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Gorgeous, lyrical, world music played on the clarinet accompanied by a rhythm section and a string quartet. Included are beautiful standards from Brazil, Israel, France as well as music by John Coltrane and a few original compositions.
Genre:
Jazz: World Fusion
Release Date:
2007
Albums you will love
Anat Cohen
Place & Time
Jazz: World Fusion
Poetica
© Copyright-Anzic Records
(700261208527)
Record Label: Anzic Records
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I started to play the clarinet when I was 12. I received my early formal music education in a conservatory and in junior high school in my hometown of Tel-Aviv. At about age 16, when I decided to pursue a major in Jazz at the “Thelma Yelin” High School For The Arts, I was instructed to “bring your brother’s saxophone or…any horn... but NOT the clarinet”. For the next 15 years I played mainly tenor saxophone and only brought out my clarinet occasionally.
While attending Berklee College of Music in 1996, I met Phil Wilson, a great musician and educator. He encouraged me to play the clarinet because he felt I had my own “voice” on the instrument. After moving to NYC in 1999, I started to play different styles of music in which the clarinet is part of their tradition: Brazilian Choro, Dixieland, Colombian and Venezuelan folk music, among others. For the last seven years, I have played saxophones less and the clarinet more. I am feeling the connection with the instrument I established as a child and enjoying it more than ever.
I decided to make an album to share some of what I have learned about playing the clarinet in various musical contexts. The songs I have chosen are songs I have loved for years. There are some old Israeli songs like “Hofim” (Beaches), “Nigunim” (Melodies) and “Ein Gedi” (a beautiful oasis in Israel), a great song by Israeli singer/songwriter Ariel Zilber called “Japanese Tale” (which has stunning lyrics by Ehud Manor), a beautiful ballad called “Quando Eu Me Chamar Saudade” by the extraordinary Brazilian songwriter Nelson Cavaquinho, a French song by Jacques Brel “La Chanson des Vieux Amants” (Song for Old Lovers - which I would like to dedicate to Yossi Banai, whose version of the song in Hebrew I can only describe as truthful) and song by the great John Coltrane, “Lonnie’s Lament”. There are and two original compositions of mine - “The Purple Piece” and “La Casa del Llano” (a place I ate arepas several times during a visit to Caracas, Venezuela) and Omer Avital’s impressionistic song “Cypresses”.
I have always associated the clarinet with sounds that are flowing, expressive and intimate….i.e…poetic. I made this album, and named it Poetica, to inspire others to share this association with me.
With:
Anat Cohen – Clarinet
Jason Lindner – Piano
Omer Avital – Bass
Daniel Freedman - Drums (Percussion on Lonnie’s Lament)
Gilad – Percussion on Cypresses
** String Quartet on tracks 4,6,9 &10:
Antoine Silverman – Violin
Belinda Whitney – Violin
David Creswell – Viola
Danny Miller – Cello
For more information about Anat Cohen please visit:
www.anatcohen.com
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Anat Cohen's Spiraling Modern Jazz Presence
author: ejazznews.com
Anat Cohen - “Poetica”
Posted by: editoron Monday, April 09, 2007 - 10:34 AM
Glenn Astarita
CD-2007 Anzic Records
While at Berklee College, Tel-Aviv reared multi-reed artist Anat Cohen was encouraged to pick up the clarinet by musician/educator Phil Wilson. And from her own words: “I decided to make an album to share some of what I have learned about playing the clarinet in various musical contexts.” With that, Cohen employs a jazz combo and String Quartet for the consummation of this lovely jazz-outing that touches upon multinational folk themes via a quasi, third-stream approach. It’s soft and eloquently expressed amid the strings delicate enhancements and polytonal contrasts. Cohen’s soul-stirring lines on “Hofim (Beaches)” lead a dreamy medium-tempo swing vamp, nicely interleaved by the strings unit. In other areas, Cohen’s music summons Middle Eastern folk and shades of Brazil. And she opens Coltrane’s “Lonnie’s Lament,” with an introspective muse that subsequently cascades into a peppery Latin groove. Then on “Nigunim,” the musicians’ lush overlays, accentuate Cohen’s sweet and sublime phrasings. To that end, “Poetica,” surfaces as a chain of airy themes rooted within a focused, jazz-mindset that is not overly saccharine or watered-down with orchestral innuendos. No doubt, Cohen’s spiraling modern jazz presence should get an added boost with the release of this irrefutably attractive outing. – Glenn Astarita
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A Masterpiece
author: PYMWYEA
This is simply the most beautiful CD I have heard....since Jim Hall's "Concierto". It is destined to be recognized as a masterpiece. Ms. Cohen has other worldly chops on the clarinet and impeccable taste in tunes. Wow.
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How beautiful is the clarinet
author: jeery m.
How beautiful is the clarinet, especially when played by Anat. The diversity of the music-fromIsraelto south America-to Brussels is an aded bonus. The music is both poetic and peaceful.
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