北京
北京
BILL O'CONNELL TRIO

演出时间:06月10日 19:30-06月10日 21:00

艺人: BILL O'CONNELL

场地: 北京 Blue Note Beijing

地址:前门东大街23号blue note 查看地图

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参演音乐人
演出场地
演出主办方
演出详情

演出音乐人:BILL O'CONNELL


演出信息

日期/Date:2018年6月9日

入场时间/Door Time:6:00 PM

演出时间/Show Time:7:30PM

地址/Add:前门东大街23号 Blue Note Beijing

23 Qianmen East Street. Dongcheng District. Beijing

电话Tel:170-0000-0288 188-BLUE-NOTE

 

票价信息

B2剧场票价Ticket Price:

360(主座)RMB

(餐饮低消:60RMB) 


乐队成员

Bill O'Connell - piano 

Lincoln Goines - bass

Robby Ameen - drums

 

亚历克斯·亨德森(Alex Henderson)在AllMusic.com网站上写道;“作为一名钢琴家,他以一种抒情的方式而闻名,这一方法对Keith Jarrett、Bill Evans和Chick Corea以及Herbie Hancock都有影响。” *的音乐评论家和爵士乐出版物一直称赞Bill O'connell的艺术成*。“他的艺术光谱的范围似乎是无限的,”评论家乔治·卡洛尔在他的《拉丁爵士幻想》的评论中说,“我的读者们会被这个音乐尊严和即兴发挥的权威所打动,”。

 

O’Connell 1953年8月22日出生于纽约市。高中毕业后,他在俄亥俄州*的奥伯林音乐学院学习古典钢琴。回到纽约后,他很快*沉浸于上世纪70年代遍布这座城市的令人兴奋的拉丁爵士和萨尔萨舞。他的*次重大突破是在1977年加入古巴的康加球员和乐队领队Mongo Santamaria的拉丁爵士乐队,当时他是键盘手。与这位传奇人物合作了两年,这位年轻的钢琴家有机会磨练出他在整个职业生涯中所强调的三个特质——作曲、编曲和演奏。他与Santamaria合作的两个LPs的唱片《Amanacer 》和《 Mongo ala Carte– essential albums》被拉丁爵士唱片的收藏家们所垂涎。另一件很少见的事是,他参与了当时拉丁音乐的先锋艺术——《 Jasmine》(West 54),这是一个由一个名叫罗杰·罗森伯格(Roger Rosenberg)在男中音萨克斯管(baritone sax)上的同名四重奏组合而成的唱片。

 

在经历了40年的职业生涯,Bill O’Connell已成为一名录音艺术家,钢琴家和编曲人。他曾四次荣获“年度爵士作家”奖,该奖项来自于美国*表演权利组织“SESAC”。他是罗格斯大学爵士学院的一员,作为一个非拉丁美洲人的小联盟成员,他对*近几十年的拉丁爵士运动做出了重大贡献。*,作为拉丁爵士受人尊敬的教育家和*,Bill O’Connell的职业生涯充满了表达和实现他独特音乐视野的新机会。

 

After a 40-year long career that has seen him excel as a leader, soloist, arranger, musical director, and accompanist for some of the most celebrated names in jazz and Latin music, Bill O’Connell can lay claim to a track record of challenging and artistic-diverse triumphs that few of his peers can match. As a recording artist, his 13 dates as a leader have drawn universal critical acclaim while his talents as a pianist and arranger have been tapped by a diverse range of noted soloists to elevate their sessions. Today, as both a respected educator and leader of The Latin Jazz All-Stars, O’Connell’s professional life brims with new opportunities to express and fulfill his singular music vision.

O’Connell was born in New York City on August 22, 1953. After high school, he studied classical piano at Ohio’s famed Oberlin Conservatory of Music. Returning to New York, he was drawn to and became quickly immersed in the heady Latin jazz and salsa scene that was flowering in the city in the 1970s. His first big break came when he joined Cuban conga player and bandleader Mongo Santamaria’s Latin jazz group in 1977 as keyboardist. Working with the legendary conguero for two years afforded the young pianist the opportunity to hone the three attributes he would emphasize throughout his career – composing, arranging, and playing. His time with Santamaria also resulted in the first of O’Connell’s many recordings on two LPs for the Vaya label, Amanacer and Mongo ala Carte– essential albums that are today coveted by collectors of vintage Latin jazz vinyl. Another rarity, and further documentation of his involvement in the avant-garde of Latin music at the time, was Jasmine (West 54), an LP by a quartet of the same name that featured Roger Rosenberg on baritone sax.

“Most of my contemporaries didn’t go down this path,” the pianist reflects, commenting on his experience with Santamaria and, in following decades, many other Latin jazz music greats. “But I saw the beauty in this music and it touched me on both an emotional and intellectual level,” he adds. “So, four decades later, here I am.”

Although he quickly established himself as an in-demand keyboardist and arranger on New York City’s vibrant Latin music circuit, O’Connell didn’t forsake his passion for straight-ahead jazz and chalked up engagements with such hallowed improvisers as Sonny Rollins, Chet Baker, Gato Barbieri and Emily Remler. With the late bassist Charles Fambrough he enjoyed a long working relationship that produced four recordings, including two high profile projects for the famed CTI label, The Charmer (1992) and Blues at Bradley’s (1993). The pianist displayed his versatility by-way-of accompanist roles for several leading jazz vocalists, resulting in four albums with Jon Lucien, two with Janet Lawson, one with Nnenna Freelon and performances backing Kenny Rankin. Gigging with storied bossa nova singer Astrud Gilberto produced a deep understanding of Brazilian music idioms that he often appropriates for his arrangements. All the while, O’Connell continued to polish his Latin chops, performing with such idiom luminaries as trumpeter Jerry González’s Fort Apache Band and trombonist Papo Vázquez.

He recorded Searching, his first album as a leader, in 1978 for the Inner City Records label, but O’Connell soon put his solo aspirations on hold to enter an especially propitious phase of his career as music director and keyboardist for Dave Valentín. By the early 1980s, the young Nuyorican flautist had become the most popular and commercially successful Latino instrumentalist of his generation. The keyboardist began his professional association with Valentín 1981 on the album Pied Piper on the prestigious GRP label. O’Connell contributed his composition “Dragon Fly” and played on that track. In 1984, he joined the group fulltime for the recording of Kalahari, another GRP date. He maintained a strong friendship and close working relationship with Valentín through the release of 15 albums, culminating in 2011 with the flute legend’s final recording, Pure Imagination, for HighNote Records.

O’Connell resumed his recording forays as a leader in the late 1980s with Love for Sale (Pony Canyon) and Signature (Blue Moon Mesa), followed in 1993 by Lost Voices (CTI). In recent years, the pianist’s recording output has accelerated, producing albums that range from his first ever solo recital, After the Dust Settled (Random Chance), recorded live in Moscow’s Tchaikovsky Hall in 2011, to a duo effort in 2015 with saxophonist Steve Slagle, Power of Two (Panorama Records), and his latest aural adventure with The Latin Jazz All-Stars, Heart Beat (Savant), released in 2016.

Also included in his discography are the particularly inventive Triple Play (Savant, 2008), a trio format featuring percussionist Richie Flores and Valentín on flutes, and a follow up, Triple Play Plus Three (Zoho, 2011), which added Cuban clarinetist Paquito D’Rivera and mallet master Dave Samuels to the mix. 2010 produced Rhapsody in Blue (Challenge), a sextet effort featuring members of his regular Latin jazz ensemble plus vibraphonist Dave Samuels. In 2014, Imagine (Savant) showcased the group that has become O’Connell’s primary focus, The Latin Jazz All-Stars, with Conrad Herwig on trombone, saxophonist Steve Slagle, bassist Luques Curtis, Richie Barshay on drums and percussionist Richie Flores. In addition to his role as a leader, the pianist has also become an essential ingredient, as both keyboardist and arranger, of trombonist Herwig’s Latin Side Of recordings that put a Latin twist on the compositions of such jazz giants as Herbie Hancock and Joe Henderson.

Leading music critics and jazz publications have long praised O’Connell’s artistry. Alex Henderson, writing for AllMusic.com, stated that “As a pianist he is known for a lyrical approach that owes something to Keith Jarrett, Bill Evans and Chick Corea, as well as Herbie Hancock.” “The range of his artistic spectrum seems limitless,” declared George Carroll in his review of Latin Jazz Fantasy, the pianist’s groundbreaking 2004 album on the Random Chance label that featured a string orchestra and such guests as trumpeter Randy Brecker. “I suggest that my readers will be moved by this colossus of musical dignity and improvisational authority,” the critic concluded.

Black Sand, a 2001 release for Random Chance that featured Dave Valentín, bassist Andy Gonzalez and drummer Steve Berrios, prompted Mark Holston of Hispanic Magazine to write, “Putting the primary accent on the Latin side of the stylistic equation proves the point Bill O’Connell has been making all of his professional life: Black Sandsizzles.” Chris Heim in JAZZIZ Magazine, reviewing Triple Play, concluded that “The skill and chemistry of the players [and] the many small pleasures in arrangement and execution add up to a surprising, high-scoring set.” Downbeat weighed in on the 2013 Savant release Zócalo by O’Connell and The Latin Jazz All-Stars, with critic Josef Woodard observing that “Restless harmonic and rhythmic shifts meet restless idiomatic moves, but in the most natural, vibrant and musically-truthful way.” All About Jazz lauded Rhapsody in Blue, proclaiming “A taste of the Latin style, a measure of hard bop with a touch of mainstream and a slice of standards makes [the album] a varied musical project offering enough from across the jazz spectrum to please just about everyone.”

A four-time recipient of the “Jazz Writer of the Year” award from SESAC, the performing rights organization, O’Connell is on the jazz faculty of Rutgers University. As a member of a small fraternity of non-Latinos who have made significant contributions to the Latin jazz movement of recent decades, his importance cannot be overstated. As longtime associate Dave Valentín points out, “I’ve never heard him take a bad solo. He’s also a wonderful comper. Some pianists are good in one area but weak in the other. Bill is a master of both.” And, as his illustrious career vividly illustrates, O’Connell is also a master of myriad music idioms and an endless range of sophisticated keyboard and arranging skills.

 

注:本场演出换票起始时间为17:30,请各位观众提前安排时间换票。


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