GREG BURK.
Transcription
GREG BURK.
http://home20.inet.tele.dk/jazznet/burk.html 3/13/08 9:45 PM Forside Anmeldelser Artikler Diverse En side om jazz i alle dens mange afskygninger. GREG BURK. Af Henrik Kaldahl. Pianist, komponist og underviser Greg Burk er født i Lansing af forældre som begge er aktive indenfor den klassiske musik og begyndte at studere klaver i en ung alder. Han studerede på UMassAmherst med Yusef Lateef og Archie Shepp, og afsluttede hans bachelor grad på universitetet i Michigan. Efter college flyttede han til Bratislava og turnerede i det centrale europa med hans egen trio. Som 25 årig begyndte han at studere på New England Conservatory of Music, hvor han fuldførte sin masters degree og modtog undervisning af George Russell, Danilo Perez og Paul Bley som senere blev en kæmpe indflydelse på den måde han spiller musik og improviserer på den dag i dag. Hans personlige lyd drevet af både en kærlighed til den smukke melodis passager og fremadstormende improvisation har udmøntet i en række udgivelser på det italienske legendariske selskab Soul note (Checking In, Carpe Momentum og Berlin Bright) og det amerikanske selskab 482 Music (Nothing Knowing, The Way In og hans seneste udgivelse Ivy Trio). Greg Burk underviser i dag i klaverspil på flere italienske musik konservatorier og har stået for diverse workshops rundt omkring i verden. Udover at være leder for flere grupper gennem tiden har Greg Burk spillet sammen med flere store jazz ikoner såsom James Carter, Rodney Whitaker, Gerald Cleaver, Jerry Bergonzi, Gerald Cleaver, Bob Moses, Steve Swallow, Frank Lacy, John Tchicai og mange flere. Greg Burk har spillet musik i forskellige konstellationer. Hans solo optrædender har inkluderet alt lige fra kreative fortolkninger af Bach's musik til udforskninger inden i klaveret til dramatiske fremførelser af hans egne originale kompositioner. Hans trio genopfinder det http://home20.inet.tele.dk/jazznet/burk.html Page 1 of 3 http://home20.inet.tele.dk/jazznet/burk.html 3/13/08 9:45 PM klassiske trio format ved at kombinere det simple og smukke med den kreative spontanitet gennem kollektiv improvisation og hans kvartet bygger videre på grundlaget fra trioen med tilføjelsen af tenor og sopran saxofoner. Han er blevet kaldt en ekseptionel pianist/komponist (All Music Guide) og en musiker der spiller med en tydelig kærlig og passion for hans håndværk (AllAboutJazz). På hans hjemmeside (www.gregburk.com) kan man læse meget mere om ham og hans mange spændende projekter. Interview pr. mail med Greg Burk, Marts 2008. Jazznet : How did your adventures with music begin. Did you have any training by any teachers or are you self taught ??? Greg Burk : I come from a musical family. My father is a orchestral conductor and my mother a trained opera singer. I heard classical music as a child and went to many rehearsals etc. I even played some parts in Operas that my father staged. Ironically, I was a terrible student of "classical" piano repertoire. I always made mistakes, got bored practicing etc. I was destined to be an improvisor. I've since studied with many great jazz musicians including Paul Bley, Archie Shepp, Yusef Lateef, George Russell, Bob Moses and others. Jazznet : What are you doing now, and what will be the next release from you and your projects ??? Greg Burk : I am continuing to record both as a sideman and leader across genres. I find myself increasing drawn to "free" music although my roots in jazz (playing melodies over chord structures while swinging) are very deep and undeniable. I've recorded some new music with a quartet I have here in Rome, and also some music with Canadian drummer Michel Lambert. I also am planning to release a duo recording with Bob Moses and myself. Jazznet : Improvised music is these days a very different size to classify and put in any boxes, since the boundaries are very flowing. Where do you see it going in the future and what do you think is going to be the next big thing ??? Greg Burk : The world is always getting smaller, and improvising is something that expresses being human. This means that more people from different places on Earth will be playing and improvising together in the future. Jazz opened the door for creative minds to express and challenge themselves through improvisation. Jazz is a language however, and new languages have emerged and are being created and elaborated with time. This process promises to keep improvised music alive, vital and evolving from now to eternity. There is a discipline in learning to be a jazz musician, however. I believe that regardless of the style or language involved, there need to always be a set of skills involved in creation. As far as the next big thing....surely it will be some more remarkable musicians expanding boundaries that were thought to be fixed. "The world is always getting smaller, and improvising is something that expresses being human." Jazznet : At your concerts and on your records as well, how much is improvised and how much is planned before start ??? Greg Burk : Nearly all the music is improvised. That word has different meanings. Normally I like to alternate between completely open improvisation-no predetermined structure-with structured compositions. I find this to be the most satisfying and challenging kind of musical journey. I dislike recordings that are too well executed, too cleanly arranged, etc. My favorite jazz to listen to and to create is "rough and ready"-music from this moment, as it concieved, preserving all of the emotion, focus and spirit of the moment. Jazznet : If you should mention 5-10 records that have meant something to you and your music, what would they be ??? Greg Burk : Any recordings of John Coltrane, Paul Bley, Charles Mingus, Don Cherry, Kieth Jarrett, Dollar Brand, Monk or Tristano. Jazznet : Frank Zappa once said "Jazz is not dead it just smells funny". What are your comments on that, do you think jazz is a dead and in serious need of a vitamin injection ??? Greg Burk : The problem is not so much the music, but the society we live in today. When jazz was created, developed and flourished, live music was central to normal, working class people's lives. The cities in the US were filled with clubs where bands came in for a week or two. Now people rent movies, cruise the internet, have nintendo.....There is not the same connection between musicians and http://home20.inet.tele.dk/jazznet/burk.html Page 2 of 3 http://home20.inet.tele.dk/jazznet/burk.html 3/13/08 9:45 PM people today. Clubs are often filled with tourists and musicians. Concerts have enabled jazz musicians to make the money they deserve, but have also made jazz more "elite" and distanced it from a wider audience. "My favorite jazz to listen to and to create is "rough and ready"-music from this moment." Jazznet : Do you have any plans of coming to Denmark to play some concerts ??? Greg Burk : Not at the moment, but I hope to come in the near future. Jazznet : If a new listener was about to buy his first recording with your work. Which one would you recommend as the best introduction to your music ??? Greg Burk : Well my first recording as a leader, Checking In (Soul Note 2002), is a good one to start with. It sets down many of the ideas that I later continued to develop on further recordings. Composition is also a central element of this recording, and the tunes are very dear to me. Otherwise, Nothing, Knowing (482 Music 2005) is also very special because it features Steve Swallow and Bob Moses reunited after many years. Jazznet : Where do you see yourself, Mr. Greg Burk in 5-10 years, still making music for the masses ??? Michael Jefry Stevens : I plan to continue making music for the next 60 years (I hope!) Whether the masses will catch up to me, still remains to be seen. Musikken. Reviews coming soon..... http://home20.inet.tele.dk/jazznet/burk.html Page 3 of 3
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