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When

Jan 23, 2008 8:00 pm (Wednesday)

Where

Blue Note

131 West Third Street
New York, NY
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What
FEATURING: Eldar, piano Todd Strait, drums Harish Raghavan, bass With the release of re-imagination, his third CD for Sony BMG Masterworks, jazz pianist Eldar documents his transit...
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Description
FEATURING:
Eldar, piano
Todd Strait, drums
Harish Raghavan, bass

With the release of re-imagination, his third CD for Sony BMG Masterworks, jazz pianist Eldar documents his transition from youthful prodigy to a creative artist with something to say. The release follows the 2006 CD Live at the Blue Note, which featured Eldar and his working trio with jazz trumpeters Chris Botti and Roy Hargrove as guest artists, and cemented Eldar's position as one of the most formidable jazz musicians of his generation.

Live at the Blue Note and Eldar's self-titled 2005 Sony Classical debut were recitals, on which the pianist interpreted and presented serially a mixture of originals and well-chosen standards from the American Songbook and canonic jazz composers, revealing, as the New York Times noted, a "formidable technique wedded to a mature grasp of musical structure." But on neither album was he able to focus fully on expressing his own emerging musical vision.

On re-imagination, recorded last December, Eldar, then six weeks shy of his twentieth birthday, had something more ambitious in mind. He conceived the project as a sort of suite, weaving together nine originals, the songbook standard Out of Nowhere and Oscar Peterson's rollicking Place St. Henri into a narrative arc. Joining him are three different trios (bassists James Genus, Carlos Henriquez, and Marco Panascia and drummers Terreon Gully, Ali Jackson, and Todd Strait), while guitarist Mike Moreno and turntable guru D.J. Logic augment the sonic palette.

"This is the first record I've done where I focus more on composition than playing standards or working in the standard setting of a trio," says Eldar. "Unlike anything I've done in the past, it's a very personal statement rather focusing on a certain tradition or vibe, or on genres or labels. It's more an enhanced version of a piano trio that's just making music."

"Of course, it's a very pianistic record," Eldar adds, "It states certain things that only a piano player would say, because of the way piano is laid out-horizontally, like a symphony orchestra-and the way the ideas flow. Compositionally, I didn't want to restrict myself. I wanted to write in a more rhapsodic way, compositions with freer forms where you make the puzzles fit within a free-flowing expression.

Eldar accesses a wide range of references to tell his stories. As always, he draws on the legends-Oscar Peterson, Art Tatum and Benny Green for orchestral swing and impeccable technique, McCoy Tyner, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea and Kenny Kirkland for harmonic palette. But Eldar's heady 21st century brew incorporates information from a broad range of late 20th century sources. Among the pianists he cites as heroes are Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Danilo Perez, Brad Mehldau, Bill Charlap, Esbjorn Svensson, and Jason Moran. Composer-improvisors like Pat Metheny, Michael Brecker, and Kurt Rosenwinkel enter the mix. So does the jazz-hiphop synthesis of Roy Hargrove; the sophisticated pop of Radiohead, Bjork, Sting, Soulive and the Beatles; the classical pianists Evgeny Kissin and Arcadi Volodos.

It makes sense that Eldar feels a particular affinity for the latter pair, both ethnic Russians, and for Rubalcaba, who was trained in Cuba by Russian teachers. Himself of Russian descent, he spent his first ten years in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, a province on the eastern border of the then-Soviet Union, where his father, Emil, was a mechanical engineer and his mother, Tatiana, was a professor of music studies.

"There's a very direct correlation between the way I approach the piano-the way my parents shaped my approach from a very young age-and the Russian school of music," he says. "It comes from a formal tradition of classical music and classical training. From day one, my mother taught me to form a perfect arch with my hand, as though there's an apple in there as you play."

Eldar's path from Bishkek to the United States is the stuff of jazz legend. At nine he performed at a jazz festival Novosibirsk, in Siberia, and impressed the late Charles McWhorter, a New York based jazz patron. McWhorter obtained a scholarship for Eldar to attend summer camp at the prestigious Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan, where he spent each summer between 1998 and 2001. In 1998, he and his parents moved to the U.S., beginning their new life together in Kansas City.

During these years, Eldar continued to develop and impress everyone who heard him. Marian McPartland invited Eldar to appear on her NPR series Piano Jazz after McWhorter sent her a tape of his playing. Dr. Billy Taylor encountered him at a Charlie Parker symposium in Kansas City and booked him for an appearance on CBS's Sunday Morning. Also in Kansas City, Eldar played for the Jazz Musician Foundation, before Michael Greene, then head of the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences, who booked Eldar to play on the 2000 Grammy Awards telecast. In 2001, Eldar participated in the jazz piano competition of the 2001 Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival and won the top prize. The following year, he won first place in the Peter Nero Piano Competition.

From then until now, Eldar has performed on the international festival, club, and concert circuits, while pursuing his education in jazz harmony and improvisation with Kim Park and John Elliott. His family moved to San Diego in 2003, and in Fall 2005, he matriculated at the University of Southern California, where he studied improvisation with pianist Shelly Berg.

Now a full-time musician, Eldar is happy with the trans-genre approach. "I'm not looking at labels," he says. "I've never heard music as one style or another-as bebop or swing, or the Romantic or 20th century period of classical music. It's more about whether music connects, whether it has a message. The message is the most important thing. I want to be a musician and I want to be an artist-not just a piano player.
Cost
BAR: $15.00 TABLE:$25.00
More about Blue Note
Blue Note
Regarding the Jazz scene in New York City, one of the Blue Note s managers matter of factly told us This is it. Indeed, the Blue Note is arguably the world s most popular jazz club. Although the club only opened their doors in the early 80 s, it has the feel of a longtime veteran in the New York Jazz scene. Once you get over the commercial feel of the joint, including its gold plaque embedded tables, mediocre meals named after jazz songs, and overpriced gift shop, the Blue Note is truly among the best of its kind. Expect to see world renowned talent on any given day except for Mondays, which is reserved for exceptional local talent. Show times are 9 00 and 11 30 during the week and additional Sunday matinees at 1 00 PM and 3 30 PM. Check the schedule link for show details.

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