Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Salvatore Bonafede Trio Sicilian Opening (jazzeyes008)

After many releases ranging from trio to larger bands, featuring several jazz notables – from Joe

Lovano and John Abercrombie to Enrico Rava – renowned Italian pianist and composer Salvatore

Bonafede gets back to his roots with a trio featuring two fellow Sicilians now based in New York: Marcello

Pellitteri on drums and Marco Panascia on electric and double bass. Out of folk clichés, the Salvatore

Bonafede Trio takes Mediterranean melodies dipped into the bittersweet colours of their home-island

and opens them up to a worldwide jazz audience.


Provided with Bonafede’s highly imaginative touch, his newest album Sicilian Opening, on the

JazzEyes label, features original compositions played with fine melodic lines and evocative sound, as

well as some evergreen pop hits arranged in the trademark Bonafede distinctive jazz style. With this

recording Bonafede definitively cements his reputation as one of the most compelling piano players

and brilliant composers on the present scene, both at home and throughout the world.


Born in Palermo, Italy, Salvatore Bonafede taught himself to play piano at the age of four, later

graduating from Palermo Conservatory of Music. In 1986 he earned a scholarship to the Berklee

College of Music in Boston, from which he graduated in three years. While living there, “Sal” – as elder

jazz musicians started to call him – joined the Jerry Bergonzi Quartet to tour Australia. In 1989 he moved

to New York where he led his own groups and played with the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, Dewey

Redman, Joshua Redman, Lew Tabackin, and Joe Lovano. His first CD as a leader and composer,

“Actor-Actress” (Ken Music, Japan) was praised by critics around the world and earned a place on the

Village Voice Critics’ Poll as one of the Top 10 CDs of the Year. In 1991, the Italian magazine “Musica

Jazz” voted him a “Top Young Player”.


Sal Bonafede moved back to Italy in 1994 and worked with Lester Bowie, Tom Harrell, Bobby

Watson and John Scofield. As pianist of Joe Lovano’s 12-piece orchestra, he took part in a number of

major European festivals and performed for “The 2005 Nightlife Awards” at Town Hall in New York. He also

recorded and worked with Marc Johnson, Paul Motian, Paolo Fresu, Judi Silvano, Randy Brecker, John

Abercrombie, Marvin “Smitty” Smith, Jerry Bergonzi, Tim Berne, Ralph Towner, Dave Douglas, Michael

Formanek, and Enrico Rava. In addition to his performing and recording activities, Bonafede also

composes for film (awarded for best soundtrack in 2003 and 2004) and for TV movies.


Tuesday, January 26, 2010

DUTCH TRUMPET SENSATION ERIC VLOEIMANS RETURNS TO US + CANADA February 20 – March 8, 2010 with his trio FUGIMUNDI

* New Challenge Records CD "Heavensabove!" with his quartet "Gatecrash" has US release in February 2010 *

One of the great surprises of the entire weekend was the performance by trumpeter Eric Vloeimans' group FugimundiThey played with a high-wire sense of adventure and such an infectious spirit of joy that it made the 21-piece Columbian salsa orchestra that followed them seem anti-climactic.” — Larry Appelbaum, JazzTimes

“5-stars. The sheer authority of trumpeter Eric Vloeimans’s exceptional trio with Harmen Franje (piano) and Anton Goudsmit (guitar) is one of the defining characteristics…there’s a shared sense of adventure and discovery.” — Ray Comiskey, Irish Times about Live at Yoshi’s

Holland’s award-winning trumpet sensation Eric Vloeimans (pronounced Louie-mans) brings his joyous and compelling music to the US with his FUGIMUNDI band featuring Vloeimans with guitarist Anton Goudsmit and pianist Harmen Fraanje.

FUGIMUNDI will perform:

• Sat. Feb. 20 Coastal Jazz Winterruption Festival on Granville Island Vancouver, B.C.

12:30 p.m. Free 604.872.5200

Mon. Feb. 22 Yoshi’s, 510 Embarcadero West Oakland, CA

8 p.m. $12 (510) 238-9200 www.yoshis.com/

• Thurs. Feb. 25 Athenaeum, 1008 Wall Street La Jolla, CA

7:30 p.m. $19 members; $24 non-members (858) 454-5872 www.ljathenaeum.org

• Sat. Feb. 27 Kerrytown Concert House, 415 North Forth Avenue Ann Arbor, MI

8 p.m. $10 - $25; $5 for students 734-769-2999
kerrytownconcerthouse.com

• Sun. Feb. 28 Chicago Cultural Center, Claudia Cassidy Theater Chicago, IL

6 p.m. Free 312.744.6630 http://www.explorechicago.org/city/en/supporting_narrative/attractions/dca_tourism/Chicago_Cultural_Center.htm

• Tues. Wed., March 2 & 3 Caspe Terrace Des Moines, IA

• Thurs. March 4 Twins Jazz, 1344 U Street Northwest Washington, DC

8 p.m. (202) 234-0072, www.twinsjazz.com/

• Sun. March 7 Casa del Popolo, 4848 boul. St.-Laurent Montreal, Canada

8:30 p.m. 514-284-0122 www.casadelpopolo.com

• Mon. March 8 Ottawa Jazz Festival, National Arts Centre, Fourth Stage Ottawa, Canada

7 p.m. $22 Single Tickets; $15 Student Tickets. 613.241.2633 www.ottawajazzfestival.com

Eric Vloeimans was born in 1963 in Huizen, The Netherlands, and grew up in Den Bosch. He quickly gained attention, first as an honors student at the Rotterdam Conservatory, then at the New School in NYC where he picked up gigs with the Frank Foster Big Band and a US tour with the Duke Ellington Band conducted by Mercer Ellington. Since 1989 he has been active in a wide variety of ensembles and as a group leader and is now widely regarded as one of Europe's best performers.

Vloeimans has won numerous awards including the Dutch Edison Award four times, the Elly Ameling Prize of the City of Rotterdam, the prestigious Bird Award at the North Sea Jazz Festival, and the most important jazz prize in The Netherlands - The Boy Edgar Prize. He has toured worldwide and performed at festivals including those of Rotterdam, Sibiu, Athens, Dansko, Oslo, Paris, Budapest, Viersen, Frankfurt, Roma, Montpellier, St. Petersburg, Budapest, Essen, Wien, Kosice, Berlin, Johannesburg, North Sea, New Delhi, Mumbai and Bangkok, among others.

Vloeimans’ compositions are fresh, expressive and powerful, not restricted to one particular style, and he has created an evocative, harmonic language of his own. In addition, he has mastered the complete range of the trumpet, from the energy laden high notes to the soft, velvety, almost wooden sounds, and he does not shy away from playing beautifully.

His trio "Fugimundi" be likened to chamber music of an adventurous kind - jazz, lounge, pop. Vloeimans is featured on a total of 14 CDs as a leader and numerous others as a sideman. His new CD "Heavensabove!" with his quartet "Gatecrash" will be released in the US in February on Challenge Records.

Guitarist Anton Goudsmit is a much sought-after player who does amazing things with whatever music he is presented with or writes. In 2001 Anton formed the Ploctones to perform a series of his compositions commissioned by Dutch NPS Radio.
In 2004 a Goudsmit organized a live CD recording of the Ploctones at the Jazz op het Dak festival which was featured on VPRO television. Since then the Ploctones have emerged as a very creative and innovative group, capable of combining grooves and improvisation.

Pianist Harmen Fraanje, born in 1976 in Roosendaal, The Netherlands, is active in the international jazz scene, playing with some of the finest musicians in Europe. On a tireless quest for creativity, new collaborations and new horizons, he has developed an authentic voice, a very honest personal approach towards music. Open to all kinds of music - from classical music, to improvisation, from centuries-old Pygmy chants to Duke Ellington with John Coltrane - he is always trying to embody the music, to be able to speak in his own unique language.

Eric Vloeimans — In the News

“Creative and refreshing.” — Bill Milkowski, JazzTimes about Live at Yoshi’s

4-stars. AMG Album pick “This is polished, sophisticated, under-the-radar music, exceptionally conceived and played, that exemplifies what contemporary continental jazz...” — Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide about Live at Yoshi’s

“Mr. Vloeimans, a Dutch trumpeter with a melodic style evocative of late-period Miles Davis.” — Nate Chinen, New York Times

Hyper presents one of the freshest takes on electronic jazz in some time. From its enthusiastic reaction, the audience it was recorded in front of apparently agrees.” — Ross Boissoneau, Jazziz

“It is little wonder why Dutch-born Eric Vloeimans is considered one of the most influential trumpet players of his generation. An accomplished storyteller, Vloeimans refuses to restrict himself to any particular melodic format or sonic texture.” — Ernest Barteldes, Miami New Times

“Trumpeter Eric Vloeimans is ranked as one of the undisputed giants within the Dutch jazz establishment…. beautiful sonority and controlled musical dynamics, his open and crystal-clear phrasings…” —
Luc Baets, Het Nieuwsblad

Vloeimans sparkles.”
— Jeroen van de Valk, The Parool

Disarming beauty by the Eric Vloeimans Quartet.” — 
Rinus van der Heyden, Brabants Daily

“Eric Vloeimans is a talent to cherish. His ability on the trumpet and the place of his rhythm section withstands the comparison with the young American lions gloriously, and because of his fresh ideas and catching performance he often even exceeds their standards.”
Volkskrant

Beautiful technique, sublime formation of tone and not only that, Eric Vloeimans also possesses good feeling of style, good taste and an excellent talent for composition.” —
Hifi Video Test magazine

# # #

www.ericvloeimans.com/

New England Conservatory Presents “Living Time” George Russell: His Musical Life and Legacy

New England Conservatory Presents Living Time

George Russell: His Musical Life and Legacy

Sunday, March 21 at Jazz at Lincoln Center

Part of NYC Week-long Celebration of NEC’s Ground-Breaking Jazz Studies Program, March 20 – 27, 2010

“Four decades after its founding, NEC’s jazz studies department is among the most acclaimed and successful in the world; so says the roster of visionary artists that have comprised both its faculty and alumni.” — Mike West, JazzTimes

New England Conservatory, in conjunction with Jazz at Lincoln Center, presents Living Time” George Russell: His Musical Life and Legacy, an in-depth examination of George Russell’s pivotal position and important contributions to African American improvisational art music on Sunday, March 21 from 2 – 6 p.m. at Jazz at Lincoln Center, Irene Diamond Education Center, 5th Floor, Time Warner Building, 33 West 60th Street, NYC. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, please call (212) 258-9800 or log on to www.jalc.org.

While Russell’s music and ideas have been celebrated around the world, they remain somewhat “below the radar,” particularly in the United States. This academic colloquium will be a major critical appraisal of his multi-faceted career. Panelists include: Gunther Schuller, Ken Schaphorst NEC '84 M.M., Ingrid Monson NEC '82, Cameron Brown, Stanton Davis NEC ‘72, Ben Schwendener NEC '86, and David Baker with an introduction by Jerome Harris NEC ’77. There will be two panels: “George Russell as composer, bandleader, and influential figure”; and “George Russell as music theorist and educator.”

The event is part of New England Conservatory’s 40th Anniversary of its first-in-the-nation Jazz Studies program. “Hot and Cool: 40 Years of Jazz at NEC,” began in Boston in October and continues in NYC with 8 days of concerts and events March 20 - 27, 2010 featuring some of NEC’s most renowned alumni, faculty and students. Proceeds from these events will support jazz scholarships at NEC.

NYC Events include:

Saturday, March 20 Anthony Coleman; Jeremy Udden Cornelia Street Café

Sunday, March 21 “Living Time”: George Russell’s Musical Life and Legacy JALC

Sunday, March 21 Andre Matos CD Release Concert for Quare Cornelia Street Café

Monday, March 22 The Public Option & The Noah Preminger Quartet 55 Bar

Tuesday, March 23 Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society Jazz Standard

Weds, March 24 NEC Faculty Jazz All Stars; Marty Ehrlich’s Quartet Jazz Standard

Thursday, March 25 Curtis Hasselbring; Frank Carlberg Douglass Street Music Collective

Friday, March 26 Vocal Showcase Joe’s Pub

with Dominique Eade, Sara Serpa, David Devoe, Amy Cervini, Carmen Staaf, Jorge Roeder, Jo Lawry, Richie Barshay, Sofia Koutsovitis

Friday, March 26 John McNeil-Bill McHenry Quartet Cornelia Street Café

Saturday, March 27 NEC Jazz Summit B.B. King’s

with John Medeski, Cecil Taylor, Ran Blake, Anton Fig, Bernie Worrell, Sarah Jarosz, Dominique Eade,

Lake Street Drive + more

The 40th celebration kicked off in Boston with a week of events in October 2009, culminating in a performance by the Wayne Shorter Quartet with NEC’s Philharmonia, which Kevin Lowenthal of the Boston Globe called a “stirring merger of jazz and classical music and to the fruitful 40 years of the two forms cohabiting at NEC.”

With a faculty that has included 5 MacArthur "genius" grant winners (Steve Lacy, George Russell, Ran Blake, Gunther Schuller, and Miguel Zenón) and 4 NEA Jazz Masters (Schuller, Brookmeyer, Russell, and Ron Carter), and alumni that reads like a who’s who of jazz, NEC’s Jazz Studies Program has spawned numerous Grammy winning composers and performers. As Mike West writes in JazzTimes: “Four decades after its founding, NEC’s jazz studies department is among the most acclaimed and successful in the world; so says the roster of visionary artists that have comprised both its faculty and alumni.”

History of NEC Jazz Studies

The first fully accredited jazz studies program at a music conservatory, NEC’s program was the brainchild of Gunther Schuller, the jazz historian, horn player, composer, author, and conductor. Principal Horn in the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra at age 19, Schuller had discovered Duke Ellington as a teenager and pronounced jazz as important as classical music. Named President of the Conservatory in 1967, he moved quickly to incorporate jazz into the curriculum. By September 1969, he had gotten his unprecedented program approved by the National Association of Schools of Music and began offering classes. Closely allied to the Jazz Studies program was his Third Stream department, which came along a few years later and which linked classical and jazz into a new genre.

Schuller chose his jazz faculty with a connoisseur’s discernment. The first department chair was saxophonist Carl Atkins. Composer George Russell, who conceived the Lydian Chromatic Concept (which has importantly influenced jazz greats from Miles Davis to Maria Schneider), began a Conservatory association that continued until his recent passing. When Russell retired from teaching, the NEA Jazz Master became a Distinguished Artist-in-Residence Emeritus. Pianist Jaki Byard, called a “walking encyclopedia of jazz,” brought his eclecticism and generosity of spirit to his NEC teaching. And Ran Blake, who Schuller had discovered pushing a broom at Atlantic Records, came to NEC in 1968 and became the first chair of the Third Stream Department in 1974.

During the early years of Jazz at NEC, Atkins formed a trio composed of Donald Pate on bass, Harvey Mason on drums, and Ron Fransen on piano. With Atkins as saxophonist and coach, the group toured jazz festivals recruiting students and attracting national attention to the new NEC program.

Among the earliest students to enroll were Stanton Davis and Ricky Ford. Brought in by Ran Blake, Ford fronted the house band at Wally’s Café while playing in Jaki Byard’s big band and Schuller’s repertory band at the Conservatory. “My participation in the NEC jazz ensemble under Jaki’s direction prepared me for entrée into the Ellington Orchestra,” Ford has recalled.

By the time Schuller retired as President of NEC in 1977, the list of jazz graduates was already impressive. They included Anthony Coleman (who has returned to teach at NEC), Marty Ehrlich, Fred Hersch, Jerome Harris, Michael Moore, and Bo Winiker.

Throughout the history of NEC’s Jazz Studies program, the faculty has continued to be distinguished by its wide range of important artists including trumpeter John McNeil; saxophonists Jimmy Giuffre, Steve Lacy, and Joe Allard; drummer Bob Moses; bassist Dave Holland; trombonist-composer-arranger Bob Brookmeyer; pianists Michael Cain and Stanley Cowell; and guitarists Gene Bertoncini, Chuck Wayne and Jack Wilkins. Vocalist Dominique Eade, who graduated in 1984, then became the first jazz performer to receive an NEC Artist Diploma in 1989, joined the faculty and has been a magnet for gifted young singers. Several, like Kris Adams, Luciana Souza, Lisa Thorson and Patrice Williamson, have gone on to prestigious careers.

So illustrious is NEC’s jazz faculty that five of the most eminent have received MacArthur “Genius” grants (Lacy, Russell, Blake, Schuller, and Miguel Zenón). In addition, Schuller, Brookmeyer, Russell, and Ron Carter have all been named NEA Jazz Masters.

Similarly, prominent alumni of NEC reads like a Who’s Who of Jazz and includes: Bruce Barth, Regina Carter, Freddy Cole, Marilyn Crispell, Marty Ehrlich, Ricky Ford, Satoko Fujii, Jerome Harris, Fred Hersch, Roger Kellaway, Mat Maneri, Harvey Mason, Andy McGhee, Bill McHenry, John Medeski, Vaughn Monroe, Michael Moore, Hankus Netsky, Jamie Saft, Frank London, Don Byron, George Schuller, Luciana Souza, Chris Speed, Cecil Taylor, Cuong Vu, Phil Wilson, Bo Winiker, Bernie Worrell, Rachel Z, Rachael Price, Richie Barshay, and Bridget Kearney.


For further information on Jazz 40th at NEC, go to: http://necmusic.edu/jazz40

# # #

New England Conservatory Celebrates 40th Anniversary of Ground-Breaking Jazz Studies Program

NYC Events Take Place March 20 – 27, 2010

* Performers include John Medeski, Bernie Worrell, Cecil Taylor, Lake Street Dive, Dominique Eade, Ran Blake, Anton Fig, George Garzone, John McNeil, Cecil McBee, Billy Hart, Frank Carlberg, Marty Ehrlich, Jeremy Udden, Noah Preminger, Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society & more *

“Four decades after its founding, NEC’s jazz studies department is among the most acclaimed and successful in the world; so says the roster of visionary artists that have comprised both its faculty and alumni.” — Mike West, JazzTimes

New England Conservatory continues to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of its first-in-the-nation Jazz Studies program with “Hot and Cool: 40 Years of Jazz at NEC,” 8 days of concerts in NYC March 20 - 27, 2010 featuring some of NEC’s most renowned alumni, faculty and students. Proceeds from these events will support jazz scholarships at NEC.

NYC event highlights include Hot & Cool: NEC Jazz Summit featuring

John Medeski of MMW, Bernie Worrell, Cecil Taylor, Anton Fig, Ran

Blake, Sarah Jarosz, Dominique Eade, Lake Street Dive and others;

the John McNeil-Bill McHenry Quartet; the Noah Preminger Quartet, A

Vocal Showcase at Joe’s Pub, Darcy James Argue’s Secret

Society, the NEC Faculty Jazz All Stars and more. (A full schedule of events accompanies this press release.)

The 40th celebration kicked off in Boston with a week of events in October 2009, culminating in a performance by the Wayne Shorter Quartet with NEC’s Philharmonia, which Kevin Lowenthal of the Boston Globe called a “stirring merger of jazz and classical music and to the fruitful 40 years of the two forms cohabiting at NEC.”

With a faculty that has included 5 MacArthur "genius" grant winners (Steve Lacy, George Russell, Ran Blake, Gunther Schuller, and Miguel Zenón) and 4 NEA Jazz Masters (Schuller, Brookmeyer, Russell, and Ron Carter), and alumni that reads like a who’s who of jazz, NEC’s Jazz Studies Program has spawned numerous Grammy winning composers and performers. As Mike West writes in JazzTimes: “Four decades after its founding, NEC’s jazz studies department is among the most acclaimed and successful in the world; so says the roster of visionary artists that have comprised both its faculty and alumni.”

History of NEC Jazz Studies

The first fully accredited jazz studies program at a music conservatory, NEC’s program was the brainchild of Gunther Schuller, the jazz historian, horn player, composer, author, and conductor. Principal Horn in the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra at age 19, Schuller had discovered Duke Ellington as a teenager and pronounced jazz as important as classical music. Named President of the Conservatory in 1967, he moved quickly to incorporate jazz into the curriculum. By September 1969, he had gotten his unprecedented program approved by the National Association of Schools of Music and began offering classes. Closely allied to the Jazz Studies program was his Third Stream department, which came along a few years later and which linked classical and jazz into a new genre.

Schuller chose his jazz faculty with a connoisseur’s discernment. The first department chair was saxophonist Carl Atkins. Composer George Russell, who conceived the Lydian Chromatic Concept (which has importantly influenced jazz greats from Miles Davis to Maria Schneider), began a Conservatory association that continued until his recent passing. When Russell retired from teaching, the NEA Jazz Master became a Distinguished Artist-in-Residence Emeritus. Pianist Jaki Byard, called a “walking encyclopedia of jazz,” brought his eclecticism and generosity of spirit to his NEC teaching. And Ran Blake, who Schuller had discovered pushing a broom at Atlantic Records, came to NEC in 1968 and became the first chair of the Third Stream Department in 1974.

During the early years of Jazz at NEC, Atkins formed a trio composed of Donald Pate on bass, Harvey Mason on drums, and Ron Fransen on piano. With Atkins as saxophonist and coach, the group toured jazz festivals recruiting students and attracting national attention to the new NEC program.

Among the earliest students to enroll were Stanton Davis and Ricky Ford. Brought in by Ran Blake, Ford fronted the house band at Wally’s Café while playing in Jaki Byard’s big band and Schuller’s repertory band at the Conservatory. “My participation in the NEC jazz ensemble under Jaki’s direction prepared me for entrée into the Ellington Orchestra,” Ford has recalled.

By the time Schuller retired as President of NEC in 1977, the list of jazz graduates was already impressive. They included Anthony Coleman (who has returned to teach at NEC), Marty Ehrlich, Fred Hersch, Jerome Harris, Michael Moore, and Bo Winiker.

Throughout the history of NEC’s Jazz Studies program, the faculty has continued to be distinguished by its wide range of important artists including trumpeter John McNeil; saxophonists Jimmy Giuffre, Steve Lacy, and Joe Allard; drummer Bob Moses; bassist Dave Holland; trombonist-composer-arranger Bob Brookmeyer; pianists Michael Cain and Stanley Cowell; and guitarists Gene Bertoncini, Chuck Wayne and Jack Wilkins. Vocalist Dominique Eade, who graduated in 1984, then became the first jazz performer to receive an NEC Artist Diploma in 1989, joined the faculty and has been a magnet for gifted young singers. Several, like Kris Adams, Luciana Souza, Lisa Thorson and Patrice Williamson, have gone on to prestigious careers.

So illustrious is NEC’s jazz faculty that five of the most eminent have received MacArthur “Genius” grants (Lacy, Russell, Blake, Schuller, and Miguel Zenón). In addition, Schuller, Brookmeyer, Russell, and Ron Carter have all been named NEA Jazz Masters.

Similarly, prominent alumni of NEC reads like a Who’s Who of Jazz and includes: Bruce Barth, Regina Carter, Freddy Cole, Marilyn Crispell, Marty Ehrlich, Ricky Ford, Satoko Fujii, Jerome Harris, Fred Hersch, Roger Kellaway, Mat Maneri, Harvey Mason, Andy McGhee, Bill McHenry, John Medeski, Vaughn Monroe, Michael Moore, Hankus Netsky, Jamie Saft, Frank London, Don Byron, George Schuller, Luciana Souza, Chris Speed, Cecil Taylor, Cuong Vu, Phil Wilson, Bo Winiker, Bernie Worrell, Rachel Z, Rachael Price, Richie Barshay, and Bridget Kearney.


For further information on Jazz 40th at NEC, go to: http://necmusic.edu/jazz40

# # #