Daily Archives: March 25, 2024

A day late for Renee Rosnes’ birthday, a Jazz Times feature from 2021and a publicity bio for her 2001 album “Life on Earth”

If you heed the opinion of her peers and colleagues, Renee Rosnes is a jazz equivalent to a “five-tool” baseball player, that rare athlete who possesses the physical attributes and psychological fortitude to excel in all phases of the game over a sustained duration. In lieu of hitting for average and power, throwing, fielding and running, Vancouver-born Rosnes, 59, has made her mark as an instrumentalist, improviser, composer, arranger, and bandleader, accumulating a c.v. as distinguished as any pianist of her generation since she moved to New York in 1986.

            During her first 15 years in New York, Rosnes established impeccable bona fides as both side musician and leader. She sound- and beat-sculpted on various keyboards with Wayne Shorter and MBASE influencers Greg Osby and Gary Thomas. She functioned as an authoritative hardcore jazz practitioner on long-haul side-musician relationships with grandmasters Joe Henderson, J.J. Johnson, James Moody, Bobby Hutcherson, and Lewis Nash, as well as the Carnegie Hall Jazz Band and the Dizzy Gillespie All-Stars. She stamped her elegant, orchestrative conception of the piano trio function on three sparkling standards albums targeted to the Japanese market with the Drummonds, a for-the-studio outfit titled for the surnames of Rosnes’ then-husband Billy Drummond and bass maestro Ray Drummond.

            Rosnes was also composing and arranging for her own bands. She documented her output on eight albums, each with its own distinctive character, for Blue Note’s Canadian cousin, beginning with an eponymous 1988 date to which Shorter, Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock and Branford Marsalis contributed.

            On Rosnes’ 20th and latest date, Kinds of Love (Smoke Sessions), conceived and composed at the height of the Covid-19 lockdown, her apex-of-the-pyramid personnel – Chris Potter, saxophones and winds; Christian McBride, bass; Carl Allen, drums; Rogério Baccato, percussion – jump in the deep end of the pool on nine bespoke originals. It’s Rosnes’ third outing for the label, following 2018’s Beloved Of The Sky (Potter, vibraphonist Steve Nelson, bassist Peter Washington and drummer Lenny White) and 2016’s Written On The Rocks (Nelson, Washington, saxophonist Steve Wilson and drummer Bill Stewart), which feature another 16 Rosnes compositions, mostly of recent vintage.

            “Smoke Sessions has given me the liberty to present myself in the fullest way possible artistically,” Rosnes said by phone from the New Jersey home she cohabits with husband Bill Charlap. “The pandemic gave me an unusual amount of time to work and kept me creatively motivated. I’m normally so busy getting on airplanes that I often lamented not having solitude to work, and then this gift presented itself. I felt fulfilled working day to day, week to week, imagining this new album, inspired by the musicians who would be recording with me. I trusted that the music would soar, and the musicians I’d assembled would impart more depth and nuance than I even imagined. The key is to always allow people to be themselves.”

            “I take sources of inspiration from all parts of my life,” Rosnes continued. She keeps a notebook with ideas, spawned when she comes across something intriguing – a 20th century work by Lutoslawski or an 18th century sarabande from one of Bach’s English Suites; a Lester Young phrase from a 1957 solo on “Polka Dots and Moonbeams”; a fragment from a composition by Chick Corea or Thelonious Monk; birdsong; the image of a landscape, synesthetically refracted into the language of notes and tones. “I analyze why it appealed to me, then explore whether I can utilize any part of it, whether it’s a harmonic progression or a rhythmic concept. There’s no end of raw material to work with.”

            “I was knocked out by her writing, which was always strong,” said Potter, who first recorded with Rosnes on Ancestors (1995) with Nicholas Payton, Peter Washington and Al Foster. “But these new tunes felt like another level; the way she extends her language, the framework she invents – it keeps blossoming and blossoming. It’s the specificity of the voicings, how she incorporates improvisation into the composition. You expect things like this in a classical piece, where everything is written out, but you don’t always encounter it in jazz. Yet, it still feels natural; when you’re blowing, you feel you can play and be yourself.”

             McBride first recorded with Rosnes on As We Are Now – a 1997 quartet with Potter and Jack DeJohnette – a few years after touring with her in J.J. Johnson’s group. “I always look forward to playing Renee’s music because it’s highly advanced, with unusual intervallic leaps and harmonic progressions – and it’s also memorable and singable,” he said. “Her melodies are super-strong – there are many smart, highly intellectual composers whose work is fun to analyze, but you don’t necessarily walk away humming it. I think she’s been extremely successful at channeling the storytelling Wayne Shorter does in his long-form writing into a more traditional acoustic jazz texture. It’s an escapade.”

            “Renee is a natural composer, who instinctually knows so much technically about the building blocks of music that she can lead with the heart and end up with something that is 100 percent structurally sound,” Charlap said. That assessment fits Rosnes’ contributions to Ice On The Hudson (SMK), a cabaret-jazz project on which her elegant, focused responses to David Hajdu’s well-turned lyrics complement the voices of Rene Marie, Janis Siegel, Karen Oberlin and Darius de Haas. “When we were hatching ideas for songs, Renee was completely open-minded, as long as the idea is grounded in authentic human feeling,” Hajdu testified in an email. “We’ve written about missing a loved one so much that you’re willing to die to be reuinited; about diners and pie; about the Gabriola Passage, a natural formation in Northwestern Canada that Renee finds profoundly inspiring. No theme is too daunting, too emotionally complicated, too serious, or too silly for her. None of the songs sounds like any of the others, and yet they are all distinctly the work of the same musical intelligence.”

            “Open minded” also describes Rosnes’ contributions to the eponymous 2020 Blue Note release by Artemis, the all-female collective that she founded in 2016 and serves as music director – the sprawling, Nino Rota-ish theme of “Big Top,” the minimalist, Alec Wilderish framing of Cecile McLorin Salvant’s voice on “If It’s Magic” and “Cry, Buttercup, Cry,” and the funky camelwalk lope that propels her arrangement of Lee Morgan’s “Sidewinder.” In a sense, her involvement with Artemis parallels her earlier work with SFJazz Collective, to which Rosnes contributed 11 compositions and arrangements from its inception in 2004 until 2009. That experience, Rosnes said, showed her “it was possible to have a band of leaders where egos don’t get in the way, to create great music with strong personalities who encompass many viewpoints.”

            Allison Miller, Artemis’ drummer, noted Rosnes’ receptivity “to the various sub-genres each musician brought to the band,” how “she produced the record in a way that made all these different-sounding compositions fit together as a single body of work.” “Like all my favorite musicians, Renee is ever-evolving,” Miller said. “She has a beautiful combination of organization and creativity, which I think woman bandleaders especially need to have. She has this beautiful ability to herd us all together – which isn’t easy, because we each have big opinions and want to give everyone else advice. But at this point in her career, she very humbly and kindly demands respect. She’s definitely a mentor to me. I hold her on a pedestal.”

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Although Rosnes now devotes the preponderance of her career mosaic to bandleading and collaborative projects, she continues to spend consequential side musician time with Ron Carter, her steady employer since 2011, when, at Kenny Barron’s recommendation, he brought her for his quartet.                                                                           

            “It’s been extraordinary to create music with Ron on his terms night after night, at that high level of consistency,” said Rosnes, who does precisely that on Live in Stockholm, Vol. 1 & Vol. 2 (In and Out). “I love his spontaneous arrangements, the curveballs he throws at me when he’s experimenting or exploring with the harmony or the rhythm. There’s a lot of trust between us, which contributes to the feeling of liberty and freedom within the music.”                

            With deliberate precision, Carter enumerated the sources of his trust. “I need a piano player who reads the music I write,” he began. The job description continued: “the ability to transcribe songs if I need them right away”; “when I say a little faster or a little slower, they don’t say ‘why?’ or, if I ask them, they say ‘That’s too fast or too slow’ or ‘Can I suggest something?’”; “trusts my downbeat”; “trusts my notes as good notes to play in a chord – it’s their job to try to find how they can make that fit into their scheme”; “has a real sensitivity about the piano volume and knows how to use the pedals”; “is a half hour early for all the gigs”; “wants to be in the band.”

            He paused, then, with formality, referenced Rosnes’ given forename. “Irene fits all those boxes I just checked off. When we see each other after a long layoff, we hug because we miss each other’s importance to the music of our life.”

            Both Carter’s encomium and Barron’s initial cosignature highlight Rosnes’ stature as a “keeper of the flame,” grounded in the aesthetic imperatives that prevailed among the masters of the art of swing with whom she played and to whom she listened closely after arriving in New York. She frequently attended sets at Bradley’s, the piano saloon, by rotation regulars like Barron and Cedar Walton, both frequent Carter collaborators during the 80s and 90s, as well as Tommy Flanagan, Hank Jones, Walter Davis, John Hicks, and Richie Beirach (to name a short list).

            “It was such an education, to hear this level of mastery any given night of the week, and it had a major impact on the development of my playing,” Rosnes said. “Obviously that particular scene is not possible anymore — at least with that many artists and with that frequency; young musicians aren’t able to have that experience because it simply doesn’t exist.”

            “Renee knows how to put a certain English on the ball,” Potter said, describing how Rosnes incorporates those experiences in her pianism. “It’s not just the notes, it’s the velocity and the phrasing; it’s the real language, not a sequenced version of that language. There’s all this pianistic subtlety that maybe came down through folks like Wynton Kelly, to whom she’s obviously paid very close attention. She combines that with classical training, so she knows how to make the piano ring, make certain notes jump out – make it swing. It’s jazz piano.”

            “I want to avoid husbandly hyperbole,” Charlap qualified, before analyzing Rosnes’ artistry in his eloquent argot. “She’s a magnificent accompanist and listener, so seamless and correct within a rhythm section, weaving a carpet for the soloists and the rest of the band,” he said. “In her quiet nature, sometimes she’ll play a solo with so much fire and so vital that it sometimes feels like a tidal wave emotionally. She’s a great virtuoso pianist, a major soloist with an incredibly beautiful design to her melodic line, unique to her. But she’s got this other thing, which is some sort of gift from above – or from somewhere. Renee can hear anything. If you drop a needle on a record, and it’s Stravinsky or Art Tatum or just about anything, she knows every single note instantaneously. But that doesn’t teach you taste. One can play something that is technically correct and yet not really part of the language. It doesn’t have to be something that’s been done. But it must build on something that has existed. And she has virtuoso taste.”

            “When I came to New York, Mulgrew Miller for me was the reigning champ of New York – the next step after Kenny Barron,” McBride said of the playing field he stepped into in 1989. “I think that way of Renee. She can play with anyone in any style, any situation, make it work on that music’s terms, and still maintain her individuality. That, to me, is a true genius.”

[BREAK]

Until she assembled Artemis in March 2016, Rosnes, in both side musician and leader roles, almost always was the only woman on the bandstand. “I learned a long time ago that music transcends gender,” she said. Perhaps as a survival mechanism, she’s trained herself to shrug off “the many slights that women instrumentalists often face” in all aspects of their career. But she mentioned a particularly troubling encounter last summer when she arrived at a New York club, left unidentified, to perform the fourth night of a week-long run.

            ”As I approached the entrance, I was stopped by the doorman, who obviously didn’t recognize me,” Rosnes said. “That’s not entirely unusual, and doesn’t bother me. He said, ‘Excuse me, but do you have a ticket?’ I replied, ‘No, because I’m playing in the band.’ He took a step back, eyed me, and sarcastically said, ‘Oh…really?’ After a few seconds went by, he said, ‘What do you play? Cards? Roulette?’ I just stood there and looked at him in disbelief. I knew I had options, but I was not interested in getting riled up before a gig. At that moment, the manager just inside the door noticed something was amiss, poked his head out, and admonished the doorman for not letting me through. I made a conscious decision not to allow that experience take me out of my zone nor affect my performance that night — but it sure feels disappointing when those things happen.”

            “When I was traveling with Renee, she always radiated that she felt comfortable with who she is,” Potter says. “That got expressed both musically and also the way that she dealt with promoters and everything else. I’m sure lots of stuff got thrown at her that doesn’t happen to the men. But she always seemed very sure of herself. The same as all musicians, she was always looking to make her music at the highest level it could possibly be. I don’t remember any situations where I felt she was being disrespected, and I can’t actually imagine her putting up with it, even though she’s very nice and Canadian and everything like that. But it might be she was so good at it that I didn’t even see the struggles she faced.”

            Without diving too deeply into the thickets of dime-store psychology, one could speculate that Rosnes’ firm belief in the innate musical gifts she displayed from early childhood have allowed her, as the mantra goes, to always know her worth, immunizing her spirit against the viruses of misogyny, harassment, and institutional sexism, and allowing her to bring a clear-headed can-do attitude to any musical situation she’s encountered.  “I didn’t have any one-on-one mentors, male or female, who took me under their wing after I came to New York,” she says. “My mentors became the people I worked with, merely by the fact that they hired me and I got to make music with them and learn from them every night.”

            “Renee is definitely a mentor to me,” said Miller. Indeed, it’s increasingly evident to Rosnes that she is – has been for some time – a mentor figure to several generations of younger female musicians, as she and her Artemis bandmates were told at several concert engagements not long before our conversation.

            “People tell us we’ve had a great impact, or we see on social media that we’ve moved or encouraged someone, that it’s helping in their journey or to make decisions about what’s possible,” Rosnes said. “I hadn’t given it much thought, but now I see it means something greater than I’d imagined.

            “As each year goes by, I see more young female musicians who play at a high level on all the instruments. You can tell how dedicated they are and how well they play; you just know they’ll be making a name for themselves – and rightly so.”

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Bio for Renee Rosnes, Life On Earth:
 
On Life On Earth — her eighth Blue Note recording and fifth under the auspices of EMI-Canada — the pianist Renee Rosnes presents her most conceptually ambitious recital to date. It works on several levels. For one thing, Rosnes surefootedly guides a collection of astonishing rhythmic talent — Zakir Hussein from India, Mor Thiam from Senegal, Duduka Da Fonseca from Brazil, trap drummers Jeff Watts and Billy Drummond from the U.S. — with some of the leading instrumentalists in contemporary improvising — saxophonists Chris Potter and Walt Weiskopf; trombonist-shell master Steve Turre; and bassists John Patitucci and Christian McBride. She deploys them in various configurations on a program that draws upon a palette of rhythms, melodies and textures that reference India, Senegal, Indonesia, Brazil, Inuit, European Classical music and hardcore jazz.
 
“I’m drawn to musicians I know can go various ways conceptually, who have the talent and depth to interpret what I’ve written and bring their personal experiences to it,” says Rosnes, 39. “That’s what happened on this date. I didn’t have to explain a lot; we played and it fell into place.” She notes that each musician on Life On Earth has a history of saying something consequential outside of their most customary context or setting. “That’s becoming more and more the case,” she adds, “as today’s musicians travel so much and as the Information Age brings the world together.”
 
What sets Life on Earth apart from the pack is how deeply Rosnes has drawn from her inner well of experience in composing, orchestrating and conceptualizing the diverse information into music. The genres never feel juxtaposed; she gets to essences, transmuting each approach integrally into her personal narrative. 
 
“Since I recorded Art and Soul in 1999, I’ve developed as a musician,” Rosnes says. “I’ve listened to a lot of different things, and I’m always writing. I set out to make an album exploring different instruments and timbres than I was used to playing with. These pieces truly grew out of my love for various things, be it a musician or a beat or something I grew up with, and each has a story. Hopefully a musical thread of my personality and the rhythm section’s carries through, and it becomes an organic experience.”
 
No piece emanates from a deeper source than the stunning “Empress India,” which takes its title from a favorite blend of tea.  It’s based on the complex, fluent rhythmic patterns of tabla master Zakir Hussain, whose work with Shakti Rosnes knew well, and whom she first witnessed at a classical performance with the Indian Masters Of Percussion. Born in Saskatchewan and raised in Vancouver, Rosnes discovered her birth mother, Mohandir, in the spring of 1994, not long before her adoptive mother, Audrey, succumbed to cancer.
 
“Since I met my family, I’ve listened to more Indian music than I had in previous years,” Rosnes says. “I love harmony and I enjoy writing music with a lot of harmonic content, while most Indian music is based on one mode and one tonic.  To my knowledge, few recordings feature tabla with piano. I came up with this line and envisioned how we might marry the two sounds.”
 
Rosnes stays drumcentric on “Senegal Son,” an irresistible melody with origins in a solo that Senegalese percussionist Mor Thiam played in Excursions, a band led by bassist Ray Drummond in which both play. She orchestrates it for marimba (Steve Nelson), alto flute (Shelley Brown), and rhythm section (Patitucci and Watts).
 
“I mentioned the beat I’d heard, Mor clapped it, and I heard this melody over it,” Rosnes says. “With this groove I felt that a lot of harmony was unnecessary. It’s a moot point. It’s all about the heart of the music.”
 
Speaking of heart, Rosnes, Patitucci and Billy Drummond converse on the lovely melody of “Ballad of The Sad Young Men” in a way that makes you feel you’re hearing a great singer convey the poignant lyric. Roberta Flack’s beautiful version on her debut album, “First Take,” inspired Renee to play the tune.
 
With “Icelight” and “Gabriola Passage,” Rosnes harks to the Pacific Northwest, where she came of age. “Icelight” has a Latin feel, but Rosnes wrote it in tribute to the newly established northern Canadian territory of Nunavut, where the landscape is dominated by tundra, rock snow and ice, and which is inhabited mainly by the Inuit people.  It features the capacious, hard-edged sound of tenor saxophonist Walt Weiskopf, a long-time Rosnes collaborator; Inuit throat singer Kevin Tarrant offers his musical commentary on the final vamp.
 
“I went to school with a lot of Native Indian kids and heard Native Indian music growing up,” says Rosnes, who collects indigenous Haida art from the Inuit. “Until I left Western Canada, I didn’t realize how much of an impact the Native American culture had on me.”
 
Spurred by Weiskopf’s soprano saxophone and drummer Duduka Da Fonseca’s Brazil-inflected beats, “Gabriola Passage” was untitled when Rosnes performed it the July 2000 Ottawa Jazz Festival. In a letter, a listener wrote Rosnes that the piece evoked thoughts of sailing through ocean waves in a steady breeze, not unlike the experience of sailing east from Gabriola Island to Valdez Island to the Georgia Strait off of Vancouver. 
 
“I spent a lot of time there growing up, and I love that part of the world,” Rosnes says. “It’s in my blood, the smell of the ocean and the virgin forest. I’d been to exactly the place this man was talking about, and the image connected with me.”
 
As a Vancouver youngster, Rosnes played classical music on piano and violin, and she references those experiences on “The Quiet Earth,” conjuring the image “of a peaceful and blue planet spinning quietly on its axis, viewed from far away somewhere up in the stars.” It begins with a stirring string soli, morphs to a soulful Rosnes statement and climaxes with a majestic Patitucci declamation, pizzicato.
 
“I’m very interested in the ranges and possibilities of string instruments, and I enjoy writing for strings, though I haven’t done it much,” says Rosnes. “I went to university in the Classical performance program.  But at some point I felt so much more challenged by the art of improvisation, and I decided to go that route.”
 
During those Vancouver years Rosnes’ friend Red Schwager, a guitarist now with George Shearing, played her the recording of the ketjak Balinese Monkey Chant that she samples at the outset of “Hanuman,” the Monkey God. Rosnes transcribed it into a wobbly unison line for trombonists Steve Turre and Conrad Herwig and bass trombonist Doug Purviance, then launches into a surging melody in the spirit of Joe Henderson’s “Caribbean Fire Dance.” Duduka Da Fonseca represents the monkey on cuica and Chris Potter unleashes a ferocious tenor solo that evokes the sound of Henderson while never xeroxing his licks. Rosnes comments: “There’s a real force and real power to the piece, which reflects the image of Hanuman, who is adventurous, strong, cunning, and courageous — and he’s a musician!”
 
“In some way this is my personal tribute to Joe,” says Rosnes, who played with Henderson from 1987 to 1998, shortly before the recently deceased tenor master suffered the stroke that marked the end of his performing career. “Joe performed at a consistently high level night after night, in a lot of different contexts, and those occasions where everything came together were among the best that I’ll probably ever experience.”
 
The trio gives an intimate reading of Rosnes’ arrangement of “Nana,” a suite of six Andalusian folk songs that the Spanish classical composer Miguel de Falla arranged for voice and piano. Rosnes makes the piano evoke the life force of a singer, and Patitucci makes the strings resonate with emotion on his arco solo.
 
The leader calls upon the harmonies and textures of Steve Turre’s painstakingly accumulated and personally sculpted collection of musical seashells to evoke “The Call of Triton,” the trumpeter of the deep in Greek mythology who blew loudly on his seashell to raise great storms and blew gently to calm the waves. Rosnes toured with Turre at the cusp of the ’90s and plays with him in the Carnegie Hall Jazz Band, so she knows his range; she frames him with a funky beat and the intriguing timbral blend of bass clarinet and flute.
 
Rosnes learned indelible lessons in musical storytelling on numerous sidemusician gigs with such masters as Henderson (1987-1998), James Moody (1987-present), J.J. Johnson (1993-1998), and Bobby Hutcherson (1995-present). But no experience expanded her sense of orchestral possibility more than a year (1988) spent playing synthesizer with Wayne Shorter.
 
“Playing Wayne’s music opened up my mind to so much harmonic freedom,” she says. “Anything could happen at any time on the same piece from night to night. He didn’t give a lot of verbal direction to the bandmembers; conceptual ideas were stated through the horns, and as a learning, growing musician, you took your cue musically from what was going on.”
 
Rosnes doesn’t claim to be a student of mythology, but on Life On Earth she makes the universal archetypes vivid and palpable through music. “I’m Canadian,” she says. “But I approach this as a member of the human race.”

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