
At Copenhagen's New Epicurus, Fine Dining Meets Subterranean Jazz
It wasn't the legendary jazz clubs of New York, Chicago or New Orleans that inspired Epicurus—an audacious new fine dining and subterranean jazz club hybrid in Copenhagen—so much as those in Tokyo. The Japanese version, says Niels Lan Doky, a partner in the Danish venture, combines the improvisational music with a rigorous attention to aesthetic detail.
Doky knows what he's talking about. He's one of the most esteemed jazz pianists of his generation, having performed on stages from Carnegie Hall to the Royal Albert Hall and collaborated with legends such as Pat Metheny and Michael Brecker. He's also proudly knowledgeable about the deep history of jazz in Copenhagen, especially in the 1950s and '60s. That's when American legends like Louis Armstrong, Stan Getz and Dexter Gorden decamped to Denmark and give the capital one of the most flourishing jazz scenes in the world.
Doky, who was knighted by HM Queen Margrethe II of Denmark for his musical contributions, is the musical director of Epicurus, which opened in April. He often takes the stage himself, and he plans to continue doing so, behind the brand-new, state-of-the-art Bösendorfer 230 Vienna Concert piano that he picked out himself from the instrument maker's factory in Austria. But it's never about him. Nor is it only about any other artist who takes the stage.
Niels Lan Doky at the piano
As musical director, Doky likens his approach to that of a director of a classical or opera venue, who would devote a season or cycle to Bach, say, or Verdi or Wagner. The performers are world-class, but the repertoire is what Epicurus is selling. The residencies last a few weeks, long enough for word of mouth to spread. Last month, Camille Sledge paid delightful tribute to Aretha Franklin. Word spread—she had a room full of otherwise restrained Danes dancing in the aisles by the end of at least one evening.
Or as Doky puts it, 'Everything I've ever done in my career as a musician has always been to try to bridge the gap between, what shall we call it, deep artistic substance and accessibility—a broad appeal.'
The other things that Epicurus is selling are equally substantive and appealing. The subterranean concert hall has superb sound and aesthetics—the work of the Italian-Danish duo GramFratesi, who drew inspiration from Epicurean philosophy, ancient Greece and the history of artistic expression through the ages—and it's arranged with great precision and attention to detail. The spacing between the café tables is just so, the plush chairs are comfortable, and the lighting is perfect.
The jazz club before a performance
The drinks are likewise well thought out. The price of admission buys seats for the concert and a flight of drinks—sparkling wine followed by a choice of wines, cocktails or non-alcoholic concoctions. The bar is curated by Epicurus partner Rasmus Shepherd-Longberg, one of Denmark's foremost cocktail entrepreneurs (owner of Ruby, which has been among the World's 50 Best Bars six times), and Michael Hajiyianni, the former head bartender of the famously creative restaurant Alchemist.
An original painting by Miles Davis—the only one on display on Danish soil—hangs at the entrance to the combined Epicurus space, a welcome beacon for downstairs concertgoers, upstairs diners and the fullest 'Epicureans,' who buy the combined tickets for the culinary pleasures followed by the musical ones below. During his comeback in 1981, Davis gave the painting to Bill Evans, who has now loaned it to his longtime collaborator Doky as a gesture of friendship and faith in the Epicurus vision.
He has reason for that faith: Epicurus's other partners are Lars Seier Christensen, the Danish entrepreneur and investor behind the country's first Michelin three-star restaurant, Geranium (as well as the two-star Alchemist), and Mads Bøttger, the owner of Dragsholm Castle and its one-star restaurant. They clearly know how to nurture fine dining talent, and they know how to stand out in a city that's awash in creative dining.
Scallops with kale, watermelon radishes and caviar
And here they know how to make the meal one pillar of a harmonious, well-balanced evening out. While it's a truism that elite gastronomy has become its become its own kind of theater, with dinners running to 30 elaborate courses and stretching five or six hours, the restaurant portion of Epicurus isn't that.
The menu, which was devised by head chef Oliver Bergholt, a veteran of other popular projects around town, is a compact six courses. It can be completed in less than two hours. (There's also an à la carte menu for guests who only want to dine.) There's minimal theatricality, but plenty of quality and pleasure. There are also some parallels with jazz music, like collaboration, harmonization and improvisation around seasonal ingredients.
The dishes change, of course, but they include the likes of smoked salmon trout wrapped in shiso leaves; lightly seared scallops with curly kale, watermelon radishes and a dollop of caviar; grilled venison with parsnips and green asparagus; and a summer salad with whitefish roe and 'grandma dressing.'
Servers explain this last ingredient to their foreign guests: It's a classic comfort food that nearly everyone in Copenhagen seems to have grown up with, a mixture of lemon, sugar, vinegar, cream and dill. It's humble but high quality, and here it's a reminder. Even with all its Japanese, American and otherwise global influences, Epicurus retains a distinctively Scandinavian soul.
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Bloomberg
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Godzilla Conquered Japan. Now Its Owner Plots a Global Takeover
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Forbes
2 hours ago
- Forbes
Montreux Jazz Festival And Claude Nobs Foundation: A Living Legacy In Sound And Spirit
Quincy jones presents a night of global Gumbo - Quincy Jones and Claude nobs © Lionel Flusin © Lionel Flusin A Festival Built on Passion, Vision, and Jazz The 59th edition of the Montreux Jazz Festival ends on Saturday 19th July, its final notes echoing over the serene waters of Lake Geneva. Chaka Khan's powerful tribute to Quincy Jones– To Q With Love– opened this year's festival with a soulful celebration of one of Montreux's most treasured collaborators. But as the applause fades and the stages are packed down, attention is already turning to 2026, when the Montreux Jazz Festival will celebrate its 60th anniversary–a milestone that not only marks six decades of musical excellence, but also honors the enduring legacy of its visionary founder, Claude Nobs. A Musical Pilgrimage to Claude Nobs Chalets Just one day after Chaka Khan's opening night performance, I made a musical pilgrimage to a place that many consider the spiritual heart of Montreux: Claude Nobs' chalet high in the mountains above the lake, now home to the Claude Nobs Foundation. Nestled in the quiet Alpine village of Haut-de-Caux–accessible via the quaint Golden Pass cogwheel railway, which has a portrait of Claude Nobs on the side–this site is far more than a charming retreat, it's a living museum, a sanctuary of sound, and a cradle of innovation. Mountains above Montreux © Sky Sharrock © Sky Sharrock Where Legacy Meets Innovation Led by Thierry Amsallem–Claude's lifelong partner and the foundation's President–the Chalet offers a deeply intimate window into the world of a man who changed the course of music history. The Claude Nobs Chalets–now a UNESCO-listed heritage site–house an extensive archive of recordings, and form the beating heart of projects that are redefining how music can be preserved and experienced. In collaboration with the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), the Montreux Jazz Digital Project is turning the musical archive of Montreux Jazz Festival into a launchpad for immersive, futuristic experiences–where the performances of legends are accessible in 3D audio and virtual environments. Montreux Media Ventures is a pioneering steward of cultural heritage, presiding over one of the world's most significant audio-visual Collection from the renowned Montreux Jazz Festival. From Nina Simone to Miles Davis, Aretha Franklin and David Bowie, MMV has preserved iconic performances from some of the world's greatest artists for future generations. With over 17,000 hours of audio and video, MMV is seen as 'The Abbey Road of recorded live music', presiding over a cultural asset of unrivalled quality that has been inscribed in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register since 2013. Thierry Amsallem, Founder of Claude Nobs Foundation © Sky Sharrock © Sky Sharrock Claude Nobs: From Local Promoter to Global Pioneer The roots of Montreux Jazz Festival (MJF) go back to 1967, when Claude founded what was then a pure jazz festival. Within just four years, Montreux had cemented itself as an essential stop on the global music map. In 1968, a Grammy-winning recording from the festival earned worldwide acclaim. In 1969, an impromptu concert led to the best-selling jazz album Swiss Movement , introducing the world to Montreux's magic. By 1971, Claude was booking Rock legends like Santana and Pink Floyd–even as he kept jazz at the festival's core. A Personal Touch: The Stories Behind the Chalet Walls As we walked through the chalet complex, Thierry recounted stories that painted a vivid portrait of the man behind the festival. Claude, it turns out, had a passion for trains, and his collection of model locomotives runs through several rooms. Neil Young, an equally avid collector, once playfully one-upped Claude during a visit when he showed him his model train collection. Thierry stood in a sitting room of the chalet where a collection of Claude's model trains is displayed and recalled: 'Claude was here. I was there. Neil Young was here, and he was looking at Claude's train collection. Claude explained that he was a big fan of trains because his father had lived near a railway line. Claude was explaining to Neil that his trains were from a US company of the 1930s. Neil Young said to him 'Don't explain. I bought the company!' He sold the company two years ago I think. Then we became friends because of trains!' The extensive train collection also includes a model train gifted to Claude by none other than Paul Simon. Who knew that an obsession with model trains could be shared by so many music legends? Claude Nobs Foundation collection of model trains © Sky Sharrock © Sky Sharrock A Museum of Musical Legends The chalet itself is a time capsule of musical history. In one room, David Bowie's Kimono, shoes and a bunch of fake flowers sit beside a cheeky postcard sent to Claude from San Francisco by Freddie Mercury. Quincy Jones' trumpet and Jamiroquai's signature hat add to the eclectic mix. A small chalet adjacent to the main house is–according to Thierry–Shania Twain's favorite hideaway. If these walls could talk, they would hum with stories of legendary jam sessions and home-cooked meals shared by stars, back in an era when stars weren't surrounded by a huge entourage of PR people, stylists and managers. Claude often cooked himself, offering artists a family-like refuge away from the adoring fans at the Montreux concerts. Bowie once praised the home-cooked dinner Claude made him in front of a live audience. There is also a room where the Rolling Sones hung out, which is decorated with photos and paintings of them, including some by Ronnie Wood. Claude developed a relationship with The Rolling Stones and even helped Keith Richards when he was in rehab for a year in Montreux. Thierry recalled that, when Claude invited the Rolling Stones to play Montreux, they were all enthusiastic apart from Mick Jagger who said 'But Claude, I don't play Jazz!' The Rolling Stones were due to play Montreux casino after Frank Zappa performed, but the night ended in a legendary incident worthy of a disaster movie. David Bowie's Kimono at Claude Nobs Chalets © Sky Sharrock © Sky Sharrock From Fire to Fame: The Story of Smoke on the Water In a vintage screening room lined with 1970s Swissair first-class seats–complete with now-defunct ashtrays–Thierry showed us rare footage of iconic festival moments. Thierry told us the dramatic tale of the infamous 1971 fire at Montreux Casino. During a Frank Zappa concert, a fan set off a flare gun, sparking a fire that would burn the venue to the ground. Deep Purple witnessed the chaos, and the next day wrote the now-legendary Smoke on the Water , immortalizing the event, and Claude himself ('Funky Claude was running in and out'). Thierry explained: 'Deep Purple said 'We're going to bring the Rolling Stones mobile studio, because we would like to play Montreux but we would also like to record an album. Claude said 'OK, but this will be after the Frank Zappa Show'. And a stupid guy during the Zappa show lit a gun flare and set fire to the casino.' Thierry proceeded to show us a previously unseen film with footage of the Frank Zappa concert, the fire and the aftermath, edited to the soundtrack of Pink Floyd's track One of These Days , which led to the composition of Smoke on the Water . After the visit to the chalet, I listened to the track again and the lyrics took on a whole new meaning: 'We all came out to Montreux On the Lake Geneva shoreline To make records with a mobile, yeah We didn't have much time now Frank Zappa and the Mothers Were at the best place around But some stupid with a flare gun Burned the place to the ground Smoke on the water, a fire in the sky (Smoke) on the water, you guys are great They burned down the gambling house It died with an awful sound Funky Claude was running in and out He was pulling kids out the ground now When it all was over Find another place Swiss time was running out It seemed that we would lose the race Smoke on the water, a fire in the sky Smoke on the water.' A Vision for the Future: AI, Immersion, and Innovation Montreux is not just a music festival–it's a guardian of culture. The archive is staggering: over 17,000 hours of audio and video recordings have been preserved, with performances from Prince to Nina Simone, from Ed Sheeran to Bowie. This treasure trove is overseen by Montreux Media Ventures, which manages the festival's media and production and has earned the archive a place in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register. The Claude Nobs Foundation and Montreux Media Ventures are not only preserving the past but innovating for the future. Thierry revealed one of the most exciting developments in the works: an AI-assisted recreation of Claude's voice, set to debut during the 60th anniversary celebrations. This voice will guide visitors through Live at Montreux-The Experience by Claude Nobs , an interactive installation that immerses audiences in the music, the history, and the very soul of Montreux. Art Meets Sound: The Visual Legacy of Montreux Art has always been integral to Montreux's identity. Claude's eclectic tastes extended beyond music and model trains to art deco and contemporary art, and he was pioneering in his vision not only of merging pop and rock music with jazz–which some people viewed as musical sacrilege in the 60s–he was also pushing the boundaries between art and music. In 1983, Claude invited American Street artist Keith Haring to design artwork for the festival, beginning a tradition that continued with artists like Niki de Saint Phalle and Malika Favre. Haring had visited the Chalet during his time in Montreux, and several originals of his artworks are on display, many of them personally dedicated to Claude. Thierry explained that Haring had created street art around Montreux during his visits, which wasn't documented and sadly disappeared, but his designs for the festival and his artworks live on in the Chalet. For 2025, London-based artist Lakwena took inspiration from Nina Simone's 1976 performance of Stars , building her design around the lyric, 'All you see is glory.' An exciting collaboration will be announced later this year with an artist for the 60th anniversary of MJF. In the Chalet you can spot a Warhol portrait of Mao next to an original Keith Haring artwork signed to Claude, a self-portrait of Bowie, and a more contemporary painting by artist Kehinde Wahale, the official portraitist of former US President Barrack Obama. Artworks at Claude Nobs Chalets © Sky Sharrock © Sky Sharrock Quincy Jones and the Power of Collaboration Montreux has also long benefited from the influence of legendary producer Quincy Jones. After joining as co-producer in 1991, Quincy and Claude formed an extraordinary partnership, drawing artists across eras and styles. Together, they staged one of Miles Davis' final performances and brought to life nights featuring Phil Collins, Mos Def, Herbie Hancock, Jorja Smith, Jon Batiste, and countless others. This firm friendship between Quincy and Claude endured during their lifetimes, and Quincy's legacy was celebrated at the 2025 MJF with Chaka Khan's musical tribute To Q with Love . MJF Scène du LAC. Lac Chaka Khan © Lionel Flusin © Lionel Flusin Prince, Bowie, and the Soul of Montreux 'Prince called Claude himself to say he wanted to play Montreux,' Thierry said. 'He fell in love with the place.' The late icon went on to perform six legendary concerts at the festival. The chalet still reverberates with echoes of those performances. Thierry played us a video of Bowie performing Ashes to Ashes at Montreux, and also Prince's moving rendition of Purple Rain , a performance so emotionally charged that the room fell silent. Quincy Jones' Trumpet © Sky Sharrock © Sky Sharrock Thierry gave some insight into the close relationship Quincy and Prince formed with Claude and Montreux: 'One day Claude was touring Prince in the 1980s, and that's how they met. Many years later Prince called Claude and said he would love to play Montreux. So he came back in 2007, played Montreux and fell in love with the place and the people. He could have been our best Ambassador, unfortunately he passed away – he played six concerts in Montreux. And Quincy Jones our ambassador since 1991 and he passed way last year. So we are really missing these great ambassadors who have passed away.' An upper floor of Claude's chalet contains an open-plan room where his bed is positioned above a seating area, with a huge window overlooking the mountains. Thierry gestured to a large sofa and said it was Quincy's favourite spot to sit, recalling how he and Claude bonded over their love of Crocs. One could sense the ghosts of Quincy, Claude and the other legendary musicians who sat on that sofa after a night of live of music in Montreux, and the jam sessions that took place in the rooms below. Claude Nobs Chalets © Sky Sharrock © Sky Sharrock Looking Ahead to the 60th Anniversary As Claude's memory continues to inspire, his legacy lives on not just in festival lineups, but in mentorship programs, immersive experiences, and a holistic vision of music that spans genre, geography, and generation. Looking ahead to the 60th edition in 2026, the Montreux Jazz Festival will move into a fully redesigned Convention Centre. This transformation will reinvigorate the legendary Stravinski Auditorium and the Jazz Lab, ensuring that Montreux's magic—its potent mix of setting, sound, and soul—remains as vibrant as ever. The Festival That Keeps Reinventing Itself The 59th edition ended on a high note, with powerful performances from both legends and rising stars. From Neil Young to James Blake, from Chaka Khan to Raye, this year's lineup was a bridge between the past and the future. The festival continues to evolve, adapt, and innovate–always true to Claude Nobs' original vision. MJF Raye © Amelie Chatellard © Amelie Chatellard Claude's Spirit Lives On What began as a small jazz event by a railway-loving music promoter in a Swiss lakeside town has become one of the most influential and beloved festivals in the world. Montreux is not merely a destination–it's a feeling, a memory, a soundscape shaped by decades of groundbreaking artistry. As we look forward to Montreux's 60th anniversary, one thing remains clear: Claude Nobs' spirit is as alive as ever–in every note, every train whistle, and every flame of inspiration sparked on the Lake Geneva shoreline.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Whisper Of The Heart left a lo-fi legacy unique to Studio Ghibli
A sea of bokeh lights emanates from Tokyo. Light pollution paints the night sky. The camera pans down into the suburbs. The artificial light becomes less dense, clustered along highways and trainlines. Olivia Newton-John's pop-country fusion recording of 'Take Me Home, Country Roads' plays, the gospel-like introduction sung by a choir over organ. Whisper Of The Heart opens unlike any other Studio Ghibli film. Thirty years since its release, Whisper Of The Heart remains a unique entry in the legendary anime studio's filmography. It was Ghibli's first feature directed by someone other than Hayao Miyazaki or Isao Takahata and, while the studio has made some non-fantastical films, none are so mundane nor romantic. Neither have any cemented a legacy like the one left by its director's single credit. While Miyazaki's influence as the film's writer and storyboarder is apparent, Yoshifumi Kondō's sole directorial effort remains an overlooked but widely influential film. Both prescient in its subject matter and a direct predecessor to pervasive animation today, Whisper Of The Heart anticipates a current zeitgeist often summed by vague buzzwords: chill vibes and lo-fi aesthetics, Ghibli-esque romantasy, and low-stakes, character-driven plots (all of which are lumped into the expanding anime category of 'slice of life'). Even if you haven't seen moonstruck middle schooler Shizuku Tsukishima fall in love outside of a book for the first time, or follow a cat through the urbanizing expanse of early '90s western Tokyo, you've seen her on YouTube, sitting at a desk overflowing with books, pencil in hand as she writes for hours, lost in the music piped into her wired headphones. Or you've seen this same girl dedicatedly working to improve, sitting at her desk day and night as the seasons change around her, in films like Look Back. Or, as in Sound! 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She forms an ideal of who this 'Seiji Amasawa' could be, a romantic image thoroughly shattered by the rude-yet-mysterious boy she finds making violins in an antique shop. Their romance is one of constant refusal of the fairytale stories Shizuku reads at the beginning of the film. Their tropey 'school rooftop confession' scene is betrayed by Seiji's news that he's leaving to apprentice at a luthier for two months. If he succeeds, he'll go away again for another 10 years. Through love, Shizuku finds purpose: writing. She grows from lazily reading all day over summer break to staying up till 3 a.m. writing her novel while Seiji is away. Upon his return, both resolve to push each other towards their goals, even if they part for the foreseeable future. At the same time as he details this love story, Miyazaki works through his feelings on urbanization and the consumer tech boom of the late '80s. This comes courtesy of a subplot told almost entirely visually. While Shizuku writes by hand, her mom, working on her masters thesis, writes at a chunky folding word processor. Empty fields run along highways. Nighttime landscape shots emphasize artificial lighting. The library is replacing the checkout cards with barcodes, foreclosing on the kind of romantic daydreams Shizuku formed through encountering Seiji's name. One could even make a drinking game out of how many times people almost get hit by cars. Confessing her disaffection to all this, Shizuku writes a parody of 'Country Roads' for her school choir, titled 'Concrete Roads.' While the film itself is nostalgic, Shizuku is not. She's wary of the future encroaching on her present. This, more than her likeness, is why Shizuku is the Lofi Girl, her analog ideals resisting a current that will make the world less romantic. The cluttered desks and densely packed bookshelves that always accompany her character design—even when detached from Whisper Of The Heart—are the antithesis of a decade of physical minimalism made possible through maximized digital footprints. While all that is communicated nearly wordlessly in the film, it's not easily reducible to an aesthetic. Nor is Ghibli's filmography so reducible as to contain Miyazaki, Takahata, Kondo, and the other directors who have since made films there within a single adjective. At a time when AI image generators attempt to smooth out decades of artistry into a single simplified style, Whisper Of The Heart stands as a resounding refusal of 'Ghiblification.' After Shizuku's finished the marathon of writing her first novel, she has to accept that it isn't very good. She's opened a geode, but the minerals need to be cut and polished. 'Now I've written it, I know. Wanting isn't enough. I have to learn more,' she cries after her first failure to extricate something beautiful from within. But Shizuku's first step isn't failing to create, it's succeeding to finally hear the whisper of her heart. Wanting—to be a writer, a luthier, a musician, an animator—isn't enough. But it's a start. Whisper Of The Heart remains singular in part because Yoshifumi Kondō died three years after it was released in Japan. He wouldn't live to see it come to America; Whisper Of The Heart wouldn't even be released in English until 2006, after the studio's global popularity surged in the wake of Miyazaki's successes in the early '00s. It's become a joke how many times Miyazaki has claimed that he would retire, but his first 'final film' was Princess Mononoke, Kondō's last credit as an animation director. Miyazaki had hoped to pass the studio to Kondō, and even held a farewell party after he left Ghibli on January 14, 1998. Kondō died exactly one week later. Two years after Kondō's death, Miyazaki came out of retirement for the first time, to make the film that would become Spirited Away. His death, and the films audiences didn't see from him after Whisper Of The Heart, is perhaps why the aesthetic endures. Kondō never produced his own filmography full of bicycles and folk instruments and cities mid-change. Those that experienced his work wanted more; it wasn't enough. Unlike the flattening faux-style of Ghiblification, what animators have done with Whisper Of The Heart in the subsequent decades instead looks forward, like Shizuku herself. In her translation of 'Country Roads' (back to English), she ditches the rosy images of Appalachia with a feeling more complicated than nostalgia—yearning for something lost, and moving on: Country road, this old road Could go right to my home town I won't go there, I can't go there Can't go down that country road Country road, when tomorrow comes I'll be like I always am Want to go back there Can't go back there Fare thee well, country roads More from A.V. Club Ari Aster is just asking questions, like "How the hell do we get off this thing?" Whisper Of The Heart left a lo-fi legacy unique to Studio Ghibli Senate holds late-night vote to cut funding to NPR and PBS Solve the daily Crossword