Neon Hill Clara Haberkamp

Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
02.11.2018

Label: Traumton

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Vocal

Artist: Clara Haberkamp

Album including Album cover

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Formats & Prices

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FLAC 44.1 $ 13.20
  • 1Lighted Crow04:14
  • 2Wild Rose03:43
  • 3Alone03:24
  • 4Neon Hill03:45
  • 5Pink Overture04:18
  • 6I Capitulate03:12
  • 7Greenwood03:53
  • 8Freeze Frame04:36
  • 9You and I04:09
  • 10Neon Sunrise04:20
  • 11Someone Like You05:00
  • Total Runtime44:34

Info for Neon Hill



A voice, a piano, and a couple of songs - that doesn’t sound like much, but in Clara Haberkamp’s case it is enormous.

In the past years the Berlin-based pianist most notably appeared with her trio with drummer Tilo Weber and changing bass players. She made no secret of the fact that she also likes to sing and does it very well. For the first time much less the jazz pianist, but rather the singer-songwriter Clara Haberkamp takes center stage on Neon Hill. In an almost magical way, her songs are catchy and complex at the same time. You definitely can’t sing along the first time, probably not even on the second or third listen, but already at first contact with the eardrum, the songs unfold their acoustic and spiritual bouquet that wants to be heard again and again.

Clara Haberkamp already revealed a very individual style on her earlier albums. Likewise, Neon Hill leaves any stylistic comparison out of the question. There are elective affinities though, but these have more to do with the seriousness of the approach of the own material than with musical similarities. Among these chosen musical relatives are artists like Randy Newman, Joanna Newsom or the Seattle-based composer, poet and singer Robin Holcomb. But the young Berliner doesn’t imitate; she remains true to herself and is inspired solely from inside. Her most convincing argument is her disarming authenticity, which however never crosses the line to indiscretion. Just like the songs of the three named musicians, Clara Haberkamp’s pieces elude all conventional classification. Neon Hill is a cycle of contemporary art songs that arose from their creator’s life; for this very reason they are full of lust to get back into life.

The songs of Clara Haberkamp depict an entirely unique world. Variations about searching and finding are the central theme of the album. To the song-poet it is in no way about processing personal experiences, but rather about a number of perspectives, from which she examines the topic. She plays very subtle games with the listener’s expectations; she establishes intimacy, still however builds an invisible fence around her garden to protect her terrain. Every song develops nearness anew and at the same time the artist needs to regain distance, to be able to allow closeness once more. This flexible measure of nearness and distance is recalibrated in every song. “These songs,” Clara Haberkamp tells, “are kind of like diary entries, except they are not only private. It is about finding to your self in the most general sense. My interpretation is also important, but at the heart of the CD are the songs themselves.”

The incomparable clarity of the voice reveals itself like a force of nature. Clara Haberkamp masters a wide spectrum of timbres. Not just every song, but every line and every word gets from her what is needed in each case. Her intuitive changes from pensive to expressive, from polished to brittle, or from casual to vehement, give the already emphatic words and melodies additional depth.

Neon Hill is an unaccompanied solo album. But by no means does Clara sound alone or even lonely. She is completely with herself, goes into retreat in a sense. The contemplative textures of piano notes wrap around the singer’s voice like a cashmere scarf, when the morning sun hasn’t licked the dew off of the leaves. Often it is exactly about the space between the keystroke and the inner voice, about rendering audible the unsaid between familiar poles. The pianist and singer felt like making a quiet record, but the multifaceted interaction of sounds and thoughts calls for completely different tempos within the ballads. Some songs are like dreamy streams of consciousness that surrender themselves to their unstoppable flow, others are more reminiscent of conditions that seem trapped within themselves.

The order of the songs describes a process that allows countless possibilities of association for the listener. The aim of the journey is predefined very clearly though. The last song, a friendly adaptation of Van Morrison’s “Someone Like You”, is only about finding. Clara Haberkamp deliberately put this wonderfully beautiful straightforward love song at the end of her song cycle. “You often hear that love songs are water under the bridge, but then again love is the only thing in the world worth living and fighting for. I think there can never be enough love songs.”

We have learned to find words and melodies for our emotions. Clara Haberkamp reverses this path. She restores words and sound to their primal state, in which pure feeling lies hidden.

Clara Haberkamp, piano, vocals



Clara Haberkamp
Die Pianistin, Komponistin und Sängerin Clara Haberkamp (*1989 bei Unna) lebt in Berlin. In den Jahren 1998 bis 2006 gewann sie mehrmals bei den Wettbewerben „Jugend jazzt“ und „Jugend musiziert“ auf Landesebene.

Von 2006 bis 2009 war sie Mitglied im Landesjugendjazzorchester NRW. Tourneen mit der Big Band führten sie nach Südostasien, Malta, Israel und Estland. Später war sie auch Pianistin im Bundesjazzorchester (Bujazzo).

Von 2009 bis 2013 studierte sie Klavier am Jazz Institut Berlin (Hanns Eisler/UdK) bei Hubert Nuss, Wolfgang Köhler, Susanne Grützmann, David Friedman, Greg Cohen und John Hollenbeck. Parallel zum Studium nahm sie weiterführenden Unterricht in Gesang und Komposition. Im Oktober 2014 hat sie ihr Masterstudium im Fach Komposition an der HfMT Hamburg bei Wolf Kerschek begonnen. Im Rahmen einer Kooperation zwischen der Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg und dem NDR wird sie 2017 ihr eigens für die NDR Big Band komponiertes Programm aufnehmen.

2011 gewann sie den „Jazz Baltica Förderpreis“ mit ihrem Trio. Im Mai 2012 erschien ihre Solo LP „One Hundred Dreams“ auf dem Label „Edition Longplay“ auf Vinyl. Darauf folgte das Debütalbum des Clara Haberkamp Trios „nicht rot, nicht weiß, nicht blau“ und wenig später das zweite Album des Trios „You Sea!“ (LAIKA Records).

2013 ging Haberkamp mit Schauspieler und Sänger Gustav Peter Wöhler und seinem deutschsprachigen Programm „Wegen Mir“ auf Tournee. Das gleichnamige Album erschien im Frühjahr 2013 auf dem Label Kurtmusik. Seit 2012 spielt und tourt sie mit der Songschreiberin und Künstlerin Susanne „die Popette“ Betancor.

Das Clara Haberkamp Trio hat im April 2016 ein neues Album mit dem Titel „Orange Blossom“ aufgenommen. Dies wird am 30. September, 2016 auf dem Label Traumton Records in Berlin veröffentlicht. Das Clara Haberkamp Trio spielte u.a. beim Jazz Baltica Festival, beim XJAZZ Festival Berlin, beim Jazz Open Festival Hamburg und bei den Eldenaer Jazz Evenings in Greifswald und ist regelmäßig deutschlandweit auf Tournee.

Im Mai 2016 erhielt Clara Haberkamp eine Einladung vom Goetheinstitut Slowenien die Deutsche Nationalhymne und „Lass mich bei dir sein“ (Knef/Noris) für ein europäisches Ensemble zu arrangieren und in Ljubljana aufzuführen. Kurz darauf war sie als Dozentin für „Instant Composing“ an der European Jazzakademie Heek tätig und hat ab Oktober 2016 einen Lehrauftrag für Jazzimprovisation an der Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg.

Seit Oktober 2015 ist sie Stipendiatin der Oscar und Vera Ritterstiftung.

This album contains no booklet.

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