ALLOY Running And Belonging Marleen Dahms
Album info
Album-Release:
2025
HRA-Release:
05.12.2025
Album including Album cover
- 1 Running And Belonging 07:25
- 2 Aribau 07:55
- 3 Opening My Eyes 06:26
- 4 Zuflucht 05:05
- 5 Keep Going 06:30
- 6 Ivory Tower 05:34
- 7 Paralelo 06:44
- 8 Intro (Present Spirits) 02:35
- 9 Present Spirits 05:47
- 10 Shifting Responsibilities 04:13
Info for ALLOY Running And Belonging
ALLOY – the English word for "alloy" – symbolizes connection: the interweaving of people, stories, and experiences. Everything is interconnected. The band's mission is to make these connections audible, to trace their origins, to uncover cross-connections – and to create new ones.
The five-member band, led by trombonist Marleen Dahms, creates music that floats, flies – and yet remains grounded. Running and Belonging, their debut album, explores the question of belonging in a world full of fractures. It asks about responsibility. About identity. About one's place in the bigger picture.
"If music is an expression of personality – shaped by identity – why do I make music so strongly influenced by, or even based on, Black American musical traditions and improvisation, as well as South American rhythms, when my own cultural background is completely different?" asks Marleen Dahms.
“How authentically can I express myself through this music? What is my own cultural identity, and what does identity even mean?”
Running and Belonging is an intense process of self-examination, of grappling with one's own family history, with European history, with inherited patterns of thought and behavior. “Many beliefs are emotionally anchored within us—and cannot be dissolved through rational thinking alone,” says Marleen Dahms. “If you want to change something, you also have to understand the feelings behind it, where they come from, and above all, process them emotionally, not just rationally.” The album is an attempt to do precisely that: to process social and personal themes and questions emotionally through music, to make inner movements audible. Not to provide answers, but to feel what is.
The music on “Running and Belonging” is often melodic and catchy—but never pleasing. It pauses and allows space. The sound is warm, melancholic, sometimes fleeting, then again raw and unvarnished. Traditional song forms meet improvisation, stately melodies meet light-footed, Afro-Latin American-sounding rhythms, flute meets brass, lightness meets depth.
At its heart is a powerful duo: Marleen Dahms on trombone and Lisa Buchholz on trumpet – two women who together create a sonic unity and force that captivates. ALLOY is rounded out by Johannes Mann (guitar), Luca Curcio (bass), and Steven Moser (drums). Guests Vincent Bababoutilabo, a flautist from Berlin, and Afrogame, a percussionist from Salvador de Bahia, expand the sonic spectrum – their colors blend organically with the ALLOY sound without being overpowering.
Some pieces directly reference places, memories, and movements. “Opening My Eyes,” for example, was written after a trip through Latin America—a piece about privilege, colonial history, and humanity. “Aribau” revels in the feeling of community and the memories of a safe home.
Others are more abstract, but no less clear. “Refuge,” for instance, is an attempt to process guilt and shame in a melody. “Ivory Tower” offers a look at Western self-evidence—at the expense of others. In “Intro / Present Spirits,” the personal becomes political. The memory of Betty Cohn, who lived in Marleen Dahms’ Berlin apartment until 1942 before being deported to Riga and murdered, coalesces into a quiet musical memorial.
And then there’s “Shifting Responsibilities”—a piece about German bureaucracy, responsibility, and turning a blind eye.
“Running and Belonging” isn’t a loud debut—but it is a powerful one. It's not about grand gestures, but about honest, musically profound exploration.
Marleen Dahms' ALLOY succeeds in translating complex themes into sound with musical depth and emotional resonance. They create musical spaces that invite you to pause—to feel, reflect, and connect.
An album that speaks through its questions—and that's precisely where its power lies.
Marleen Dahms, trombone
Lisa Buchholz, trumpet
Johannes Mann, guitar
Luca Curcio, double bass
Steven Moser, drums
Vincent Bababoutilabo, flute
Afrogame, percussion
Marleen Dahms
is a berlin based trombonist, improviser and composer.
After seeing Lisa Simpson screaming her soul out of her saxophone in an episode of the simpsons at 8 years old, she started playing the alto a few weeks later. As a teenager she additionally learned trombone and piano.
She holds a master degree in jazz trombone and studied at the Jazz-Institute-Berlin (UdK/Hanns-Eisler), as well as in Lucerne, Leipzig, Barcelona and learned from Nils Wogram, Geoffroy de Masure, Gerry Hemingway and Thomas Leyendecker among others.
As a bandleader she composes for her quintet „ALLOY“ and plays/-ed with different projects such as „Andromeda Mega Express“, „Magnetic Ghost Orchestra“, „Été Large“, „London Jazz Composers Orchestra“, „Panda Do Sol“, „Babylon Orchestra“, „Zaunkoenig“, „Skazka Orchestra“, „Omniversal Earkestra“ among others. As a sidewomxn she has also played with german pop/rap/rock artists like AnnenMayKantereit, Revolverheld, Nina Chuba.
She has played concerts at european jazzfestivals and concerthalls like Leipziger Jazztage, Jazzfest Berlin, Jazzfestival Dresden, Jazzfestival Münster, Jazzfestival Göttingen, Jazzgoestotown Prague, Salzburg Jazz& The City, Elbphilarmonie Hamburg, Volksbühne Berlin. Tours lead her to Ghana, Ecuador, Colombia, Russia, France, Italy, Czech-Republic, Denmark, Lithuania, Switzerland und Poland.
She lived in Ecuador for 10 months and travelled to Cuba, Colombia and Ecuador for 3 months again during her studies to learn from trombonists and other musicians of the Salsa- and Cumbia Scene (German Guerrero, Amaury Perez, Ramon Torrivilla) and played in local bands. She did a 7-weeks residence in Accra (Ghana) and learned and played with local jazz musicians and the all female highlife band „Lipstick Band“.
She was a member of the „Jazz Academy Elbphilarmonie Hamburg 2021“ with Theo Croker, Melissa Aldana, Matt Brewer and the „Summer Session 2022“ in Denmark with Terri Lyne Carrington, Joe Lovano, Kris Davis, Keyon Harrold and got scholarships from Goethe Institut, PROMOS, DAAD, Elsa-Neumann-Stipendium as well as fundings from Musikfonds, Berliner Senat, Initiative Musik.
She is the founder of a feminist reading group for womxn and non-binary jazzmusicians and artistic director/curator and co-founder of the project BUMMM! (Being Unique Makes Meaningful Music), a series of jam sessions/concerts for womxn, non-binary and other historically marginalized gender identities in the jazz and improv scene of Berlin and beyond.
This album contains no booklet.
