Elina Duni
Elina Duni (born 10 March 1981, Tirana, Albania) is a Swiss-Albanian jazz singer and composer. She left Albania at the age of ten to live and study in Geneva, Switzerland.[1] She went on to study singing, composition and teaching at the University of the Arts Bern,[2] but from 2004 onwards Albanian folk music became a prime influence. At this moment, in 2004, she formed a quartet under her own name with the Swiss jazz pianist Colin Vallon, bassist Patrice Moret and drummer Norbert Pfammatter. In a review, John Fordham concluded that "This quartet definitely sounds like rising star material for ECM."[3] After two albums – Baresha (2008) and Lume Lume (2010) – on Meta Records, the quartet went on to record for ECM in 2012, with Matanë Malit (Beyond the Mountain) and in 2015, Dallëndyshe (Swallow). In 2014, she released her first album as a singer-songwriter in Kosovo and Albania, entitled Muza e Zezë (The Black Muse). In 2017, she was nominated to receive the annual Swiss Music Prize and in 2018 she released the album Partir, a solo programme in which she accompanies herself on piano, acoustic guitar and percussion. The album features traditional folksong from across the globe, sung in 9 different languages.[4][5]
Duni currently lives in Zurich, Switzerland, and shares a fruitful collaboration with British rising star guitarist Rob Luft, with whom she has released two albums on ECM Records. The 2020 album Lost Ships comprises six Duni/Luft originals and six interpretations. Sidemen are Matthieu Michel on flugelhorn and multi-instrumentalist Fred Thomas on piano and percussion,.[6] Their sophomore collaborative album A Time To Remember was awarded Jazz Album Of The Month in The Guardian newspaper, with John Fordham describing it as a sonically "delicate yet diamond bright" listening experience.[7]
Discography
- 2007 - Baresha
- 2010 - Lume, Lume
- 2012 - Matanë Malit[8]
- 2014 - Muza e zezë (The Black Muse)
- 2015 - Dallëndyshe
- 2018 - Partir
- 2019 - Aksham
- 2020 - Lost Ships (with Rob Luft)
- 2023 - A Time To Remember (with Rob Luft)
References
- ^ Andina, Michele. "Jazz as a cultural bridge". Swissinfo.ch. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
- ^ Jurek, Thom. "Elina Duni". AllMusic. Retrieved 23 February 2021.
- ^ Fordham, John (20 December 2012). "Elina Duni Quartet – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
- ^ "Partir: Elina Duni". ECM Records. Retrieved 23 February 2021.
- ^ Bouchard, Fred (July 2018). "Elina Duni: Partir". Down Beat. Vol. 85, no. 7. p. 65.
- ^ Arnett, John (2020-11-23). "Elina Duni, Rob Luft – 'Lost Ships' Review". londonjazznews.com. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
- ^ Fordham, John (2023-07-14). "Elina Duni: A Time to Remember review – a unique voice in jazz". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2024-04-22.
- ^ "Elina Duni: Love, Lust And Albanian Folk Songs". Npr.org. Retrieved 29 May 2018.