William Parker

Place of Birth: Bronx, NY
Date of Birth: January 10, 1952
Education: Private studies with Richard Davis, Jimmy Garrison, Wilbur Ware and Paul West.
Fellowships, Prizes, Grants, Honors, Residencies
-New York State Music Fund commission of “Double Sunrise Over Neptune,” performed at Vision Festival XII in June 2007-Named as one of the “50 Greatest New York Musicians of All Time” in Time Out New York, March 2007
-Residency at Luther College’s “A Sense of Vocation” program in Decorah, Iowa, 2007

-Nameless Sound Resounding Vision Award, Houston, TX, 2006

-Residency at Hallwalls in Buffalo, NY, 2006

-Jazz Musician of the Year, Musica Jazz (Italian Magazine), 2005

-Participant in Visiting Artist Program at Haystack in Deer Isle, Maine, 2004

-Other Minds Festival commission of “Spirit Catcher for Four Musicians and Tape,” in San Francisco, CA March 2003

-Residency at the Djerassi Foundation in Woodside, CA, 2003

-Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust Commission of “Universal Tonality,” in 2002

-New York State Council on the Arts Commissioning Award, 2000

-Residency at Bennington College, Bennington, VT, 1991

-Residency at the Rotterdam Conservatory, 1991 and 1994

-New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) Artist Fellowship, 1988

Work, Highlights

2007: Premiered “Double Sunrise Over Neptune,” which was presented at Vision Festival XII and commissioned, recorded and commercially issued by Arts for Art with support from the New York State Music Fund. Recorded Alphaville Suite for double quartet. Premiered multimedia piece, “Expanded Humanity” with students from Humanities Preparatory Academy (NYC) and the Amistad Academy (Hartford, CT).

2006: Premiered “Lakota Chamber Music,” for woodwinds and “Light In The Hall of Whispers,” for string ensemble. Residency at Hallwalls in Buffalo, NY and performed theatre/Dance/Music Piece “Looking For Cookie Gilchrist” in collaboration with Patricia Nicholson.

2005: Played at Tel Aviv Jazz Festival with Roy Campbell’s Pyramid Trio, Voted Jazz musician of the year in Italy by Musica Jazz. Taught at the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music.

2002: “Universal Tonality” premiered at Roulette, commissioned by the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust.

2001: William Parker Quartet formed, recorded “O’Neal’s Porch.” Taught at the Rotterdam Conservatory. Premiered project entitled The Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield.

2000: William Parker Quartet formed, recorded “O’Neal’s Porch, recognized in 2001 by the New York Times as one of the Best Jazz Albums of the Year. “Kaleidoscope” premiered at the Fifth Annual Vision Festival, commissioned by Arts for Art with funds provided by NYSCA and performed by the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. Premiered “Big Orange Mountain,” performed by the Kitchen House Blend Band.

1999: The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra performed at Alice Tully Hall.

1998: The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra and Dance performed “Mass for the Healing of the World” at Verona.

1995: Premiered 10 compositions in an 8-week season with the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra at the Knitting Factory. Composed music for the dance-drama “The Shadow People.”

1994: Founded the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. Composed new music for Czechoslovak-American Marionette Theater, as well as arranging and re-orchestrating music from Dvorak’s opera “Rusalka.”

1993: Founded sextet In Order to Survive, which performed at Roulette and the Knitting Factory.

1991: Participated in Total Music meeting, Berlin, Germany. Composed music for Marcus Dance Theater, “The Generation Table,” performed at PS 122, and for Denis Charles Dance Troupe. Toured Japan, England, France and Germany with Cecil Taylor’s Feel Trio.

1988-89: Co-organized Second Sound Unity Festival, New York City. Presented “Vision on an Ordinary Day,” a composition for large ensemble, with poetry, voice and dance, at Cooper Hewitt Museum.

1986 – 87: Composed and presented “Vision Peace and Battle Cries,” a modern ballet for large orchestra with poetry and voice in collaboration with choreographer Patricia Nicholson at La MaMa. Toured Japan with Billy Bang and Europe with Cecil Taylor.

1985: Composed music for documentary shown on PBS, “Community Dig.”

1984: Co-organized “Sound Unity,” a five day international festival at CUANDO, New York City.

1983: Premiered composition, “Inheritance” for three voices, bassoon, alto flute, double bass and dance in Downtown Music Series at Third Street Music School.

1982: Premiered “A Thousand Cranes,” an opera for orchestra, dance and a chorus of 1000 school children, performed at opening of UN Second Special Session for Disarmament, June 1982.

1981: Concerts for solo bass in Berlin. Composed “Peace Suite” a composition for large ensemble, voices, dance and poetry. Toured Europe with Cecil Taylor Unit.

1980: Composed and performed “Night Skies,” a modern ballet in collaboration with choreographer Patricia Nicholson. Joined Cecil Taylor Unit.

1978: CETA Artist Program with Theatre for Forgotten. Composed for many of theater productions and performed in prisons and hospitals.

1975: Performed at the Five Spot with Don Cherry.

1974: Performed with Cecil Taylor’s big band at Carnegie Hall

William Parker is an improviser, and composer. He plays the bass, shakuhachi, double reeds, tuba, donson ngoni and gembri. He was born in 1952 in the Bronx, New York. He has studied bass with Richard Davis, Art Davis, Milt Hinton, Wilber Ware, and Jimmy Garrison.
William Parker entered the music scene in 1971, playing at Studio We, Studio Rivbea, Hilly’s on The Bowery, the Salt and Pepper club and The Baby Grand, and quickly became a sought after bass player in the New York music scene. He has played with many musicians from the avant-garde such as, Bill Dixon, Sunny Murray, Charles Tyler, Billy Higgins, Charles Brackeen, Alan Silva, Frank Wright, Frank Lowe, Rashid Ali, Donald Ayler, Sonny Simmons, Jeanne Lee, Gunter Hampel, Karl Berger Dave Burrell, Don Cherry, Cecil Taylor, Jimmy Lyons, Milford Graves and with traditionalists like Walter Bishop, Sr. and Maxine Sullivan.

William’s early collaborations with the dancer and choreographer Patricia Nicholson created a large repertoire of composed music for ensembles ranging from solo works to big band projects. Parker played in the Cecil Taylor Unit from 1980 through 1991. He has also performed with musicians from the AACM such as Muhal Richard Abrams, Roscoe Mitchell, Henry Threadgill, Anthony Braxton, Wadada Leo Smith, Ernest Dawkins, and The Art Ensemble of Chicago.

WParLnoonan-1
In addition to his work with artists in the United Stated, William Parker has developed a strong relationship with musicians in the European Improvised Music scene such as Peter Kowald, Peter Brotzmann, Han Bennink, Tony Oxley, Derek Bailey, Franz Hautzinger, Tomasz Stanko, John Tchicai , Louis Sclavis, Conny Bauer, Hannes Bauer, and Louis Moholo.

In 1994 William began leading his own bands, In Order To Survive, and The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. 2001 marked a turn toward a more universal sound by working with drummer Hamid Drake on O’Neal’s Porch. The Raining on the Moon Quintet followed, with addition of vocalist Leena Conquest to the O’Neals Porch quartet. Most notable among many recent projects is the Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield.

William has taught at Bennington College, NYU, The New England Conservatory of Music, Cal Arts, New School and The Rotterdam Conservatory of Music. He has also taught music workshops in cities throughout the world including Paris, Berlin and Tokyo and the Lower East Side of New York.

Parker is also a theorist and author of several books including the Sound Journal (centeringmusic), Document Humanum (centeringmusic) , Music and the Shadow People (centeringmusic) and The Mayor of Punkville (centeringmusic).

Steve Greenlee of the Boston Globe stated in July 2002, “William Parker has emerged as the most important leader of the current avant-garde scene in jazz.” He is working in many of the more important groups in this genre, some of the most prestigious being his own, i.e. The Curtis Mayfield Project, Little Huey Creative Orchestra, In Order to Survive, William Parker’s Quartet and other groups. Mr. Parker is one of the most important composers in our time period, he is also a poet whose words are beginning to be heard in various media: in print, in song and in his theatre piece, “Music and the Shadow People.”s/performances for young people that he has conducted, both in the USA and in Europe. This has been for him amongst some of his most important work and greatest successes.”

In ‘95 the Village Voice characterized William Parker as “the most consistently brilliant free jazz bassist of all time.”

Mr. Parker has released over 20 albums under his leadership. In 1995 after years of obscurity as a leader, he released Flowers Grow In My Room, on the Centering label. This was the first documentation of the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. This CD hit #1 on the CMJ charts and The Little Huey began to tour. They have performed in the Verona Jazz Festival and Banlieues Bleues among others. William Parker’s new Quartet has hit with rave reviews for both albums “O’Neals Porch” and “Raining on the Moon.”

These releases and their success highlight William Parker as an outstanding composer and bandleader. From the beginning of his musical career, William Parker has been prolific, composing music all of the music for his projects. His compositional skills span a range including operas, oratorios, ballets, film scores, and soliloquies for solo instruments. He has also successfully explored diverse concepts in instrumentation for large and small ensembles.

William Parker is a poet, with three volumes published thus far: “Music Is,” “Document Humanum,” and “The Shadow People.”

“He (William Parker) is something of a father figure” stated Larry Blumenfeld in a New York Times article. He has looked for and encouraged young talent and has been a mentor to many young musicians.
Place of Birth: Bronx, NY
Date of Birth: January 10, 1952
Education: Private studies with Richard Davis, Jimmy Garrison, Wilbur Ware and Paul West.
Fellowships, Prizes, Grants, Honors, Residencies
-New York State Music Fund commission of “Double Sunrise Over Neptune,” performed at Vision Festival XII in June 2007-Named as one of the “50 Greatest New York Musicians of All Time” in Time Out New York, March 2007
-Residency at Luther College’s “A Sense of Vocation” program in Decorah, Iowa, 2007

-Nameless Sound Resounding Vision Award, Houston, TX, 2006

-Residency at Hallwalls in Buffalo, NY, 2006

-Jazz Musician of the Year, Musica Jazz (Italian Magazine), 2005

-Participant in Visiting Artist Program at Haystack in Deer Isle, Maine, 2004

-Other Minds Festival commission of “Spirit Catcher for Four Musicians and Tape,” in San Francisco, CA March 2003

-Residency at the Djerassi Foundation in Woodside, CA, 2003

-Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust Commission of “Universal Tonality,” in 2002

-New York State Council on the Arts Commissioning Award, 2000

-Residency at Bennington College, Bennington, VT, 1991

-Residency at the Rotterdam Conservatory, 1991 and 1994

-New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) Artist Fellowship, 1988

Work, Highlights

2007: Premiered “Double Sunrise Over Neptune,” which was presented at Vision Festival XII and commissioned, recorded and commercially issued by Arts for Art with support from the New York State Music Fund. Recorded Alphaville Suite for double quartet. Premiered multimedia piece, “Expanded Humanity” with students from Humanities Preparatory Academy (NYC) and the Amistad Academy (Hartford, CT).

2006: Premiered “Lakota Chamber Music,” for woodwinds and “Light In The Hall of Whispers,” for string ensemble. Residency at Hallwalls in Buffalo, NY and performed theatre/Dance/Music Piece “Looking For Cookie Gilchrist” in collaboration with Patricia Nicholson.

2005: Played at Tel Aviv Jazz Festival with Roy Campbell’s Pyramid Trio, Voted Jazz musician of the year in Italy by Musica Jazz. Taught at the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music.

2002: “Universal Tonality” premiered at Roulette, commissioned by the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust.

2001: William Parker Quartet formed, recorded “O’Neal’s Porch.” Taught at the Rotterdam Conservatory. Premiered project entitled The Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield.

2000: William Parker Quartet formed, recorded “O’Neal’s Porch, recognized in 2001 by the New York Times as one of the Best Jazz Albums of the Year. “Kaleidoscope” premiered at the Fifth Annual Vision Festival, commissioned by Arts for Art with funds provided by NYSCA and performed by the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. Premiered “Big Orange Mountain,” performed by the Kitchen House Blend Band.

1999: The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra performed at Alice Tully Hall.

1998: The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra and Dance performed “Mass for the Healing of the World” at Verona.

1995: Premiered 10 compositions in an 8-week season with the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra at the Knitting Factory. Composed music for the dance-drama “The Shadow People.”

1994: Founded the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. Composed new music for Czechoslovak-American Marionette Theater, as well as arranging and re-orchestrating music from Dvorak’s opera “Rusalka.”

1993: Founded sextet In Order to Survive, which performed at Roulette and the Knitting Factory.

1991: Participated in Total Music meeting, Berlin, Germany. Composed music for Marcus Dance Theater, “The Generation Table,” performed at PS 122, and for Denis Charles Dance Troupe. Toured Japan, England, France and Germany with Cecil Taylor’s Feel Trio.

1988-89: Co-organized Second Sound Unity Festival, New York City. Presented “Vision on an Ordinary Day,” a composition for large ensemble, with poetry, voice and dance, at Cooper Hewitt Museum.

1986 – 87: Composed and presented “Vision Peace and Battle Cries,” a modern ballet for large orchestra with poetry and voice in collaboration with choreographer Patricia Nicholson at La MaMa. Toured Japan with Billy Bang and Europe with Cecil Taylor.

1985: Composed music for documentary shown on PBS, “Community Dig.”

1984: Co-organized “Sound Unity,” a five day international festival at CUANDO, New York City.

1983: Premiered composition, “Inheritance” for three voices, bassoon, alto flute, double bass and dance in Downtown Music Series at Third Street Music School.

1982: Premiered “A Thousand Cranes,” an opera for orchestra, dance and a chorus of 1000 school children, performed at opening of UN Second Special Session for Disarmament, June 1982.

1981: Concerts for solo bass in Berlin. Composed “Peace Suite” a composition for large ensemble, voices, dance and poetry. Toured Europe with Cecil Taylor Unit.

1980: Composed and performed “Night Skies,” a modern ballet in collaboration with choreographer Patricia Nicholson. Joined Cecil Taylor Unit.

1978: CETA Artist Program with Theatre for Forgotten. Composed for many of theater productions and performed in prisons and hospitals.

1975: Performed at the Five Spot with Don Cherry.

1974: Performed with Cecil Taylor’s big band at Carnegie Hall

William Parker is an improviser, and composer. He plays the bass, shakuhachi, double reeds, tuba, donson ngoni and gembri. He was born in 1952 in the Bronx, New York. He has studied bass with Richard Davis, Art Davis, Milt Hinton, Wilber Ware, and Jimmy Garrison.
William Parker entered the music scene in 1971, playing at Studio We, Studio Rivbea, Hilly’s on The Bowery, the Salt and Pepper club and The Baby Grand, and quickly became a sought after bass player in the New York music scene. He has played with many musicians from the avant-garde such as, Bill Dixon, Sunny Murray, Charles Tyler, Billy Higgins, Charles Brackeen, Alan Silva, Frank Wright, Frank Lowe, Rashid Ali, Donald Ayler, Sonny Simmons, Jeanne Lee, Gunter Hampel, Karl Berger Dave Burrell, Don Cherry, Cecil Taylor, Jimmy Lyons, Milford Graves and with traditionalists like Walter Bishop, Sr. and Maxine Sullivan.

William’s early collaborations with the dancer and choreographer Patricia Nicholson created a large repertoire of composed music for ensembles ranging from solo works to big band projects. Parker played in the Cecil Taylor Unit from 1980 through 1991. He has also performed with musicians from the AACM such as Muhal Richard Abrams, Roscoe Mitchell, Henry Threadgill, Anthony Braxton, Wadada Leo Smith, Ernest Dawkins, and The Art Ensemble of Chicago.

WParLnoonan-1
In addition to his work with artists in the United Stated, William Parker has developed a strong relationship with musicians in the European Improvised Music scene such as Peter Kowald, Peter Brotzmann, Han Bennink, Tony Oxley, Derek Bailey, Franz Hautzinger, Tomasz Stanko, John Tchicai , Louis Sclavis, Conny Bauer, Hannes Bauer, and Louis Moholo.

In 1994 William began leading his own bands, In Order To Survive, and The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. 2001 marked a turn toward a more universal sound by working with drummer Hamid Drake on O’Neal’s Porch. The Raining on the Moon Quintet followed, with addition of vocalist Leena Conquest to the O’Neals Porch quartet. Most notable among many recent projects is the Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield.

William has taught at Bennington College, NYU, The New England Conservatory of Music, Cal Arts, New School and The Rotterdam Conservatory of Music. He has also taught music workshops in cities throughout the world including Paris, Berlin and Tokyo and the Lower East Side of New York.

Parker is also a theorist and author of several books including the Sound Journal (centeringmusic), Document Humanum (centeringmusic) , Music and the Shadow People (centeringmusic) and The Mayor of Punkville (centeringmusic).

Steve Greenlee of the Boston Globe stated in July 2002, “William Parker has emerged as the most important leader of the current avant-garde scene in jazz.” He is working in many of the more important groups in this genre, some of the most prestigious being his own, i.e. The Curtis Mayfield Project, Little Huey Creative Orchestra, In Order to Survive, William Parker’s Quartet and other groups. Mr. Parker is one of the most important composers in our time period, he is also a poet whose words are beginning to be heard in various media: in print, in song and in his theatre piece, “Music and the Shadow People.”s/performances for young people that he has conducted, both in the USA and in Europe. This has been for him amongst some of his most important work and greatest successes.”

In ‘95 the Village Voice characterized William Parker as “the most consistently brilliant free jazz bassist of all time.”

Mr. Parker has released over 20 albums under his leadership. In 1995 after years of obscurity as a leader, he released Flowers Grow In My Room, on the Centering label. This was the first documentation of the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. This CD hit #1 on the CMJ charts and The Little Huey began to tour. They have performed in the Verona Jazz Festival and Banlieues Bleues among others. William Parker’s new Quartet has hit with rave reviews for both albums “O’Neals Porch” and “Raining on the Moon.”

These releases and their success highlight William Parker as an outstanding composer and bandleader. From the beginning of his musical career, William Parker has been prolific, composing music all of the music for his projects. His compositional skills span a range including operas, oratorios, ballets, film scores, and soliloquies for solo instruments. He has also successfully explored diverse concepts in instrumentation for large and small ensembles.

William Parker is a poet, with three volumes published thus far: “Music Is,” “Document Humanum,” and “The Shadow People.”

“He (William Parker) is something of a father figure” stated Larry Blumenfeld in a New York Times article. He has looked for and encouraged young talent and has been a mentor to many young musicians.

Brio

Brio is a band from Zagreb, Croatia. This duo was formed somewhere in 1999 and played its first show in 2001. Since its formation, and with members coming from Zagreb punk-rock, noise-rock scene, Brio has devoted itself to practicing and performing free-improvised music. Brio has made a couple of DIY records, two of which (At the playground, What we got ourselves here is a problem in communication; both recorded live in 2005) were reviewed by Eugene Chadbourne in All Music Guide under avant-garde section and got great reviews. Throughout the years Brio played at all major croatian festivals dedicated to improvisation and modern music (Thirsty Ear Festival, NO Jazz Festival, Improspections, …) often opening/supporting for players like Peter Brotzmann, Mats Gustafsson, Shoji Hano, Triage, Zu, The Chicago Underground Duo, The Ex, Mathew Shipp… After playing strictly acoustic, no amps-no PA music for almost ten years, in 2009 Brio finally found a suitable practice room and shifted its focus back on straight-to-the amp electric guitar and classic four piece drum-kit set up. From the start till now, Brio has been completely self-managed band.
Brio’s live performances are often described by critics as rain of meteors crushing everything in front of it, not leaving you a moment for respite (Igor Jelinović, Radio SC). Taking free improvisation as its foundation, Brio is dedicated to creating a music of the moment, fully expressing the whole range of human emotions, resulting in music encompassing full dynamic and intensity ranges, from light breeze to avalanche. Although without predefined metric and tempo, drumming is polyrithmical, swinging, giving strong pulse, with the guitar singing above or growling below, sometimes almost creating unmovable, static wall of sound. Influenced by A.Schoenberg concepts of free atonality, inverto-retrograde serial techniques of A. Webern, J. Cage free use of time, Brio is creating lines of independant microtonal clusters combined with heavy blues-noise riffing, with a rhythm section at ground shaking volumes as its base. Brio is not satisfied even to be categorizaed as free improvisation collective. This music will leave the minds of audience perplexed, and their bodies well agitated.Brio is a band from Zagreb, Croatia. This duo was formed somewhere in 1999 and played its first show in 2001. Since its formation, and with members coming from Zagreb punk-rock, noise-rock scene, Brio has devoted itself to practicing and performing free-improvised music. Brio has made a couple of DIY records, two of which (At the playground, What we got ourselves here is a problem in communication; both recorded live in 2005) were reviewed by Eugene Chadbourne in All Music Guide under avant-garde section and got great reviews. Throughout the years Brio played at all major croatian festivals dedicated to improvisation and modern music (Thirsty Ear Festival, NO Jazz Festival, Improspections, …) often opening/supporting for players like Peter Brotzmann, Mats Gustafsson, Shoji Hano, Triage, Zu, The Chicago Underground Duo, The Ex, Mathew Shipp… After playing strictly acoustic, no amps-no PA music for almost ten years, in 2009 Brio finally found a suitable practice room and shifted its focus back on straight-to-the amp electric guitar and classic four piece drum-kit set up. From the start till now, Brio has been completely self-managed band.
Brio’s live performances are often described by critics as rain of meteors crushing everything in front of it, not leaving you a moment for respite (Igor Jelinović, Radio SC). Taking free improvisation as its foundation, Brio is dedicated to creating a music of the moment, fully expressing the whole range of human emotions, resulting in music encompassing full dynamic and intensity ranges, from light breeze to avalanche. Although without predefined metric and tempo, drumming is polyrithmical, swinging, giving strong pulse, with the guitar singing above or growling below, sometimes almost creating unmovable, static wall of sound. Influenced by A.Schoenberg concepts of free atonality, inverto-retrograde serial techniques of A. Webern, J. Cage free use of time, Brio is creating lines of independant microtonal clusters combined with heavy blues-noise riffing, with a rhythm section at ground shaking volumes as its base. Brio is not satisfied even to be categorizaed as free improvisation collective. This music will leave the minds of audience perplexed, and their bodies well agitated.

Peter Evans

Peter Evans has been a member of the New York musical community since 2003, when he moved to the city after graduating Oberlin Conservatory with a degree in classical trumpet. Peter currently works in a wide variety of areas, including solo performance, chamber orchestras, free improvised settings, electro-acoustic music, jazz and composition.
As a performer, Evans has been working to broaden the expressive range of his chosen instrument and enjoys playing with steady configurations of players and composers. Current bands include the Peter Evans Trio, Quartet and Quintet, Moppa Elliott’s terrorist bebop band Mostly Other People Do the Killing, the hyperactive improvisation duo Sparks (with Tom Blancarte), duo with trumpeter Nate Wooley, as well as a sustained interest in solo performance. Other projects include two collaborative trios: one with Mary Halvorson and Weasel Walter, and Pulverize the Sound with Tim Dahl and Mike Pride. He also collaborates frequently with saxophonist Evan Parker, in small groups as well as being a member of Parker’s Electro-Acoustic Ensemble. Other collaborators have included: Peter Brotzmann, Barry Guy, Clayton Thomas, Jim Black, Okkyung Lee, Sam Pluta, Zach Hill, Steve Shick, John Zorn, David Taylor, Eric Boeren, John Hebert, Kassa Overall, Mats Gustafsson, Agusti Fernandez, Ricardo Gallo and Axel Dörner.
In New York, Peter also performs contemporary notated music and is a member of the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE). This group focus premieres many new works from young composers as well as 20th century classics by composers such as Iannis Xenakis and Edgard Varese. Peter is also an experienced teacher, having given workshops on music, trumpet, and improvisation at institutions including the University of California in San Diego, the Birmingham Conservatoire, The Juilliard School, the Manhattan School of Music, Northwestern University and the Hochschule für Musik Köln. In June 2008 Peter traveled to the Philippines with the Cultures in Harmony project, teaching, collaborating and performing with tribal musicians in Mindanao. Evans has performed at many of the major festivals for Jazz and Improvised Music, including the Moers Festival, the Ulrichsberg Kaleidophon Festival, Jazz em Agosto in Lisbon, Jazz a Mulhouse, Warsaw Jazz Days, the Vancouver Jazz Festival and Jazz Middelheim in Antwerp. In 2010 Evans had compositions premiered at the Darmstadt and Donaueschingen Musiktage Festivals, and was named as one of the top 5 “Musicians of the Year” for the second year in a row by All About Jazz New York.Peter Evans has been a member of the New York musical community since 2003, when he moved to the city after graduating Oberlin Conservatory with a degree in classical trumpet. Peter currently works in a wide variety of areas, including solo performance, chamber orchestras, free improvised settings, electro-acoustic music, jazz and composition.
As a performer, Evans has been working to broaden the expressive range of his chosen instrument and enjoys playing with steady configurations of players and composers. Current bands include the Peter Evans Trio, Quartet and Quintet, Moppa Elliott’s terrorist bebop band Mostly Other People Do the Killing, the hyperactive improvisation duo Sparks (with Tom Blancarte), duo with trumpeter Nate Wooley, as well as a sustained interest in solo performance. Other projects include two collaborative trios: one with Mary Halvorson and Weasel Walter, and Pulverize the Sound with Tim Dahl and Mike Pride. He also collaborates frequently with saxophonist Evan Parker, in small groups as well as being a member of Parker’s Electro-Acoustic Ensemble. Other collaborators have included: Peter Brotzmann, Barry Guy, Clayton Thomas, Jim Black, Okkyung Lee, Sam Pluta, Zach Hill, Steve Shick, John Zorn, David Taylor, Eric Boeren, John Hebert, Kassa Overall, Mats Gustafsson, Agusti Fernandez, Ricardo Gallo and Axel Dörner.
In New York, Peter also performs contemporary notated music and is a member of the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE). This group focus premieres many new works from young composers as well as 20th century classics by composers such as Iannis Xenakis and Edgard Varese. Peter is also an experienced teacher, having given workshops on music, trumpet, and improvisation at institutions including the University of California in San Diego, the Birmingham Conservatoire, The Juilliard School, the Manhattan School of Music, Northwestern University and the Hochschule für Musik Köln. In June 2008 Peter traveled to the Philippines with the Cultures in Harmony project, teaching, collaborating and performing with tribal musicians in Mindanao. Evans has performed at many of the major festivals for Jazz and Improvised Music, including the Moers Festival, the Ulrichsberg Kaleidophon Festival, Jazz em Agosto in Lisbon, Jazz a Mulhouse, Warsaw Jazz Days, the Vancouver Jazz Festival and Jazz Middelheim in Antwerp. In 2010 Evans had compositions premiered at the Darmstadt and Donaueschingen Musiktage Festivals, and was named as one of the top 5 “Musicians of the Year” for the second year in a row by All About Jazz New York.

Glauco Benedetti

Glauco Benedetti(classe 1987) intraprende lo studio della tuba in giovanissima età, iniziando presto a collaborare con enti lirici e sinfonici. Accanto all’attività di orchestrale coltiva da subito l’interesse e lo studio di altre tradizioni musicali quali jazz, rock e pop, esplorando le possibilità del proprio strumento nei più vari e spesso inconsueti contesti musicali.

Ha conseguito il diploma tradizionale di tuba nel 2008, nel 2013 il diploma di secondo livello di Jazz presso il Conservatorio “F. Venezze” di Rovigo.

Ha collaborato tra gli altri con Francesco Diodati, Ada Montellanico, Achille Succi, John De Leo, Jacopo Jacopetti, Piero Bittolo Bon, Christian Escoudé, Marco Tamburini,

Roberto Gatto, Roberto Cecchetto, Domenico Caliri, Pasquale Mirra, Marco Frattini, Enrico Morello, Enrico Zanisi,

Tiziana Ghiglioni..

Ha partecipato al Back-up tour 2013 di Jovanotti.

Tommaso Cappellato

Tommaso Cappellato è un batterista e compositore eclettico e creativo. Forte di un groove deciso, nutrito da 9 anni di residenza a New York, studi alla New School University e due anni come leader della house band alla prestigiosa Rainbow Room, arricchisce il suo linguaggio con viaggi in diverse parti del mondo tra cui Africa, Brasile, India, Australia e Giappone. Ha suonato con Don Byron, Michael Blake, George Cables, Aaron Goldberg, Steve Grossman, Debbie Harry, Jon Hendricks, The Jazz Passengers, Enrico Pieranunzi, Enrico Rava, Marc Ribot, Kurt Rosenwinkel. Tra i suoi ultimi progetti spiccano il trio “Blackground” con Don Byron e Fabrizio Puglisi, la “Tommaso Cappellato Orchestra” composta da 13 elementi arrangiata da Michele Corcella, e “Astral Travel” un tributo allo Spiritual Jazz e una dedica al pianista e compositore Harry Whitaker, uno dei suoi mentori piu’ significativi.Drummer and composer Tommaso Cappellato spent a decade in New York crafting his technique and style. He received a BFA in Jazz Performance at The New School University, and took part to several musical projects playing all styles if music. He extensively travelled the world (Africa, India, Brazil, Australia, Japan) to tour and collaborate with many influential artists, including Don Byron, Michael Blake, George Cables, Aaron Goldberg, Steve Grossman, Debbie Harry, Jon Hendricks, The Jazz Passengers, Enrico Pieranunzi, Enrico Rava, Marc Ribot, Kurt Rosenwinkel. Among his latest projects are “Blackground Trio” with Don Byron and Fabrizio Puglisi, his own 14-piece Orchestra arranged and conducted by Michele Corcella and “Astral Travel”, a tribute to Spiritual Jazz and a dedication to the memory of late pianist, composer and arranger Harry Whitaker.

Laboule

Laboule è Paolo Novellino: nasce a Milano nel 1984 e cresce in Valtellina fra monti e arrampicate sugli alberi.

Chitarrista di nascita e polistrumentista per necessità e spirito d’avventura, passa il tempo in valle ad esplorare la chitarra suonando e fondando svariate formazioni musicali.

Dal 2007 al 2010 co-produce due dischi come batterista per i Fuseaux e nello stesso periodo inizia la collaborazione con il laboratorio creativo People From the Mountains.

Dopo l’ascolto di “Rocky Mountain raga” di Robbie Basho torna alla chitarra con lo pseudonimo LaBoule, con il quale produce l’omonimo ep “LABOULE” promosso da concerti in tutta Italia ed in Francia, Olanda e Germania come opening in act per due tour di Musica da Cucina.

Nel 2013 Esce “Refugio” , disco d’esordio per Long Song Records.LABOULE is Paolo Novellino: he was born in Milan in 1984 and grew up in Valtellina, among the mountains and trees to be climbed.
Guitarist by birth and poly-instrumentalist by necessity, with the desire for adventure, he spent his time in the valley exploring the guitar and founding several bands as a poly-instrumentalist.
But after listening to “Rocky Mountain raga” by Robbie Basho, he got back to the guitar with the stage name LABOULE. As LABOULE, he has self-produced an EP with the same name, which has been promoted with several concerts as the opening act for Musica da Cucina.

Lilies On Mars

Lilies on Mars sono Lisa Masia e Marina Cristofalo, musiciste con sede a Londra affascinate dallo spirito DIY, hanno prodotto e mixato il loro debut album in Aprile 2009, masterizzato da B. Gautier, produttore dei Cure, Paul McCartney, Fleet Foxes e John Peel. Lo stesso anno le Lilies debuttano live con Franco Battiato al teatro Le Cigale di Parigi per poi continuare il loro tour in UK, Italia, Germania e USA. Nel 2010 vincono il contest Romaeropa Webfactory re-interpretando il brano di Christian Fennezs “The Seventh string” con il quale si esibiscono al Palladium di Roma. Fennezs, dice di loro: “Sono stato colpito immediatamente dal loro remix. Hanno colto in modo molto bello l’atmosfera e lo spirito della composizione originale e lo hanno trasferito in qualcosa di interamente nuovo, allo stesso tempo unico e bello”.

Nel Luglio del 2011 esce “Wish You Were a Pony”, secondo lavoro autoprodotto dal duo, mixato da Dan Brantigan ( musicista e co-writer di Kaki King ) a New York. “Aquarium’s Key” e “Crabs”, singoli estratti dal disco sono stati presentati in UK da Tom Robinson e Ruth Barnes su BBC 6 Music : “ We LOVE this band.. how could you NOT like the almost perfect slice of indie-pop that this girls dish up.” Sono state ospiti delle radio sperimentali e di culto londinese Resonance FM, Amazing radio, Strangeways radio e IATP negli Stati Uniti. Nel Marzo 2012 suonano 5 showcases al SXSW Festival in Austin TX, con Ringo Deathstarr, Cashier n9, Alpine, Kidstreet, Silver Swans etc.

Il 25 marzo del 2013 le Lilies on Mars pubblicano il loro terzo disco “DOT TO DOT”, per la Long Song Records/Elsewhere Factory distribuito da Audioglobe. Le registrazioni sono iniziate nel loro home studio a Londra, per poi essere ultimate nella casa al mare di Lisa in Sardegna. La calma, le passeggiate in spiaggia e l’aria della Sardegna hanno avuto un impatto fondamentale sull’ ispirazione e la ricerca di suoni nuovi. “Oceanic Landscape”, primo singolo estratto dal disco, vanta la prestigiosa partecipazione di Franco Battiato, generando una perfetta miscela tra pop e sperimentazione. Il brano ha ricevuto ottimi consensi dalla critica, e’ stato inoltre nominato “Track of the Week” da Simon Raymonde (Bella Union, Cocteau Twins) nel suo show su Amazing Radio in UK. Tra gli ospiti di DOT TO DOT anche la batterista Valentina Magaletti (The Oscillation, Kid Millions, Buttonhead).

Lilies on Mars is the recording project of Lisa Masia and Marina Cristofalo, two multi-instrumentalist musicians based in London.

Fascinated by the spirit of DIY, they produced and mixed their debut album, recorded at their home studio in east London and self-released in the spring of 2009 on their record label Elsewhere Factory. The album was mastered

by Bill Gautier (The Cure, Paul McCartney, John Peel, Fleet Foxes).

In May 2011 they released their second album “Wish You Were a Pony”, recorded and produced by Lilies on Mars and mixed by Dan Brantigan (Kaki King co-writer and musician). Aquarium’s Key, the first single from the record, was introduced in the UK by Tom Robinson and Ruth Barnes on BBC 6 Music: “We LOVE this band… that refrain about the ‘keeeeeys’ will get stuck in you head whether you like it or not. Then again how could you NOT like the almost perfect slice of indie-pop that these girls dish up.”

During their career Lilies on Mars have collaborated with highly respected musicians and composers, including Christian Fennesz, working on a remix of his song “The 7th String” which they have performed live together at the Palladium Theatre in Rome. After a very busy year performing in the London and UK underground scene they debuted at SXSW 2012 Festival in Austin, TX, opening for Ringo Deathstarr, Cashier N9, Alpine, Kidstreet and Silver Swans.

On the 25th of March 2013, Lilies on Mars release their third album titled “DOT TO DOT” on Long Song Records/Elsewhere Factory, Audioglobe distribuition. Recording sessions started at their home studio in London and ended at Lisa’s beach house in Sardinia, as their creative journey pulled them towards a tranquil space to develop and experiment with new sounds.

“Oceanic Landscape”, first single taken from the album features Italian singer-experimentalist Franco Battiato. Delivering the perfect blend of pop and experimentation is a trademark of both artists and gives a generous introduction to the full-length record. Oceanic Landscape has picked as “Track of The Week” by Simon Raymonde (Bella Union/Cocteau Twins) on his radio show on Amazing radio UK. Another special guest on DOT TO DOT is drummer Valentina Magaletti (The Oscillation, Kid Millions, Buttonhead).

Keith Tippett

Keith and Julie Tippett are among the most important European jazz musicians (improvisers, composers, arrangers) in the last 40 years. The extent of their work is vast both individually and as a couple; here is a short story around an epic journey.

Keith Tippett has become the father figure of postmodern jazz piano in the UK. The only dispute in such a statement is the word ‘jazz’; used here to describe a music extending way beyond the bounds of music rooted in “the great American moment”. Keith Tippett has created and fashioned a form of spontaneous composition that finds its setting in totally unique solo piano studies via quartets, sextets, octets and large scale interactive jazz orchestras, fusing compositional arrangements with detailed instant improvising (Centipede, Ark, the Georgian Ensemble and Tapestry Orchestra). The breadth of his activity trips the imagination into a massive canon of possibilities and resolutions. For example his work with Louis Moholo-Moholo and the other ‘Blue Notes’ musicians exiled from South Africa in the 1960’s, plus his on-going commissions in contemporary music composition including the stunning ‘Linukea’ Piano Quintet, his key role in the legendary decades-driven quartet, Mujician with Paul Dunmall, Paul Rogers and Tony Levin, and finally, at the heart of it all, the essential core duo of Couple In Spirit with Julie Tippetts. The conclusion is starkly obvious, we are faced with a phenomenon way, way outside any kind of regular understanding of British ‘jazz’ and improvisation.

A singer beyond song, the great Julie Tippetts (the ‘s’ is a story for another day) is, perhaps inevitably, bound up in most of the above paragraph referring to her husband. Although she is a central catalyst in his work, her importance is also as a poet and creator of a distinctly independent language within the song form, a crucial factor in their collective story. In 1967 as Julie Driscoll with Brian Auger’s Trinity, she scored a hit record with ‘This Wheel’s on Fire’. Within two years Julie by-passed popular music conventions, painstakingly exploring her way into what would become a whole new vocabulary of soundscape. By the early 1970’s her presence in the pioneering quartet version of Ovary Lodge with Keith laid the foundations for improvisation as a unique form of instant composition. Today her voice remains a panoply of experimentation. The Western song form is not rejected yet neither are Keith and Julie Tippett confined by it. Julie has produced her own canon of recordings, including ‘Ghosts of Gold’ and ‘Tales of Finin’, collaborative works with computer wizard and multi-instrumentalist Martin Archer. ‘Tales’ was voted a Jazzwise magazine 2011 ‘Record of the Year’. Other collaborators at different times have included John Stevens, Maggie Nicols, Carla Bley and Robert Wyatt.

Any attempt to summarise Keith and Julie Tippett on one side of paper leaves out more than it includes. Although hugely influential Keith Tippett is a mysterious figure. His in-depth interview in 2010 on the BBC Radio 3 Jazz Library series revealed the scope and brilliance of his vision. As the title ‘Supernova’ (his piano duet with Stan Tracey released in 2008) suggests, this is music which literally explodes the possible. The fusion with Julie Tippetts is intensely personal yet totally crucial to their distinctly different kind of feast for the ears. To listen to the eloquence of 2011’s Octet recording ‘From Granite to Wind’ is to hear this Couple In Spirit siphoning the soul of their own Great Experiment.

Written by Steve Day, 2012: ‘Two Full Ears – Listening To Improvised Music’ (Soundworld); ‘Song of The Fly’ (Leo Records)Keith and Julie Tippett are among the most important European jazz musicians (improvisers, composers, arrangers) in the last 40 years. The extent of their work is vast both individually and as a couple; here is a short story around an epic journey.

Keith Tippett has become the father figure of postmodern jazz piano in the UK. The only dispute in such a statement is the word ‘jazz’; used here to describe a music extending way beyond the bounds of music rooted in “the great American moment”. Keith Tippett has created and fashioned a form of spontaneous composition that finds its setting in totally unique solo piano studies via quartets, sextets, octets and large scale interactive jazz orchestras, fusing compositional arrangements with detailed instant improvising (Centipede, Ark, the Georgian Ensemble and Tapestry Orchestra). The breadth of his activity trips the imagination into a massive canon of possibilities and resolutions. For example his work with Louis Moholo-Moholo and the other ‘Blue Notes’ musicians exiled from South Africa in the 1960’s, plus his on-going commissions in contemporary music composition including the stunning ‘Linukea’ Piano Quintet, his key role in the legendary decades-driven quartet, Mujician with Paul Dunmall, Paul Rogers and Tony Levin, and finally, at the heart of it all, the essential core duo of Couple In Spirit with Julie Tippetts. The conclusion is starkly obvious, we are faced with a phenomenon way, way outside any kind of regular understanding of British ‘jazz’ and improvisation.

A singer beyond song, the great Julie Tippetts (the ‘s’ is a story for another day) is, perhaps inevitably, bound up in most of the above paragraph referring to her husband. Although she is a central catalyst in his work, her importance is also as a poet and creator of a distinctly independent language within the song form, a crucial factor in their collective story. In 1967 as Julie Driscoll with Brian Auger’s Trinity, she scored a hit record with ‘This Wheel’s on Fire’. Within two years Julie by-passed popular music conventions, painstakingly exploring her way into what would become a whole new vocabulary of soundscape. By the early 1970’s her presence in the pioneering quartet version of Ovary Lodge with Keith laid the foundations for improvisation as a unique form of instant composition. Today her voice remains a panoply of experimentation. The Western song form is not rejected yet neither are Keith and Julie Tippett confined by it. Julie has produced her own canon of recordings, including ‘Ghosts of Gold’ and ‘Tales of Finin’, collaborative works with computer wizard and multi-instrumentalist Martin Archer. ‘Tales’ was voted a Jazzwise magazine 2011 ‘Record of the Year’. Other collaborators at different times have included John Stevens, Maggie Nicols, Carla Bley and Robert Wyatt.

Any attempt to summarise Keith and Julie Tippett on one side of paper leaves out more than it includes. Although hugely influential Keith Tippett is a mysterious figure. His in-depth interview in 2010 on the BBC Radio 3 Jazz Library series revealed the scope and brilliance of his vision. As the title ‘Supernova’ (his piano duet with Stan Tracey released in 2008) suggests, this is music which literally explodes the possible. The fusion with Julie Tippetts is intensely personal yet totally crucial to their distinctly different kind of feast for the ears. To listen to the eloquence of 2011’s Octet recording ‘From Granite to Wind’ is to hear this Couple In Spirit siphoning the soul of their own Great Experiment.

Written by Steve Day, 2012: ‘Two Full Ears – Listening To Improvised Music’ (Soundworld); ‘Song of The Fly’ (Leo Records)

Alan Silva

Silva was born a British subject to an Azorean/Portuguese mother, Irene da Silva, and a black Bermudian father known only as “Ruby”. At the very height of racial segregation in the United States, Silva emigrated to the United States at the age of five with his mother, eventually acquiring U.S. citizenship by the age of 18 or 19. He adopted the stage name of Alan Silva in his twenties.

Silva was quoted in a Bermudan newspaper in 1988 as saying that although he left the island at a young age, he always considered himself Bermudian. He was raised in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City, where he first began studying the trumpet, and moved on to study theupright bass.

Silva is known as one of the most inventive bass players in jazz and has performed with many of the great names in the world of avant-garde jazz, including Cecil TaylorSun RaAlbert AylerSunny Murray, and Archie Shepp.

Silva performed in 1964’s October Revolution as a pioneer in the free jazz movement, and for Ayler’s Live in Greenwich Village album. He has lived mainly in Paris since the early 1970s, where he formed the Celestrial Communication Orchestra, a group dedicated to the performance of free jazz with various instrumental combinations.[1] In the 1990s he picked up the electronic keyboard, declaring that his bass playing no longer surprised him. He has also used the electric violin and electric sarangi on his recordings.

Since around 2000 he has performed more frequently as a bassist and bandleader, notably at New York City’s annual Vision Festivals.Silva was born a British subject to an Azorean/Portuguese mother, Irene da Silva, and a black Bermudian father known only as “Ruby”. At the very height of racial segregation in the United States, Silva emigrated to the United States at the age of five with his mother, eventually acquiring U.S. citizenship by the age of 18 or 19. He adopted the stage name of Alan Silva in his twenties.

Silva was quoted in a Bermudan newspaper in 1988 as saying that although he left the island at a young age, he always considered himself Bermudian. He was raised in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City, where he first began studying the trumpet, and moved on to study theupright bass.

Silva is known as one of the most inventive bass players in jazz and has performed with many of the great names in the world of avant-garde jazz, including Cecil TaylorSun RaAlbert AylerSunny Murray, and Archie Shepp.

Silva performed in 1964’s October Revolution as a pioneer in the free jazz movement, and for Ayler’s Live in Greenwich Village album. He has lived mainly in Paris since the early 1970s, where he formed the Celestrial Communication Orchestra, a group dedicated to the performance of free jazz with various instrumental combinations.[1] In the 1990s he picked up the electronic keyboard, declaring that his bass playing no longer surprised him. He has also used the electric violin and electric sarangi on his recordings.

Since around 2000 he has performed more frequently as a bassist and bandleader, notably at New York City’s annual Vision Festivals.

Burton Greene

Originally from Chicago, he began his long career of many recordings and performances in New York´s legendary jazz scene of the 1960’s.  He and Bassist Alan Silva contributed to the beginnings of free jazz in New York with the formation of their Free Form Improvisation Ensemble.  He also co-founded the East West Trio with Indian sitarist Jamaluddin Bhartiya  and percussionist Daoud Amin in 1973, one of the first World Music groups (and long before they called it that.)  Since that time he has travelled all over Europe and the USA with performances and recordings of his compositions and arrangements in many different types of music styles and ensembles.  As Burton says it:  “Music is or should be universal, without limits.. Borders eventually become boring.. they should be transcended.  I like all kinds of music as long as it´s not dull or repetitious or superficial.. as long as it´s creative and from the heart.”  His !4 piece New Age Jazz Chorale (1975-78) did concerts and recordings in Europe, years before most other groups were termed as “New Age”.   In the last 20 years he’s been busy with his klezmer, Sephardic, Balkan, jazz ensemble Klezmokum, and various jazz solo, trio or quartet combinations.  He also has a solo orchestral electronics program, teaches jazz, world music workshops, and lectures.  His autobiographical book written over 20 years: “Memoirs of A Musical Pesty-Mystic” appeared in print in 2001 (Cadence Jazz Books). His solo piano recording for Drimala Records: “Live At Grasland” was voted one of the top 10 CD releases in All About Jazz (2005).   His groups in recent years based in New York and recorded on CIMP Records include a duet with bassist Mark Dresser, a quartet with trumpeter Roy Campbell, Lou Grassi, and Adam Lane.  Concerts and recordings also on the CIMP label are his  trio with Ed and George Schuller on bass and drums, and a quintet with the Schuller brothers, Russ Nolan on saxes and flute, Paul Smoker on trumpet.   His solo piano CD “Retrospective 1961–2005 came out in January, 2007 on the CIMP label.  Burton’s group, a quintet: Klez-Edge had a CD Release in May, 2008: “Ancestors, Mindreles, NaGila Monsters” is on John Zorn’s Tzadik CD label in New York.  Also Released on the Tzadik label in June, 2009 is the intimate duo CD: “Two Voices in the Desert” with Burton’s long time colleague and Klezmokum clarinetist Perry Robinson. A more recent release (September, 2009) getting great reviews  on Latham Records is “Groder & Greene”, spontaneous improvisations in New York with Brian Groder, Rob Brown, Adam Lane, Ray Sage, and Burton Greene.  In  February 2010 Porter Records brought out a rare recording:  Burton Greene Quartet:  “Live at the Woodstock Playhouse 1965” with Marion Brown, Rashied Ali, Reggie Johnson.  A  Klezmokum CD: “Where We Come From, Where We’re Going” came out recently on the Music & Words label  (September, 2010).  Scheduled CD releases for 2012 will include an electronic music duo with Burton’s long time colleague Alan Silva called “Parallel Worlds” for the Long Song Records label (Italy), and a solo piano CD of Burton’s latest compositions:  “Narada Burton Greene: Live At Kerry-town House” on the NoBusiness Records label (Lithuania).

Burton’s music is featured on about 70 recordings: records and CD’s.

greeneburton@cs.com

www.burtongreene.com

www.klezmokum.com

Link to youtube performances: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Burton+Greene&aq=f 

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Klezmokum&oq=Klezmokum&aq=f&aqi=g-s2g-ms1&aql=&gs_sm=e&gs_upl=6271l10263l0l11469l9l9l0l1l1l0l273l1581l0.4.4l8l0

Links to website interviews and reviews, etc:

http://www.paristransatlantic.com/magazine/interviews/greene.html

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=2109

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/musician.php?id=7211

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=33656

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=32201

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=25788

http://www.bagatellen.com/?p=1312

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=26073

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burton_Greene

http://www.justin.tv/bgreene  (documentary film and music)Originally from Chicago, he began his long career of many recordings and performances in New York´s legendary jazz scene of the 1960’s.  He and Bassist Alan Silva contributed to the beginnings of free jazz in New York with the formation of their Free Form Improvisation Ensemble.  He also co-founded the East West Trio with Indian sitarist Jamaluddin Bhartiya  and percussionist Daoud Amin in 1973, one of the first World Music groups (and long before they called it that.)  Since that time he has travelled all over Europe and the USA with performances and recordings of his compositions and arrangements in many different types of music styles and ensembles.  As Burton says it:  “Music is or should be universal, without limits.. Borders eventually become boring.. they should be transcended.  I like all kinds of music as long as it´s not dull or repetitious or superficial.. as long as it´s creative and from the heart.”  His !4 piece New Age Jazz Chorale (1975-78) did concerts and recordings in Europe, years before most other groups were termed as “New Age”.   In the last 20 years he’s been busy with his klezmer, Sephardic, Balkan, jazz ensemble Klezmokum, and various jazz solo, trio or quartet combinations.  He also has a solo orchestral electronics program, teaches jazz, world music workshops, and lectures.  His autobiographical book written over 20 years: “Memoirs of A Musical Pesty-Mystic” appeared in print in 2001 (Cadence Jazz Books). His solo piano recording for Drimala Records: “Live At Grasland” was voted one of the top 10 CD releases in All About Jazz (2005).   His groups in recent years based in New York and recorded on CIMP Records include a duet with bassist Mark Dresser, a quartet with trumpeter Roy Campbell, Lou Grassi, and Adam Lane.  Concerts and recordings also on the CIMP label are his  trio with Ed and George Schuller on bass and drums, and a quintet with the Schuller brothers, Russ Nolan on saxes and flute, Paul Smoker on trumpet.   His solo piano CD “Retrospective 1961–2005 came out in January, 2007 on the CIMP label.  Burton’s group, a quintet: Klez-Edge had a CD Release in May, 2008: “Ancestors, Mindreles, NaGila Monsters” is on John Zorn’s Tzadik CD label in New York.  Also Released on the Tzadik label in June, 2009 is the intimate duo CD: “Two Voices in the Desert” with Burton’s long time colleague and Klezmokum clarinetist Perry Robinson. A more recent release (September, 2009) getting great reviews  on Latham Records is “Groder & Greene”, spontaneous improvisations in New York with Brian Groder, Rob Brown, Adam Lane, Ray Sage, and Burton Greene.  In  February 2010 Porter Records brought out a rare recording:  Burton Greene Quartet:  “Live at the Woodstock Playhouse 1965” with Marion Brown, Rashied Ali, Reggie Johnson.  A  Klezmokum CD: “Where We Come From, Where We’re Going” came out recently on the Music & Words label  (September, 2010).  Scheduled CD releases for 2012 will include an electronic music duo with Burton’s long time colleague Alan Silva called “Parallel Worlds” for the Long Song Records label (Italy), and a solo piano CD of Burton’s latest compositions:  “Narada Burton Greene: Live At Kerry-town House” on the NoBusiness Records label (Lithuania).

Burton’s music is featured on about 70 recordings: records and CD’s.

greeneburton@cs.com

www.burtongreene.com

www.klezmokum.com

Link to youtube performances: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Burton+Greene&aq=f 

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Klezmokum&oq=Klezmokum&aq=f&aqi=g-s2g-ms1&aql=&gs_sm=e&gs_upl=6271l10263l0l11469l9l9l0l1l1l0l273l1581l0.4.4l8l0

Links to website interviews and reviews, etc:

http://www.paristransatlantic.com/magazine/interviews/greene.html

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=2109

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/musician.php?id=7211

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=33656

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=32201

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=25788

http://www.bagatellen.com/?p=1312

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=26073

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burton_Greene

http://www.justin.tv/bgreene  (documentary film and music)