Monday, 10 March 2014

Magnus Öström Band Searching For Jupiter Concert on January 18th 2014in İstanbul (Abstract)



The sounds came before the musicians. It was like the first day of creation of earth: sounds of movements of big land parts and eruption of hot dense water from the ground... Then on coming to the stage the band made an introduction part sounding like -in my opinion- what we hear in the first piece of Miles Davis' Bitches Brew, Pharaoh's Dance. The album started after this introduction and the first four pieces are played in the same order with the album started from The Moon (And The Air It Moves). The impressive first piece was very promising for the later parts of the concert with many aspects. 

Dancing At The Dutchtreat is like a sophisticated glitch between two heavy performances like it is in the album. Bassist Thobias Gabrielsson and Andreas Hourdakis were successfully in harmony when the tension of the music tended to increase in this performance. I should again mention the clock-like accuracy and clearness of Magnus Öström's drumming. 

Daniel Karlsson tried a very different partition on piano for Mary Jane Doesn't Live Here Anymore compared to what we hear in the album for this piece. I generally -kind of- remembered Esbjörn Svensson's tone from Daniel Karlsson especially in the pieces which are composed by Magnus Öström as a kind of ballad for Esbjörn. Mary Jane Doesn't Live Here Anymore is such a piece.


With its mystic name, the title track Searching For Jupiter was among the pieces in the album that let the band do many extra things within the composed bars. The introduction part given by Daniel Karlsson's piano, the lightning fast crashes of Magnus Öström at the end of first part which is linked to Andreas Hourdakis' hopeful guitar tone and the last energetic part producing a heavy metal band's sound were all performed very well.




An authentic arrangement for the concert was linking the depressive Weight of Death from previous album Thread of Life to the hopeful Through The Sun from Searching for Jupiter. Let me make a flashback here to E.S.T. going back to before 2000's. Many careful listeners can easily recognize that EST's early records do not contain pieces which are explicitly named with dead-related titles. Until the Viaticum in 2005, we see two implicitly named pieces: "Pavane, Thoughts of a Septuagenarian" in Good Morning Susie Soho reminding us the melancholy in getting old and "Car Crash" in Strange Place for Snow which is dedicated to Swedish jazz musician Jan Johansson, who died in 1968 by a car accident. Viaticum can be described as the last food/bread a human being eats before dying and the album as a whole is related to death even just with this title. Letter from The Leviathan (a sea monster) is another link to the death when we think about Esbjörn Svensson's scuba diving accident after three years. Although Tuesday Wonderland was a little bit more hopeful record, the last album Leucocyte showed us that the main theme of the band became the meaning of this world and our life as time passed: What is earth? What is jazz? What is birth? What is life? What is death? What is eternity? When we come back to Magnus Öström's own albums Weight of Death from Thread of Life was like a part of this continuum. In my opinion, the title track and At The End of Eternity are the followers of this melancholy in Searching for Jupiter.

We learned from Magnus Öström before the performance Happy And The Fall that this composition was for his three year old son and the symbolization is that people should learn to stand up when fallen down - just like a happy child falling down and learning to stand up himself/herself.

At The End Of Eternity already includes a long drum solo in the album. We had a very different and long one from our magician Magnus Öström in the concert whose beginning is dominated by toms without any crashes or hi-hats. The rests between some passages and the tensional final part of this solo were amazing. 

 

 
Piano Break Song was played in the encore. The ending part of this piece turned out to be a very different melody and rhythm in time and I felt like I am listening to a piece from Weather Report. Thus, we may say that the concert started with Miles Davis and ended with Wayne ShorterIn between we had contemporary jazz, rock and fusion.
 
İKSV Salon is one of my favourite performance halls all around the country with its great acoustic conditions and qualified equipment. Adding Magnus Öström and his friend's good soundcheck to this, the resultant sound design was just perfect. Especially the sound from drum kit is just flawless. The drum solos from Magnus Öström produced a real clean and an organic output. The electronic ingredients coming especially from Thobias Gabrielsson and keys from Daniels Karlsson were as clean as their acoustic counterparts.

 
Note: The photos used in the review were taken by official photographer of İKSV Salon, Ali Güler.

Saturday, 8 March 2014

Anat Fort - Life Creates Music, Music Creates Life


It is "a long story" what I first listened from Anat Fort. I really meant it in both perspectives. The name of the first album I get from the talented pianist and composer based in New York (born in Israel) was 'A Long Story', which is a release from ECM in 2007. On the other hand, what I started to feel within the first notes of this amazing album is a long story whose abstract will be given in this text.


I don't remember what I was doing before inserting the CD to the player or what happened next after the 56 minutes and 50 seconds have passed. All I remember was a huge present given to me. I again meant it in both perspectives. The music was like a gift. On the other hand, it was a great feeling of "just now" which captured my soul. This feeling was not an instant one. The contradiction between the naive texture and manifest-like main theme sounding like a Nordic tune pushed me to look at the name of the first piece. It was 'Just Now Var I'.  Later on I would learn that this pretty art-work was crafted just two days before the band is going into the studio. On seeing there are two more variations based on the same theme both in the middle and in the end, I got the main message: Just now, what life taught to the composer turned into music and this music will create life again. There is no regret for past and no anxiety for future. It's like Maxwell's equations of electromagnetic. Electricity produces magnetic field and magnetic field produces electricity. This inevitable conversion goes on forever with speed of light without thinking the past or future.

Paul Motian has played with Anat Fort in this first ECM album of hers. Easier said than done, we are talking about a matching not only with the highly reputable drummer of unforgettable trios of jazz history such as Bill Evans Trio and many other collaborations such as the one with Paul Bley and Keith Jarrett, but also with the heroic contemporary music producer Manfred Eicher. It is not difficult to guess that the recording sessions in 2004 and post-production process thereafter were all dreamy days for Anat Fort. Well, when I listened to the compositions such as 'Morning: Good', 'Lullaby' and solo piano performances such as the one in 'Just Now Var II', I thought: "She deserves the best of what's available." Considering that Anat Fort is accompanied by Ed Schuller on bass and Perry Robinson on clarinet, we may say that she rightfully got a dreamy line-up. 

The impressive melody in 'Just Now Var I', the bass solo in 'Morning: Good', the bass and clarinet introduction in 'Lullaby' meet us in the beginning. Avantgarde-like style duo performance of 'Chapter Two', which is a collaborative composition of Anat Fort and Perry Robinson is located after these three touching numbers of the album. As I just mentioned above, the piano solo performance in 'Just Now Var II' is a real shiny one. Not surprisingly, Paul Motian is a world class touch to all pieces he played. Especially his locomotive character in 'Rehaired' is among highlights of the album. We are learning from liner notes of the album that Paul Motian has not made any rehersal with the rest of the band. Besides the successful collaborative improvisational parts presented there, we see one more important fact in the number 'As Two / Something 'Bout Camels': Anat Fort is very good at composing within catchy melodies possibly thanks to her culturally rich Middle East roots. The energetic solo introduction made by Paul Motian in 'Not The Perfect Storm' is as impressive as what Ed Schuller and Anat Fort did to produce a really tensional aura resembling to a stormy weather in the middle of a sea. Yes, the storm is not perfect. Its power is unstable. 'Chapter One' is a calm piano solo in which Anat Fort's classical music education as well as her experience in improvisation & jazz can easily be seen. The end of the album comes with a third variation to 'Just Now', whose main theme is assigned to clarinet instead of the piano in first variation.  

The second ECM album 'And If' came in 2010 with a trio of different line up: Gary Wang double-bass and Roland Schneider drums. We are learning from the information in her webpage that this trio is her ten-years-old band which has taken stage many times on jazzland. As a memorial dedication and an indicator for Anat Fort's admiration to the musician, the entrance and the exit to the album are attained by two performances for the same tune carrying the Paul Motian's name: Paul Motian (1), Paul Motian (2). After an abstractive and calm performance based on nuances and tails of the sounds in 'Paul Motian (1)', 'Clouds Moving' presents an hopeful and energetic area for the listener. The overall sound in here - like it is so in the whole album - is very organic thanks to the long-established band. No musician is dominant compared to others and no specific instrument is pushing you to get attention. It is even hard to concentrate on any individual performance because of their irreducible organism. The rise and falls in the tension of the music are accomplished together in a very harmonious way. The beautiful and melancholic main theme in the piece 'En If' is something prepared by Anat Fort directly for listener's soul. Some recursive riffs on the piano signals the beginning of another catchy tune which is called 'Some'. Gary Wang (following an individual path from time to time) and Roland Schneider (creating interesting and minimal performances on the drum set) are proving here how nice matchings they are for Anat Fort. We hardly notice the transition to 'Something 'Bout Camels' which was performed together with 'As Two' as the 8th number before in the previous album. This is again a very successful performance started with an indecisive introduction followed by an impressive presentation of the main theme. Gary Wang's bass solo near the end and the repetition of the mystical aura of the introduction thereafter are all very touching. The next very short piece 'If' is a very unique one with Roland Schneider's energetic movements over the drum set inconsistent with the minimal piano and bass line. 'Lanesbora' is going on almost from where Anat Fort left the piano in the previous piece. This time the brush-dominant drum performance gives a calmer feeling. The melodic bass solo in the middle and rich rhythm texture created by drummer are highlights of the performance. 'Minnesota' is again another nice tune from Anat Fort in which she decided to give stage mostly to her friends. The snare-drum & hi-hat dominant rhythms and the dignified body supplied by the double bass are certainly at top quality. The angel is beautifully singing from the piano above all this good stuff. The impressive rests of the piano in the short piece 'Nu' once again supplies a vast area especially for Gary Wang to travel on his instrument freely. As mentioned before 'Paul Motian(2)' gives a calm ending to this well designed and performed album. While I am listening to that album in 2013, I sadly remembered that Paul Motian passed away a year later after this release in 2011. 

Now I'm looking for two more albums of Anat Fort. The first one is 'Peel' from 1999 which includes Anat Fort's compositions and some solo performances as well as some other trio and ensemble ones. The second one is an ECM album. I don't have any idea whether it is composed, designed or recorded but I believe ECM should release another album with Anat Fort. You know; music creates life and life creates music. It is obvious that this life goes on. Therefore this spiritual pianist will compose and play as long as she breathes. 

Thursday, 27 February 2014

Adam Baldych & Yaron Herman - The New Tradition Concert in Ankara, February 26th, 2014


I got the chance to listen to Adam Baldych & Yaron Herman yesterday in Ankara with their latest duo project "The New Tradition". The good harmony between these talented musicans, Adam's virtuosic dedication to his instrument, Yaron's surprising movements on the piano, the quality of the compositions (such as Letter for E and Riverendings) and some very well arranged classics from Poland (such as Sleep Safe and Warm from Komeda and Seifert's Quo Vadis) were all highlights of the concert. I could also get the album after the performance, three months before its official release date from ACT and listened to it at home. It will certainly be a very important release for ACT with its catchy melodies and energetic structure. Besides, we, as Ankara, were very lucky since Yaron Herman gave a wonderful masterclass before the concert in a university. More than a musical masterclass, this was a totally life-music-humanity-philosophy seminar of him and at the end of it, he presented a very special solo performance of Fragile from Sting. There is a record for the masterclass but it is a "souvenir" to me and will not be published. However you'll see soon two interviews from both musicians in my blog one of which will contain also some questions&answers from masterclass.



Monday, 17 February 2014

Ankara'da Caza Dair Son Gelişmeler

Herkes farkında değil belki; ama son zamanlarda caz için öyle kendi halinde iyi şeyler oluyor Ankara'da. Tord Gustavsen Quartet ECM'den 2014 başında çıkan ve Avrupa Cazı takipçilerini çok etkileyen albümlerinden bazı parçaları 2013 sonunda ilk kez bir Ankara konserinde çaldı mesela. Tord Gustavsen şimdiye kadarki en ayrıntılı röportajlarından birini Ankara'da yaşayan kendi halinde bir cazsever ile yaptı. Sadece bir gün önce sahnede Lars Danielsson'u, Yaron Herman'ı ve Mehmet İkiz'i birlikte dinledik. Çok değil iki ay sonra, ACT müzisyeni Lars Danielsson ve Caecilie Norby duo konserlerinin belki de en iyisini Ankara'da verdi. Şimdi yine ACT'den Avrupalı bir duo, daha albümün çıkmasına 4 ay varken ilk konserlerinden birini Ankara'da gerçekleştirecek. Albüm satışı ilk kez bu konserde yapılacak. Yaron Herman bu konserle birlikte 4 ay içerisinde ikinci kez Ankara'ya gelecek. Bir de -organizasyonlarla hiç bir ekonomik bağı olmayan Ankaralı bazı cazseverlerin çabalarıyla- piyanist Yaron Herman konser öncesinde ücretsiz master class verecek isteyen herkese. Bakalım Ankara ne kadar ilgi gösterecek. Bakalım Ankara, etkinliklerin devam etmesi ve o "hastası" olduğu diğer "cazcıların" da gelebilmesi için çok da popüler olmayan bu etkinliklere katılması gerektiğini farkedecek mi? Doğru dürüst bir caz kulübe ve öyle her türlü gündemden etkilenmeyecek adam akıllı bir sponsorun desteklediği caz festivaline sahip olmasının kendi ilgisine bağlı olduğunu anlayacak mı? O caz kulüpteki İngiliz müzik eleştirmeninin bana "Is there a market for jazz in Turkey?" dediği günden beri çok şey değişti bende. Ankara da değişir mi dersiniz? Göreceğiz...

Saturday, 15 February 2014

Iiro Rantala: The String Trio's First Album, "Anyone With A Heart" and A Retrospective Look to The Pianist's Discography



What Frank Zappa said cynically about music writers, paradoxically proves that writing is also an art form even it is for music: "Writing about music is like dancing about architecture." Yes, that's right. Trying to express the details of an architectural piece by dancing is as hard as to explain what is going on during a musical performance by words. It may seem to be as unnecessary as dancing in front of a building for some people; but writing a good review is not an easy thing. So is finding a real good melody for a musical composition nowadays. Composers have used indefinitely many melodic structures throughout the music history, some of which became so successfully famous that the melodies can easily be recognized even if the composers' names are not remembered. Being full of many already discovered melodies, the music in new millennium pushes musicians especially in jazz to do extraordinary things in styles, rhythms or sound. Some may show technical perfection and complexity as the necessary and sufficient conditions for an impressive jazz performance, whereas some may see the blues and swing as "sine qua non" for this. However, finding a catchy, unique and longevous melody is still one of the most important aspects of a successful musical piece regardless of the genre. In other words, what you play is as important as how you play it.


Having been already known for his success in composing and finding really impressive melodies in his famous Trio Töykeät period (1988-2006), Finnish pianist Iiro Rantala seems to have increased the weight of the melodies in his works with his ACT related career, which started in 2011 with the fantastic solo album Lost Heroes. Iiro Rantala was born in 1970 and his relation with classical music goes back to childhood where we can see Bach's impression on the musician. Besides, after his education in Jazz Department of Sibellius Academy in Finland, he studied classical music in Manhattan School of Music. He has taken place in 7 albums and approximately 2000 concerts of his jazz trio. We can also see his name in many classical albums, performances and compositions. Thanks to both his connection to classical genre and his long time experience in jazz, what we hear at first sight was a self-confident performance of a virtuoso jazz pianist on very well composed pieces in this solo album. Dedicated to many passed away musicians such as Pekka Pohjola, Bill Evans, Esbjörn Svensson, Michel Petrucciani and Luciano Pavorotti, each piece somewhat has a connection to the inspiring name with its style or emotion. In my opinion, this album has become one of the most precious pieces in solo jazz piano history. Let me remind you that with the release of the album, Iiro Rantala is awarded both by German Critics and ECHO Jazz. Following this success, the second album from ACT is named My History of Jazz and created in 2012 by a collaboration with Swedish bassist Lars Danielsson, Polish violinist Adam Bałdych and Danish drummer Morten Lund. Iiro Rantala expressed his wide connection to jazz obviously not only by playing many different sub-genres such as swing, bebop, smooth jazz, Nordic but also by starting and ending the album with Johann Sebastian Bach's Arias and inserting an individual improvisation based on Goldberg Variations between each piece. He directly says in the liner notes "I've never been into blues piano or so called main stream jazz. That's why they're missing on the album." Since he has taken stage with pianists Leszek Moźdźer and Michael Wollny for the first Jazz at Berlin Philharmonic concert which is recorded as a live album and released in 2013; I think Iiro Rantala can surely said to be one of the most important pianists of ACT label. I heard with my own ears that Siggi Loch (founder of ACT) found him very impressive for his wide spectrum in styles and talent in playing the classical music as well as jazz.




It seems that the collaboration between Adam 
Bałdych and Iiro Rantala from the record My History of Jazz is in the roots of the latest album which came again from ACT in 2014: Anyone With A Heart. Iiro Rantala formed a string trio for this record adding Crotian cellist Asja Valcic next to Adam Bałdych. Actually this is not the first time we see Iiro Rantala in an interesting trio configuration to play jazzy compositions. His collaboration with a guitar and a human beat box created Iiro Rantala New Trio in 2005 and stayed alive until 2010 also releasing an album. Being an interesting formation for a jazz performance, Iiro Rantala String Trio is evidently on the way which Iiro Rantala has been following: putting the composition at the heart of the performance, finding impressive melodies and using improvisation to tune the tension of the music. Frankly, it is not easy to define the string trio as a jazz one and we can tell the same also for their first album. However, it is obvious that neither Iiro Rantala suppose the opposite, nor the borders of the jazz in Europe are very well defined in last decades. The romantic album Anyone With A Heart is unique not only with its formation and almost genre-less structure but also with its incredibly emotional liner notes prepared by Iiro Rantala, whose main theme is related with heart and love consistent with the title. Our talented pianist emphasizes on the materialistic trends the world is following nowadays and he says that love is the ultimate ingredient for a beautiful world and happy people. Iiro Rantala finishes the notes with a hope that the music will touch listener's heart, which reminded me an old quote from Monteverdi: "The end of all good music is to affect the soul."


The name of the first piece is Karma, the Indian philosophy based on the idea that says "good intent produce good actions and deeds". The musical structure of Karma releases the overall aura of the album in the introduction very well with naive pizzicato touches of Adam Bałdych on the violin first. The catchy and melancholic melody in the first part is build up by entrance of Iiro Rantala's well known tone and Asja Valcic's organic sound. The composition has an interesting second part which sounds like one hand of the piano passes to lower octaves resembling a double bass shuffle giving the base of the overall sound. The kicks going on throughout this second part are repeated solely in the end producing a very mystical ambiance in the listening room. Freedom catches attention by the really impressive piano performance throughout the piece. There is a strong progressive feeling mostly created by the duo performance of strings near to the middle. I learned from notes of the album that the piece is inspired from Jonathan Franzen's novel with the same name. A Gift starts and ends like a classical piece which hides some improvisational parts from the piano in between. Asja Valcic sometimes plays from lower octaves to give a double bass like feeling. By the attacks of Adam Bałdych, the piece passes through a very energetic and impressive part near to the end. A Little Jazz Tune is dominated by Adam Bałdych from beginning to end. His definitive technique is very well obvious in this performance. Belle Epoque, the Golden Age for France and Belgium between 1871 and 1914, reminds us French style in piano. The piece Alone is again under effect of classical genre and shoots us with its melancholy at first notes of the cello which are accompanied by dark lower octaves of the piano. The lyrical violin adds another level in the deepness of the feeling. Iiro Rantala seem to have caught an unforgettable melody that can easily match with a rainy scene in a melancholic European movie. Hard Score is exactly a genre-less performance. You can neither describe it as something from classical, baroque or modern period, nor define as a complete jazz performance. It is like a jazzy performance of a classical piece affected by a progressive style. The piece has a very aggressive intro which rests between some repeats in the beginning. The melody evolves in several cases and the emotional state of the piece is almost unstable. Surely, one of the most impressive performance of the album is Hard Score with its improvisational and ambitious character. Prayer has some deep relations to Bach again with its piano partitions and it is almost a complete classical composition which again carries a very touching melody. Strings remind the late Baroque period. Playing mostly the main theme, Iiro Rantala sometimes prefers to be the rhythm line in some strings dominant partitions. The title track returns to the optimistic main theme of the album. Anyone With A Heart is like a composition for ballet. Harold Arlen's jazz standard Over The Rainbow (which is generally called Somewhere Over The Rainbow as it is done in the album) is successfully performed with its each nuances inherent to the composition. More than that, the trio -especially Iiro Rantala- added a melancholic spice to what we used to hear in general. Happy Hippo starts like an entrance of a cabaret and after the introduction the piece gives a hopeful ending to the album.

As a summary, Iiro Rantala String Trio seems to have started a long time collaboration with the album Anyone With a Heart, which will attract not only European Jazz listeners but also classical music followers. Most of the pieces have been turning in my head since I listened to them for the first time. My recommendation for you is to be absolutely open while listening to such intense works. Yes, I believe that Iiro Rantala String Trio played something coming exactly from heart in this album and all you have to do is to listen with a free mind. No need to analyze, no need to tabulate, no need to classify, no need to concentrate on similarities and differences... Just listen. In other words, let the music touch your soul.   
  
The CD (ACT 9566-2) will be released in February 28th. The recording, mixing and mastering are all made by Klaus Scheuermann, whose name is familiar for ACT followers. The album is recorded in Emil Berliner Studios on October 29th and 30th 2013.

As far as I can see, you can listen lively to Iiro Rantala String Trio on March 11th and 12th in Germany and March 13th, 14th and 15th in Austria.

You can also have a look at Adam Bałdych's first ACT album Imaginary Room and wait for his next duo one with Yaron Herman on piano, which will be released on May. Asja Valcic's duo albums with bandoneon & accordion player Klaus Paier can be found with the names Silk Road and A Deux again from ACT. Radio String Quartet Vienna's albums from ACT are also recommended in which you can listen to Asja Valcic.

Thursday, 13 February 2014

Adam Baldych ve Yaron Herman 26 Şubat'ta Ankara'da


Avrupa'nın önde gelen caz müzisyenlerinden Adam Baldych ve Yaron Herman duo formatta verecekleri konser için 26 Şubat'ta Ankara'ya Resim Heykel Müzesi'ne geliyorlar. Konser saat 20:30'da ve biletler Biletix'te.

Keman sanatçısı Polonyalı Adam Bałdych ve Fransa’da yaşayan İsrail asıllı piyanist Yaron Herman müzikal kimliklerini ifade ederken devamlı yeni yollar deneyen yeni jenerasyon caz müzisyenlerinden. Her ikisi de Almanya’nın saygın plak şirketi ACT’den albüm yapmakta ve konserlerle dünyayı gezmekte. Son duo çalışmaları, ortaçağdan tutun, çağdaş döneme kadar bir çok dönemden etkilenerek kendi kişiliklerini ve anlayışlarını ortaya döktükleri özgün, tutarlı ve iyi tasarlanmış bir çalışma. İkili bu birliktelikle bize oldukça klasik gibi görünen bir piyano ve keman düosunun aslında nasıl olasılıklarla dolu keşfedilmemiş topraklara ait olabileceğini anlatır gibi. Virtüöz müzisyenlerin sezgisel güçleri, çok zarif ve ilginç sanatsal diyaloglar ortaya çıkardığı gibi, çekingenliğin yer almadığı doğaçlamalar da sunuyor. İkilinin yeni kaydettikleri New Tradition adlı albüm 2014 Mayıs ayının sonunda ACT firmasından piyasaya sürülecek.

1986 doğumlu Adam Bałdych uluslararası icralarına 16 yaşında başlar. Adam Bałdych’in ACT’deki ilk albümü olan “Imaginary Room” 2012’de çıkar. Albümün yapımcılığı ACT’in kurucusu Siggi Loch ve  firmanın en önemli müzisyenlerinden trombon sanatçısı Nils Landgren tarafından gerçekleştirilir. Albümde Adam Bałdych’e Lars Danielsson, Jacob Karlzon, Verneri Pohjola, Morten Lund ve Marius Neset gibi İskandinavya’nın en önemli caz müzisyenlerinden oluşan bir ekip eşlik eder. Adam Bałdych albümün ardından Montrö ve Londra gibi Avrupa’nın en önemli caz festivallerinden davetler alır. Alman gazetelerinden bazıları Adam Bałdych’in tekniğine dikkat çekici övgüler yapar. Adam Bałdych başta 2013 yılında en iyi keman sanatçısı dalında aldığı Alman Caz Endüstrisi’nin en önemli ödülü ECHO Jazz olmak üzere Avrupa’dan çok önemli ödüller alır. Bir “dahi çocuk” olarak başladığı müzik kariyerinde şu an Avrupa’nın en ilgi çekici caz keman sanatçılarından biri olarak devam etmektedir.  Adam Bałdych’i Finlandiyalı piyanist Iiro Rantala’nın ACT’den çıkan ikinci albümü My History of Jazz’da olduğu kadar ACT firmasından Şubat 2014 sonunda yeni albümlerini çıkaracak olan Iiro Rantala String Trio’da da görüyoruz.

Yaron Herman 1981’de Tel Aviv’de doğar ve piyano kariyeri 16 yaşında bacağında yaşadığı ciddi sakatlık sonucu biten basketbol hayatından sonra başlar. Azmi ve yeteneği kısa zamanda kendinden söz ettiren bir müzisyen olmasını sağlar. 2005’teki ilk solo çalışma Variations’ın ardından Avrupa’da, Güney Amerika’da ve Çin’de solo konserler vermeye başlar. İlk trio albüm “A Time For Everything” ile “Victoires du Jazz” tarafından en iyi enstrümanist ödülünü alır. 2010 yılında ACT’den çıkan ilk albümü “Follow the White Rabbit” kariyerinde önemli sıçramalardan biri olur. Ardından yine ACT’den 2012’de gelen, saksafonda Emile Parisien ve Logan Richardson’ın kendisine eşlik ettiği “Alter Ego” ile sanatsal yeteneğinin tüm yönlerini ortaya koyar. Bu albüm şüphesiz Yahudi müzikal geleneklerine ve Yaron Herman’ın köklerine bir saygı niteliğinde değerlendirilebilir. Yaron Herman şu an yaşadığı ülke Fransa’da çağdaş caz sahnesinin en önemli gelecek vadeden müzisyenlerinden biri olarak değerlendirilmektedir.

(Müzisyenlerin kendi menajerlerine ait bir bilgilendirme yazısının çevirisine bazı bilgiler eklenerek hazırlanmıştır.)