Who or what is hilde? A person? An idea? A sound? A band? A combination of all these? In the
search for hilde, we come across singer Marie Daniels, violinist Julia Brüssel, trombonist Maria
Trautmann and cellist Emily Wittbrodt. They met as part of the large collective The Dorf and,
under the name of hilde, made a name for themselves in 2020 with their first album, ‘Open’.
So much for history, as their new album ‘Tide’ is an outwardly fresh start, although the four band
members would deny this and call it a logical continuation of the first album. But while on “Open”
they were still rebelling wildly against the world and their surroundings, on “Tide” they are pulling
on completely different strings. The uninhibited, unrestrained playing of their debut gives way to
a clear commitment to beauty and lingering in the sound. Without losing touch with the present,
they recall forms of singing and music-making whose traces go back to the Baroque and beyond
to the Middle Ages, only to return via the arch of improvised chamber music to the vitality of
contemporary pop music.
One of hilde’s great strengths is her ability to find completely unexpected, sometimes downright
daring links between abstract sonic invention and traditional grace. This rare gift is most evident in
her live performances. At the same time, they never lose sight of their counterpart, the creative
listener, with whom they maintain eye contact and respond intuitively.
hilde – and this brings us back to the initial question – is always hilde. It hardly matters who is
responsible for which playful impulse, which tone colour, which composition or which spontaneous
idea. Four musicians merge into one person, hilde, an individual with four heads and eight arms,
who confronts us with massive gentleness on “Tide”. The same goes for the whole arc of the
album. Each song stands on its own, but the order is not arbitrary. hilde is telling a story that
needs to be heard from the first to the last note.
We like beautiful things,” hilde exclaims in unison. For them, improvisation is an expression of
freedom that excludes nothing and allows everything. What sounds like a matter of course is – as
60 years of freely improvised music soberingly show us – not at all. Beautiful sounds,
melodiousness and song structures that invite you to sing along are not embarrassing slips of the
tongue, but deliberate. The basis for this intuitive unity goes far beyond the much quoted mutual
trust. It is based on a benevolent reliability that is seldom lived in this unbreakability, which gives
each of the four musicians the feeling of security they need to be able to go to the extreme as
hilde and always reach the innermost – and vice versa.
The periodic table of the elements has 118 components to encompass the entire material reality
of our planet. Listening to hilde’s new album ‘Tide’, it takes the exact number of four elements –
cello, violin, trombone and voice – to express the world in all its complexity. There is nothing hilde
cannot tell us, no angle and no thing that cannot be described with her music. hilde evokes
images in sound that are as visceral as they are emphatic, leading us through imagined memories
to a new image of reality.