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Maria Laurette Friis, Thomas Morgan

Colors (LP)

Label: Loveland Music

Format: LP

Genre: Jazz

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Duo improvisation can be such a rare space to enter. Creating a common language in an open sea of infinite options, everything stands out. Especially with such fundamental natural instruments as the voice and bass. So what happens if you bring together Maria Laurette Friis, the Copenhagen-based composer, multi-instrumentalist and one of Scandinavia’s unique voices, and the exceptional double bass player Thomas Morgan in an improvised session? Well, it continues for more than three hours and develops into a subtle ‘fantastic’ language of its own. 

Both adept improvisers in their own right, Maria Laurette Friis and Thomas Morgan have specific connections to language. As a sound artist and vocalist Laurette Friis creates her own in the moment, and Morgan speaks fluent Esperanto and is well versed in computer programming languages (his father was a computer science professor). In musical terms they have appeared together on the Copenhagen improv scene a few times (but never performed as a duo) and draw on electronic music, contemporary composition music, Japanese music and free jazz as well. On ‘Colors’ the departure point is as minimalistic as it gets.

“I love the music of Maria Laurette and Thomas Morgan. For me it is the most obvious choice to put them together. They were both playing a part of a symposium night in Copenhagen’s Brorsons Church, and that night a seed was planted for a duo recording a couple of years later. Just the voice and double bass. In the studio they recorded more than 3 hours of music. Everything that happened was beautiful, starting from nothing and opening a door into something new every other minute. It was really moving actually, listening back to every moment and finding into the heart of the improvisations, which in my mind quickly became compositions,” says Jakob Bro, who produced ‘Colors’ in the final process at the time of recording music to ‘Music For Black Pigeons’ with directors Jørgen Leth and Andreas Koefoed. 
Details
Cat. number: LLM024
Year: 2025
On Colors, everything has been pared down to only the bare essentials. Maria Laurette Friis’ vocals unfold in an improvised language, with words and sounds arising in the moment. This merges with Thomas Morgan’s pure and understated bass playing. Morgan has a sensitivity to language, and he is also fluent in both Esperanto and computer programming languages. Friis and Morgan have something to say to each other through the music. At the center is the contradictory and the intuitively abstract yet concrete. This is not meant to be interpreted or analyzed. It is meant to be felt and experienced through the senses. The duo’s unique expression is both captivating and ever-changing.Read more

On Colors, everything has been pared down to only the bare essentials. Maria Laurette Friis’ vocals unfold in an improvised language, with words and sounds arising in the moment. This merges with Thomas Morgan’s pure and understated bass playing. Morgan has a sensitivity to language, and he is also fluent in both Esperanto and computer programming languages. Friis and Morgan have something to say to each other through the music. At the center is the contradictory and the intuitively abstract yet concrete. This is not meant to be interpreted or analyzed. It is meant to be felt and experienced through the senses. The duo’s unique expression is both captivating and ever-changing.

The unique language that emerges is often both unsettling and deeply beautiful. Colors proves that great art can still arise from nothing – in both the strange and the more familiar dialogues. That is exactly what Friis and Morgan achieve on this captivating postcard from another world.Read more

In the world of experimental music, it now takes quite a lot to be truly surprised – it’s a space where both treasures and old debts are often revisited. That’s why listening to Colors, the improvised duo album by Maria Laurette Friis and Thomas Morgan, feels like a fresh revelation. Pairing an experimental vocalist and composer (Friis) with an experienced double bassist (Morgan) and letting them improvise for three hours may not sound groundbreaking at first. Yet somehow, a rare and unique symbiosis arises between voice and double bass – a connection so special that one rarely hears anything quite like it.

Friis is a dazzling singer, and her wordless expressions draw on everything from Mongolian throat singing and jazz to Nordic darkness. She shifts effortlessly between pure singing and guttural sounds within a single improvisation. Morgan’s double bass provides an intriguing contrast, exploring the instrument’s outer edges without ever becoming unpleasant.

The three-hour recording session has been distilled into nine tracks spanning a total of 45 minutes, and the concept of using only voice and double bass is maintained throughout – despite both musicians’ backgrounds in vastly different musical expressions. The unique language that emerges is often both unsettling and deeply beautiful. When they give each other space – as in the seven-minute »Eight« – and when the bass plays alone, it’s impossible not to sway along, even without a proper beat. Colors proves that great art can still arise from nothing – in both the strange and the more familiar dialogues. That is exactly what Friis and Morgan achieve on this captivating postcard from another world.