Showing posts with label Jazz in Russia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jazz in Russia. Show all posts

Monday, January 8, 2018

Russian Jazz Farewells, 2017

Ken Franckling posts at JJANews.org his list of Jazz R.I.P.s from 2017. For an international list, it's noticeably incomplete (maybe the American jazz community tries to finally estrange the evil Russians, just like the mainstream media do? Even at the the Cold War, the feeling of jazz camaraderie was always there...) Here’s an approximate list of losses that the Russian jazz community suffered in 2017, including a few artists whose jazz career started in Russia / former U.S.S.R and continued elsewhere, such as Copenhagen-based Nikolai Gromin and Stockholm-based Slava Preobrazhenski. The list is in reverse timeline order, December news first.

Yuri Genbachev (right,) pictured during his performance with Jazz Ensemble Allegro in 1978 (photo © Alexander Zabrin)

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Jazz.Ru Magazine #2/3-2012

On the cover (photo by Anna Filipieva): saxophonist  Rudresh Mahanthappa performs at the Jazzkaar festival in Tallinn, Estonia, as reviewed by Jazz.Ru editors Cyril Moshkow and Anna Filipieva
 Jazz travels: Bergen, Norway - 40th Nattjazz Festival and Jazz Norway in a Nutshell showcase, as witnessed by Cyril Moshkow
Jazz education, Philly way: an interview with Don Glanden, of Philadelphia's UArts Jazz Program
Herbie Hancock interviewed in Moscow during his Russian tour
 The International Jazz Day: saxophonist Igor Butman on the inaugural celebration in Paris
 Bassist Christian McBride in Moscow: a concert review
 St.Petersburg improv drummer Alexander Ragazanov tells his life story in an extensive interview
 The Young Scene. Pianist Alexey Ivannikov: "There's nothing you can do in New York City if your eyes aren't glowing"
 12th Triumph of Jazz Festival reviewed
 Saxophonist Oleg Kireyev awarded with the People's Artist honorary title in his native Russian republic of Bashkortostan
 Soviet jazz veteran, saxophonist Alexey Kozlov opens his own club in Moscow at 77
 ArtBeat: composer/producer/bassist Alex Rostotsky on his African tour
 The Russian Trail leads Leo Records to Russia: Leo Records Festival in three major Russian cities unites Soviet avant-garde veterans and the new generation of the Russian improv scene... and much more!

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Ganelin Live in Moscow

Ganelin Trio was the first Soviet (actually, Lithuanian) jazz group to tour the U.S. in 1986. Not that many in the U.S. were getting them at the time, as they were clearly not emulating American jazz, but searching for their own thing instead, mostly in the realms of free improvisation on the verge of jazz and modern classical music.
Time passed, and the three musicians went in their own directions: drummer Vladimir Tarasov stayed in Vilnius, Lithuania, after 1991, and went into sound installations and international collaborations; reedist Vladimir Chekasin was more interested in happenings and theatralization of music, and ran a series of successful monthly music/happening extravaganzas at Moscow's House of Artists; and pianist Viacheslav (Slava) Ganelin moved to Jerusalem, where he taught improvisation at two music schools, composed to his soul's content, and ran a small annual festival in the Holy City, Jerusalem Jazz Globus (next time, late November, 2012.)
Two days ago he made a very rare solo improv appearance in Moscow, and I filmed his massive, 22-minutes-long improvisation at the Jewish Culture Center in Russian capital.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Saxophonist George Garanian, Russia's Jazz Pioneer, Dies

by Cyril Moshkow


Shortly upon his arrival in Krasnodar, Russia, where he was scheduled to conduct the Krasnodar Municipal Big Band during two planned concerts with featured soloist Michel Legrand, the Soviet jazz veteran bandleader, arranger, composer, and alto saxophonist George Garanian was hospitalized in the morning hours of January 11, 2010. According to his wife, Nelly Zakirova, the 75-years-old bandleader suffered a heart attack, which eventually led to his death.
George (Georgy) Garanian was born in Moscow on August 14, 1934. He belonged to the 1950s "jazz engineers" generation -- a circle of musicians, mostly graduate and postgraduate students at Moscow and Leningrad's technical and engineering universities, with no background in classical music training, but with sheer admiration of the new, post-WWII jazz styles. Their jazz education consisted of endless careful transcriptions of American jazz stars' solos using not the original American records, which were not legally available behind the Iron Curtain, but either taped transmissions from the Voice of America (and its host Willis Conover, whose "special English" became the source of English education for those enthusiasts,) or the "jazz on the bones," self-made 78s records cut on used X-ray film, with somebody's broken ribs in the background.

In 1958, Garanian became the first Soviet-born soloist accepted in the famed Oleg Lundstrem Orchestra, the Shanghai-based swing band from the 1930s which moved to its members' distant homeland, Russia, after WWII. In the 1960s, he worked in Moscow Radio's Vadim Lyudvikovski Big Band, where he showed a considerable passion for arranging the music. In 1973, the new Soviet Television and Radio Committee Chairman, Sergey Lapin, who hated Western music, fired the entire Radio Big Band and got rid of all jazz in the Soviet TV and radio programming; Garanian, and a few chosen instrumentalists from the former Lyudvikovski Big Band, formed the core of the new studio band, Melodia, which worked for the U.S.S.R's only record label with the same name.

Garanian spent about fifteen years as Melodia's director, arranging music for the country's leading pop singers and singing film stars, and directing the Melodia Big Band for dance albums. He did not play saxophone at that time, but, as director and conductor, made sure that the orchestra, which consisted of the leading Soviet jazz soloists, would record a few albums of his arrangements of jazz standards and Garanian's originals, mostly in the realm of light fusion (closer to disco) sounds.

In post-Soviet Russia, Garanian became one of the busiest bandleaders: in early 2000s, he would simultaneously direct up to four big bands in several Russian cities, including renewed Melodia Big Band, Krasnodar Municipal Big Band, and (from 2003 to 2006) the Oleg Lundstrem Big Band. Garanian toured extensively, mostly with either of his multiple big bands, performing jazz evergreens and/or Soviet song and movie music classics in his own arrangements, very accessible to general public. He resumed his alto sax playing after a 15-years break in the early 1990s, but, obviously, never reached his own former level as soloist, though at one stage (in mid-1990s) he also toured in a piano-guitar-sax trio setting where he soloed a lot.

In 1999, Garanian conducted the Moscow Symphony Orchestra during the Oregon's "Oregon in Moscow" sessions. Produced by Pat Metheny Group's Steve Rodby, the album received a Grammy nomination, thus partly making Garanian Russia's first non-classical Grammy nominee.

Funeral arrangements were not yet announced by mid-day of January 11.

On the photo by Pavel Korbout: George Garanian conducts his Melodia Big Band in Moscow on October 22, 2009

Published: AllAboutJazz.Com

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Jazz Festivals in Russia

I think that every person who writes about jazz is, this way or that, spammed regularly: there's hundreds and thousands or artists in the world, and they (or their agents) want gigs. It's understandable. But I've been getting more and more queries lately, literally drowning in dozens of queries a day -- queries of three similar types:

1. from those who bought a lousy "Jazz promoters database". I am (or, to be precise, my private e-mail address is) listed there as Yuri Saulsky, Moscow Jazz Festival. Yuri Saulsky, God bless his soul, died seven years ago, and his festival is defunct since 2000. Who on Earth happened to submit to some unhappy database my address as the late Mr.Saulsky's? And who keeps SELLING that b*s* to innocent people? Show me that person. I will do no harm. I just want to look into that person's eyes.

2. from those who bought another lousy database, where I was listed correctly as Cyril Moshkow, but -- a festival organizer. Still, looking in the eyes of the person who submitted me there is one of my priorities.

3. from those inventive and energetic ones who googled up "Jazz Festivals in Russia", found an outdated old page in Jazz.Ru portal's tiny English section, and contacted me as if I were all those festivals once listed there.

At least I could do something for those from the paragraph 3: they definitely deserved better than an outdated page, and if they had current contacts of at least ten major Russian festivals, might they as well please, please leave me alone?

So I did something that I could do without significant looks into anybody's eyes: I renewed the Jazz Festivals in Russia directory on Jazz.Ru. It is not much, still only ten festivals (out of several dozens - compare with the directory's Russian version!), but those are major festivals with English-speaking staff (which is rarely the case in Russia) and relevant Web sites (wich is also not very common,) so maybe the stream of incoming tour offers and performance queries will reduce just a tiny little bit. I cannot give jobs to musicians, but at least I can hint them who (theoretically) does!

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Behold the Power of Jazz

Two young Russian punks dance to the music of Dennis Adu, the African-Ukrainian jazz trumpet player from Kiev, Ukraine, while Dennis performs a jazz ballad at the MuzEnergo, open-air multi-genre festival in Dubna, Moscow Region, Russia (July, 2009)
Photo by Sergei "Incognito" Kolier
Click on the image to view it full-size.

Open-Air Jazz In And Around Moscow

By Cyril Moshkow

Moscow's summer is relatively brief: early June is normally the first really warm time during the year, and the final week of August normally the last; which means that most of the fifteen million people who live in and around the Russian capital try to take full advantage of those three short months. Those who can travel, head to favorite Russian tourist destinations, like Turkey, Cyprus or the shores of the Black Sea; those who own patches of land in the city's nearest vicinities (with Russia's centuries-long peasantry traditions, of whom there are surprisingly many) try to spend as much precious summer time at their dachas as possible. Still, millions stay in the city, and they want fun.

Hermitage Garden Jazz Festival
Moscow, Russia
August 21-23, 2009



The first jazz festival to be held outdoors in Moscow was the Hermitage Garden Jazz Festival, the first edition taking place as early as 1998, when the festival started the day after the Russian government defaulted the country's economy; quite miraculously, the event held on, and is now in its 12th year...
[CONTINUE READING ON ALLABOUTJAZZ.COM]

Friday, October 9, 2009

On American Airwaves

Cyril Moshkow, Larry Appelbaum
Cyril Moshkow and Larry Appelbaum, at the Pacifica WPFW radio station on Oct.4, 2009

October 4, 2009: Cyril Moshkow, the publisher and editor of Jazz.Ru, Russia's only Jazz magazine, appeared on WPFW in Washington, DC as a guest of Larry Appelbaum's Sunday radio show, Sound of Surprise, for a two-hour dialog about the state of jazz in Russia.
LISTEN:
part 1 (wma, 25.7 Mb, 1:13:47); part 2 (wma, 14.2 Mb, 0:40:47)

Cyril Moshkow in the WPFW studios
(photos by Larry Appelbaum)

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Best description of a Russian tour I've ever read

Steve Kershaw, British bass player and Greek mythology scholar, writes about his Russian tour (April, 2008.) Marvellous.

"...[we] take some critical comment ('I really like the music, but it would sound much better with a trumpet instead' – why do the drunkest people always know best?), and, once Nick had extracted himself from the adoring pale-skinned, almond-eyed beauties and I'd made my escape from a hairy, malodorous, red-faced alcoholic, we enjoy a vodka-fuelled afterparty in Petter's hotel room after tramping the streets of the city for an hour in a vain search for an open bar."

BTW Leonid Vintskevich, the piano player, and Steve did a really good job -- I mean their new CD, "Songs From The Black Earth" (Flat Five, 2008.) 50.000 copies sold in Russia (well, there's a trick: technically, in Russia it was not a standalone release, but a supplement to a popular magazine, Avtozvuk a.k.a. The Auto Sound.) We're running Vintskevich/Kershaw quartet on the cover of the next Jazz.Ru issue.
The current issue, #3'2008, is in stores right now, and its cover features Russian big band tycoon Anatoly Kroll -- he turned 65 this April:
MAGAZINE COVER - click to enlarge