Köln Concert 50

Keys

Sellout performance Christuskirche Köln on exact date of the 50th Anniversary

On 24th January 2025, exactly fifty years after Jarrett’s original concert in Köln, Dorian Ford paid tribute to this remarkable performance, playing to a sell-out audience in Christuskirche, Köln.

Klaus Erich Haun, audience member at the original 1975 concert, said, “Never before has a concert and its aftermath moved me as much as Köln Concert 50. My head just won’t let go.”

from The Guardian

One musician who has immersed himself in the events of that day is the British pianist Dorian Ford. After spending years studying Jarrett’s solo improvisations, he was in Cologne to play an improvised set inspired by The Köln Concert on 24 January, its 50th anniversary – not in the opera house, which is undergoing renovation, but in a church around the corner.

“The Köln Concert was totally improvised,” says Ford, “but not what we understand as ‘free improvisation’. It’s tonal and melodic. It has a structure, and it transcends the boundaries of music-marketing. Jarrett described his solo improvisations as ‘universal folk music’: I can hear the sound of rugged American individualists, like Charles Ives and Scott Joplin, but I can also hear hymns, gospel music, country music, honky tonk, anthemic songs, soul, blues, stride, boogie woogie, modal jazz and plenty of classical music. This is not a European culture of deference. This is high-end, elite music, but presented with an audacious, American, heart-on-sleeve populism.”

Ford doesn’t think the piano actually sounds that bad, and the technicians had clearly addressed most of its problems. “The one thing is it sounds a little tinny, and he has to hit it hard. If you listen to Jarrett’s solo concerts from Bremen or Lausanne, recorded 18 months earlier, they’re technically superior in many ways. But the Köln piano lends a mystical, magical edge.”

Interview

A week after the Köln Concert 50, Dorian was interviews by Breandáin O’Shea for Deutsche Welle (30 January 2025).