**Edition of 200 ** Voice is the long‑awaited solo LP from Ethiopian‑born, Sweden‑based singer, improviser and composer Sofia Jernberg, an artist who has spent the last two decades expanding what the human voice can be in contemporary music. Known for her work across experimental jazz, improvised music, contemporary composition and opera, Jernberg has developed a vocabulary that treats voice less as a vehicle for text and melody than as a complete instrument, capable of occupying the roles of wind, strings, noise and electronics all at once. This album, released as a focused entry point into her practice, strips away bands, ensembles and staging to place that instrument - naked, close‑mic’d, sometimes feral, sometimes impossibly delicate - at the absolute center.
Across Voice, Jernberg moves through a spectrum of extended techniques she has made unmistakably her own: split‑tone singing where multiple notes seem to sound at once, pitchless exhalations and fricative textures, distorted cries that momentarily resemble overdriven guitar, and sudden, crystalline tones of almost classical purity. Her “anti‑singer” reputation comes not from a rejection of singing, but from a refusal to accept the narrow band of sounds usually assigned to it. She lets clicks, growls, inhaled gasps and barely audible air sit alongside long, sustained pitches, so that the mechanics of breath and throat become part of the musical material. The result is a kind of uneasy listening: pieces that can pivot in an instant from harsh, confrontational noise to moments of stark, haunting lyricism.
The record also sharpens the instrumental metaphor that has followed Jernberg’s work for years. Critics have compared her range of timbres to players like Wadada Leo Smith, whose trumpet can flicker between pure tone, smears, whispers and percussive bursts. On Voice, that analogy is fully realised: you hear lines that behave like horn phrases, percussive mouth sounds that function as drums, and dense clusters of overtones that hang in the air like prepared strings or feedback. Yet even when she moves far from conventional “singing,” there is a strong sense of structure. Each piece maps an internal journey, using contrast and repetition to carve out arcs that feel composed even when they emerge from improvisation.
Behind the rawness of the performances lies a considered production frame. The album has been presented as a “solo debut celebration of the voice in its rawest form,” with sound that keeps the physicality of mouth, tongue and breath front and center. Close recording lets tiny inflections - saliva clicks, the shift between chest and head resonance, the attack of consonants - become audible, turning listening into a strangely intimate encounter. At the same time, the sequencing ensures that the more extreme passages are offset by space and contrast, guiding the ear through zones of intensity and release rather than sustaining a single level of assault.
Voice also reads as a concise portrait of where Jernberg stands within today’s experimental landscape. Active in collaborations with figures such as Peter Evans, Eve Risser, Kim Myhr and Heiner Goebbels, she has long woven together multiple traditions - jazz, new music, improvisation, opera - into a personal language. This record distills that multiplicity into a series of solo studies that foreground the core of her practice: a drive to push the voice past what seems possible, not as a stunt, but as a way of opening new emotional and sonic registers. It’s a document both for listeners already drawn to the outer edges of vocal art and for anyone curious about what happens when “song” is dismantled and rebuilt from breath up.
In presenting the human voice as a full‑spectrum instrument, Voice quietly redefines the terms of solo vocal performance. It suggests that the most radical gestures can come without electronics, without text, without accompaniment - just one person, in a room, chasing the phantoms that live at the limits of sound and speech.
Master: Lasse Marhaug, Production: Mats Gustafson and Joakim Haugland, Cover design: Kim Hiorthøy.