Lietzensee Eberhard Klunker
Album info
Album-Release:
2015
HRA-Release:
07.04.2015
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- 1 Prelude At 6 (44.1kHz) 01:23
- 2 Some Sambal 02:40
- 3 Swallows 04:51
- 4 Danny Boy 04:01
- 5 St. Thomas 02:50
- 6 Fredy 04:08
- 7 13 04:01
- 8 Resolution 03:21
- 9 Bluesette 05:28
- 10 Stop, Stop, Go! 06:23
- 11 Mr. Hope 09:02
- 12 Nuages 03:31
Info for Lietzensee
Eberhard Klunker is heralded as a master guitarist and a virtuoso of improvisation. Highly respected by his audience and in professional circles, the musician can look back on a career and life story that is as unconventional as it is remarkable. What sets him apart, besides his musical virtuosity, is his ability to keep looking forward. Even today, he gazes with curiosity towards the future.
Born in 1952 in Herzberg, Klunker was initially self-taught and in 1971, then barely nineteen, he replaced the guitarist Hansi Biebl in the Modern Soul Band. In addition to that, he earned his certification as a professional musician from the Friedrichshain School of Music, something much coveted in the former East Germany. Through the Modern Soul Band he got to know Klaus Lenz, and with Lenz's big band, in which the singers Veronika Fischer, Christiane Ufholz, Uschi Brüning and Klaus Nowodworski were involved, took part in numerous tours within the GDR. In 1974, he joined the Hansi Biebl Blues Band, with whom he recorded the LP Savannah in 1975. He belonged to the elite of the East German rock, jazz and fusion scene, where he played with the likes of Ernst-Ludwig Petrowski, Conny Bauer and Ulli Gumpert. His musical star was shining bright and his path seemed clearly marked...
But Eberhard Klunker wanted something else from life. In early September 1975, together with his friend Olaf Wegener, a drummer and guitarist who also played in the Hansi Biebl Blues Band, he made a spectacular escape from East Germany. As night fell, they rowed a rubber dinghy from Poel Island to the Bay of Lübeck, where they landed on shore the next day near Dahme; a journey of sixteen hours. The 23-year-old then began his life and musical career all over again in West Berlin, which has been his home ever since.
Here he founded the band Windminister with fellow ex-GDR musicians. He recorded in the RIAS studios (with Klaus Renft, Christiane Ufholz, Klaus Lenz and Pete Wyoming Bender) among others, and later met blues greats like Chris Farlowe and Alexis Corner. He returned to his musical roots in 2010, when he recorded Live 2010 with his long-time collaborator Christiane Ufholz, an album which was nominated for the 'Deutschen Schallplattenpreis' (German Record Critics' Award).
Eberhard Klunker, who over the course of his musical development has devoted himself completely to the acoustic guitar, also found in West Berlin the challenge and inspiration for his latest solo album Lietzensee.
'Looking for a good sounding room for the recordings, I found the Kirche am Lietzensee (Church on Lietzen Lake) in 2013. My goal was to record the guitar sound very naturally. Two microphones recorded the guitar sound directly, and were also attuned to pick up the ambient sound as well' said Klunker about this production.' In my music, improvisation plays a very important role. Some pieces are completely improvised without any guidelines. And others develop their form around a theme and from a spontaneous situation. Each piece is unrepeatable in its arrangement' he added.
If you ask Eberhard Klunker after the intent and musical background of the compositions on Lietzensee, you will quickly realize that the one is dependent on the other. The individual pieces emerge from one another, and as much as they are capable of standing alone, they are all sensitively interconnected with each another.
Using solo guitar with sparingly and selectively applied scat singing, he sketches true soundscapes. From the audible essence of delicate and gossamer-like sounds to up-tempo percussive numbers, they all develop three-dimensionally. In the first piece, he includes the Lietzensee church bells ringing for six o'clock. He even gives the ringing bells the main role in this aural landscape by improvising freely and swinging his guitar through the air to strengthen the effect. A more beautiful 'acoustic portrait' of a recording space doesn't exist!
Eberhard Klunker is a visionary at home in many musical genres. A man and a musician who does not baulk at infringements, and who always remains true to himself and his instrument. A man who sensitively yet challengingly creates new worlds with his compositions and improvisations on the guitar, and who reconnects those worlds which already exist.
One who gives his sounds the freedom which he as a young man and musician dared to attain.
Eberhard Klunker, guitar
Eberhard Klunker
eilt heute der Ruf eines Meistergitarristen und Improvisationsvirtuosen voraus. Der in Fachkreisen hoch anerkannte Musiker wurde 1952 in Herzberg geboren und erarbeitete sich seinen Ruf durch eine sehr eigenwillige Karriere, die bereits mit 13 Jahren und seiner ersten Gitarre begann. Klunker fand nach ersten Erfahrungen mit einer Blues-Rock-Band 1971 sofort Aufnahme bei der sehr populären Modern Soul Band und spielte sich mit der Klaus-Lenz-Big-Band innerhalb kürzester Zeit an die Spitze des Jazzrock und der Fusion-Musik der DDR-Zeit. Er begleitete eine ganze Reihe inzwischen zur Hall of Fame der ostdeutschen Rock- und Jazzszene gehörenden Sänger wie Veronika Fischer, Uschi Brüning und Klaus Nowodworski. Klunker spielte seine letzten Aufnahmen in der DDR 1975 mit der Hansi Biebl Bluesband ein. Diese legendären und innovativen Aufnahmen galten lange Zeit als Lost Tapes und wurden erst kürzlich wieder veröffentlicht (Album Savannah). Klunker beendete seine DDR-Karriere erfolgreich mit einer gefährlichen Flucht über die Ostsee. Die 16 Stunden im Schlauchboot verarbeitete er später in seiner Komposition „Bootsmann“.
In West-Berlin gründete er mit anderen Ex-DDR-Musikern „Windminister“. Er nahm u.a. in den RIAS-Studios auf (auch mit Klaus Renft, Christiane Ufholz, Klaus Lenz, Pete Wyoming Bender) und traf später Bluesgrößen wie Chris Farlowe und Alexis Corner. Zu seinen musikalischen Wurzeln kehrte er 2010 zurück, als er mit seiner langjährigen Mitstreiterin Christiane Ufholz das Album „Live 2010“ aufnahm und mit ihr für den „Deutschen Schallplattenpreis“ nominiert wurde. Eberhard Klunker, der praktisch in fast allen Sparten auf der Akustikgitarre brilliert, spielte im Jahr 2013 viel beachtete Konzerte im Zeltkino Hiddensee, wo er neben einem Solo- auch ein Duo-Konzert mit einem der besten europäischen Jazz-Trompeter, Hans Peter Salentin, gab. Neben genialen Jazz-Improvisationen waren inspirierte Filmmusik-Improvisationen bis zu Klassikern der Rock-Geschichte zu hören.
Im September 2014 veröffentlichte er das Album "Beautiful Machines" mit der Sängerin Christiane Ufholz. Neben seinem Gitarrenspiel ist er auf dieser CD vorwiegend als Komponist und Texter präsentiert.
Booklet for Lietzensee