Location: Manhattan, New York
Country: USA
Genre: Progressive jazz fusion
Full length: Rosendals Garden
Format: CD, digital
Label: Avant Music News
Release date: March 27, 2026
Russian-born pianist Yelena Eckemoff demonstrated an uncanny talent at a very young age and was studying at notable music schools as early as seven. Following her graduation, she joined a jazz-rock band, studying, teaching, and composing with several different instruments. By her early twenties, she relocated to the United States and spent years experimenting with synthesizers and MIDI sequencers.
In the 2000s, she independently released works across various genres, eventually establishing herself as a jazz recording artist a few years later. Her extensive catalog of jazz albums has received acclaim for developing an experimental, improvisational approach to progressive jazz and chamber music.
Eckemoff’s most recent album “Rosendals Garden,” recorded at Sweden’s RMV Studio, showcases her improvisational jazz with a deeply personal, expressive approach, more a narrative than a mere exercise in executing flawless notes and precise measures. Each track is thoughtfully crafted to evoke the landscapes, rural scenery, and cultural history of where she stayed to record. The stories conveyed form a grand, sweeping epic capturing the enchanting qualities and poetic spirit of her surroundings.
As I mentioned, Eckemoff is less concerned on flawless technical precision and more intent to communicate on a subjective, soul-stirring level. Her music is a shining example of substance over style. While her dexterity and her grasp on jazz theory is there, it’s not merely about presenting images but enkindling entire worlds, making them feel as tangible and immersive as possible.
In the past Eckemoff has composed albums with medieval themes, biblical stories, Arabian influences, concepts exploring the cycle of life, death, and rebirth. and shades of her former life in Russia, where familiar sounds from her childhood are recreated through various instruments.
Her deep well of imagination and keen sensitivity to her environment at any given moment manifest in the early autumn sensations on “Rosendals Garden,” the feeling of the air changing as summer ends and the wind starts to grow slightly colder. You feel the chill in the air, the wind blowing leaves that turn red, yellow, and brown as nature prepares for its end-of-the-year slumber.
The transition from one season to the next is immediately palpable as the keyboards and piano of the opening track begin. Each location is vividly portrayed, revealing deep historical and cultural significance. Through intertwined piano and bass lines, nuanced percussion and strings, and subtle shifts in mood, meter, and tempo, Eckemoff and her ensemble evoke the unique character of each setting.
These layers create a realistic tapestry that immerses you in the sensation of autumn’s arrival, making you feel its presence around you in every place you visit through this album. At the very least, *Rosendals Garden* will ignite your curiosity about the Swedish locations she explored, inspiring you to learn more about their history and essence. –Dave Wolff
Lineup:
Yelena Eckemoff: Piano, keyboards, composition
Svante Henryson: Cello, electric and double bass
Morgan Ågren: Drums, percussion
Track list:
1. ABBA Museum
2. Rosendals Garden
3. Gamla Stan
4. Country Orchard Café
5. Öresund Bridge
6. Skansen Park
7. Sunrise in Rimbo
8. Ruins of Älvsborg
9. Storanden Nature Reserve
10. Strandvägen Pier
11. Gripsholm Castle

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