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It's
easy to lose track of the true essence of jazz when being bombarded by so many
fancy displays of technique and pretentious flaunts of artifice. While so many
musicians are willing to settle for a superficial jazz approach, the rare
artists willing to take risks and explore the idiom's mysteries subscribe to a
deeper commitment to the music. On her sixth Blue Note recording, appropriately
titled Art and Soul, Renee Rosnes again reveals herself to be one of the most
imaginative and soulful pianists of modern jazz by rendering a diverse
collection of tunes -- from the Beatles to Bartok, from Ornette Coleman to Duke
Ellington -- with her distinctive touch.
Born in Regina in the Canadian
province of Saskatchewan and growing up in Vancouver, Rosnes began her formal
music training when she started taking piano lessons at age 3 (at age 5 she
began violin lessons). She studied classically at the University of Toronto but
got her practical jazz training in Vancouver clubs, and on CBC Radio broadcasts.
She moved to New York in 1986 (on a grant from the Canada Council of the Arts)
and immediately began to make a name for herself supporting such legends as
Wayne Shorter, Joe Henderson and J.J. Johnson.
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In the late '80s, Rosnes joined
"Out of the Blue," the hard bop Blue Note group of young up-and-comers. Based on
her association with that band, she was signed to the label. What followed was a
string of highly acclaimed recordings beginning with Renee Rosnes (1989), For
the Moment (1990), Without Words (1992), Ancestors (1995) and As We Are Now
(1997). Her auspicious debut featured two striking duets with Herbie Hancock and
Wayne Shorter as well as several tunes with Branford Marsalis. On subsequent
albums, guests have included Joe Henderson, Buster Williams, Chris Potter,
Nicholas Payton, Jack DeJohnette and Christian McBride. In a Stereophile article
reviewing As We Are Now, writer Zan Stewart hails the recording as "One of the
finest contemporary jazz albums in recent memory...a state-of-the-art document
that shows how the melody-and-swinging imbued. Rosnes has enlarged her art via
new compositional forms and selective dissonances to give her music a most
modern groove. And by always returning from adventurous moods to those that are
tamer, Rosnes encourages us to trust and follow her. Listening with defenses
down, the music pours in, and we are expanded too."
In addition to touring and
recording with her own groups, Rosnes currently performs with the dynamic Bobby
Hutcherson, the Carnegie Hall Jazz Band (led by Jon Faddis), and James Moody to
name a few. She also belongs to a newly formed trio called "Drummonds" featuring
Ray Drummond on the bass, and her husband, Billy Drummond on the drums.
Rosnes has said, "Of the many
tests that face the creative artist, that of artfully and soulfully expressing
the scope of one's realities and life experiences is most challenging and
ultimately most rewarding." Indeed, Art and Soul serves as the litmus test of
Rosnes' heartfelt commitment to the music that is ultimately just as rewarding
to the listener.
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