Presenting the unconventional music of a
conventional line-up, Caught in My Own Trap
features three musicians from three different
countries, enchanting contemporary jazz fans
with tracks ranging from the most abstract
avant-garde musical structures to the most
sensual beauty.
The members of the trio were brought together
by pianist-composer Kirke Karja: she had met bassist
Étienne Renard years earlier in Portugal, and with
drummer Ludwig Wandinger they had crossed
paths by chance in Berlin. They played their first
gig together in Tallinn almost immediately after
the formation of the band, but just before the
outbreak of the pandemic. In 2021 they played at
the Europe Jazz Network conference, and in 2023
they also had the opportunity to perform at the
jazzahead! showcase. Their first album, The Wrong
Needle, was self-released, on which they joined
forces to develop Kirke Karja’s compositions. The
backbone of their second album is again Kirke Karja’s
new compositions, some of which are influenced
by György Ligeti, but the tracks also include
improvisations. Although all the songs are fuelled
by a huge energy charge, and the strict structures
are often hiding extreme emotions, their character
is fundamentally different, as the band’s emphasis is
not on achieving perfection, but on richly colouring
the music and determining its mood. The trio’s world
thus ranges from the most abstract avant-garde
musical structures to the most sensual beauty.
Kirke Karja, winner of the Estonian Young Jazz
Talent Award in 2014, has toured Europe since
the 2010s as leader of her own quartet, the
Pae Kollektiv, Heliotrope, and Captain Kirke.
She has also appeared alongside renowned
musicians such as Benoît Delbecq and Pierre
Durand. In addition to a wide range of
collaborations, she also expresses her keen
interest in classical and contemporary music
in solo recitals, playing works by 20th- and
21st-century composers, and composes
chamber and orchestral pieces. As young as
he is, Étienne Renard has quickly become an
indispensable member of the Parisian scene,
having scored his first major successes with
the award-winning Thibault-Gomez Quintet,
partnered Paul Jarrett on an album and made
his latest release with Benoît Delbecq’s piano
trio Triple Fever. Ludwig Wandinger has been an
accomplice of Jim Black, Wanja Slavin, Petter
Eldh, Lucia Cadotsch, and Ken Vandermark at
the drums, but he is also exploring the world of
experimental electronics and making his mark
as a visual artist and producer.