02:07 -
8. Andreas Tschopp - Everything is Connected to Everything
03:13 -
9. Andreas Tschopp - We Oscillate, We Modulate
03:00 -
10. Andreas Tschopp - Mothers
02:52
0bit/48khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
Pioneering Swiss trombonist and composer Andreas Tschopp marries contemporary jazz with South African horns and homemade ocarinas, creating a record quite unlike anything you've heard before. "What if We Align Our Breath" disregards the curvature of borders, genre, and time itself - tugging a thread through the history of wind instrumentation with ghostly agility.
At the heart of the record lie spiralling, bonelike kudu (antelope) horns - instruments that have lent their stirring calls to indigenous South African rituals and signalling systems for millennia. These horns are clustered, harmonised and stretched beyond their godly usage by Tschopp - his extended techniques coaxing an array of melancholy, playful voices to canter through the album.
Flourishes of trombone, alpine flutes and a stellar supporting cast on double bass (Shane Cooper), cornet (Ben LaMar Gay), udu drums (Gontse Makhene) and spoken word (Koleka Putuma) bring groove, countermelody and a sense of earthy introspection to the proceedings. This is inconceivable music: a sighing tapestry of brass, clay and bone that hints at some preconscious connectedness, tracing figures that rejoice, exhale and embrace outside of time.
Recommended if you like Francis Bebey, quantum physics, peat bogs.
At the heart of the record lie spiralling, bonelike kudu (antelope) horns - instruments that have lent their stirring calls to indigenous South African rituals and signalling systems for millennia. These horns are clustered, harmonised and stretched beyond their godly usage by Tschopp - his extended techniques coaxing an array of melancholy, playful voices to canter through the album.
Flourishes of trombone, alpine flutes and a stellar supporting cast on double bass (Shane Cooper), cornet (Ben LaMar Gay), udu drums (Gontse Makhene) and spoken word (Koleka Putuma) bring groove, countermelody and a sense of earthy introspection to the proceedings. This is inconceivable music: a sighing tapestry of brass, clay and bone that hints at some preconscious connectedness, tracing figures that rejoice, exhale and embrace outside of time.
Recommended if you like Francis Bebey, quantum physics, peat bogs.
