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Gilad Hekselman : SplitLife
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The winner of the 2005 Montreux Jazz Guitar Competition--stunning guitar virtuosity in a stellar trio setting.
Genre: Jazz: Traditional Jazz Combo
Release Date: 2006
SplitLife Record Label: Smalls Records
  • Buy CD - $12.97
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Purim 6:25 Album Only
Hello Who Is It? 4:38 Album Only
My Ideal 7:14 Album Only
I Fall In Love Too Easily 3:00 Album Only
Suite For Sweets 8:44 Album Only
When Will The Blues Leave 5:51 Album Only
The Summer of Laughs And Tears 6:17 Album Only
Breathless 2:22 Album Only
I Should Care 7:03 Album Only
My Second Childhood 7:05 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

Gilad Hekselman (guitar), Joe Martin (bass), Ari Hoenig(drums)

Recorded 2006 Live at Fat Cat, NYC

Engineering: Paul Cox, Luke Kaven
Assistant Engineer: Zachary Diaz
Mixing/Mastering: Luke Kaven
Photographs: Luke Kaven
Art Direction: Luke Kaven, Skip Bolen

For more info: www.giladhekselman.com

Notes

Remember the name Gilad Hekselman, because you’re going to be hearing it a lot from here on. He’s already made a big impression by winning the 2005 Gibson Montreux International Guitar Competition at the Montreux Jazz Festival. But now here is his debut recording for all to hear.

Gilad Hekselman was born in Israel February 3, 1983 in Kfar Saba, and he grew up in Alfey Menashe. He began on piano at age six, and guitar at age nine. From ages 12-14 he performed regularly on two television programs on the Children Channel in Israel, where his fellow musicians introduced him to playing jazz. He attended Thelma Yellin High School of the Arts, a national magnet school also attended over the years by a number of notable Israeli jazz musicians. Several graduates of Yellin – including Omer Avital, Avi Leibovich, and Eli Digibri – migrated to New York in the mid-1990s, attended The New School, and ultimately became frequent performers at Smalls. Hekselman, who arrived at The New School in 2004, and who has been recently featured at Smalls, is the latest to become a part of that legacy.

Gilad describes this part of his life as being split between worlds of East and West, tradition and the future, and even day and night. But he finds a kind of unity – musical and otherwise – in just that, and so we have the paradoxically conjunctive title SplitLife. The range of compositions and moods suits the title. There are three traditional standards (“I Should Care,” “My Ideal,” and “I Fall In Love Too Easily”), one blues via Ornette Coleman (“When Will The Blues Leave?”), one timeless ballad by one of Israel’s national treasures, Matti Caspi (“My Second Childhood”), and five striking originals by Hekselman (“Purim,” “Suite For Sweets,” “The Summer of Laughs and Tears,” “Breathless,” and “Hello Who Is It?”).

This is warm-hearted music, with generous spirit. Almost anyone can understand it. For some of us who perhaps spend too much time in the basement, the ray of sunshine is uplifting. Never mind that Gilad has all the instrumental skills of a true virtuoso. What makes his notes worthy is in the sincere and expressive way he can render a tune. His focus is completely on the musical moment. He’s all the way there. He’s never showing off, never overplaying, never playing “over” his accompanists. His originals are very pretty, with wide dynamics that follow a dramatic arc. He knows how to bring out power in the softer passages and how to build to a musical climax. On standards he phrases with a depth that belies his age.

His musical influences are diverse. Guitar enthusiasts might compare Hekselman with guitar masters such as Pat Metheny, Kurt Rosenwinkel, John Scofield, or Peter Bernstein. And I think many will agree with me that he will be added to that list in short order. But as much as Gilad respects other guitarists, he points to pianists Bill Evans and Ahmad Jamal (as well as John Coltrane) as his principal influences, and he carries some of a pianist’s sensibilities into his music. The way he accompanies himself reflects the pianist’s notion of left-hand/right-hand independence. Sometimes he’ll use piano voicings that are uncommon on guitar. Aside from having influences in the music of his native environs, Gilad studied North Indian classical music with sarod player Sanjay Sharma, acquiring in the process a distinctive rhythmic emphasis in his music.

Gilad and his quick-witted accompanists interact on more or less equal terms in a continuous three-part, six-way conversation. Bassist Joe Martin and drummer Ari Hoenig have been two of the key developers of this fluid and fleet style of playing in recent years, which draws distally from the classic Bill Evans trios and later Miles Davis quintets. This contemporary style is characterized by rapid and subtle changes in mood and style woven in with a continuously shifting rhythmic background. Here, the interplay is so natural, you’d think the group had been performing together for years.

Joe Martin, one of the foremost bassists of today, is no stranger to the contemporary guitar trio. He is of course famous as a regular member of Kurt Rosenwinkel’s group. But he’s also been all around the contemporary scene, flanked by artists such as Aaron Goldberg, Mark Turner, Chris Potter, Michael Kanan, Ben Monder, Jeff Ballard, Eric Harland, Jorge Rossi, and of course, Ari Hoenig. Martin is always attuned, always in the groove. For satisfaction, I keep going back to listen to “When Will The Blues Leave” at the opening of the guitar solo, where the bass line swings hard and mean. Joe helps to give the music its heart. By turns he can be lilting, melancholic, rhapsodic, or anything in between, and the feeling is always sincere.

Ari Hoenig (who made his debut as a leader on Smalls Records in 2004 on the CD The Painter) has become a world standard bearer for drumming in the contemporary piano/guitar trio as reflected in his work with pianists Jean-Michel Pilc and Kenny Werner, and guitarists Jonathan Kreisberg and Lage Lund. This record affords an unusually good opportunity for listeners to catch Ari’s astounding brushwork. [Does this guy have every bristle trained?] There are a few passages where the music calls for the brushes to play an ostinato, and Ari makes every hit count, shifting almost imperceptibly, for example, from Calypso to Flamenco when the occasion calls for it. From brushes, Hoenig progresses to the sticks, and when the occasion calls for it, to the full Category Five storm, stage left.

This group originally appeared at Fat Cat starting in January 2006 as the Gilad Hekselman Trio. So enthused was Hoenig afterward, that he suggested relaunching the group as a fellowship co-led by all three, performing original material from all three members of the group. That group may come next. But first we decided that this would be a good time to spring Gilad on the rest of the world as a surprise. The results should cause a stir.

Luke Kaven
May 2006


Acknowledgments.

To my parents, Haya and Igal: Your endless love, support, and belief in me give me the strength to do what I do. I can only hope to one day give my children the same feeling you give me. I love you. To my brothers, Nadav and Idan: I love you and believe in you greatly. I know you two will reach greatness. Thanks to my grandmothers and the entire family. Thanks to the great musicians that are playing with me on this album. Joe and Ari – your openness, musicality, intuitiveness, and maturity inspire me greatly. I am lucky and thankful to be playing with you guys. To the people who supported me in New York: Anat Cohen – thanks for your constant desire to help, guide, and support. Omer “Avitbaz” Avital – you’re the man! Thank you! Colin – Thanks for your huge support.
To Amit “Shukan” Pelled: I am so lucky to have you as a friend. Thanks to my musical brothers - Yonatan Voltzok, Max Vater & Doron Tirosh. To my teachers: Amos Hoffman – you always believed in me. Thanks to Sanjay Sharma for opening my mind; and thanks to Yuval “Yud” Cohen for further opening my mind. Thanks to all my friends around the globe – Dave, Alex, Nir, Barak, Adam, Bjorn, Avishai, Itai, Ferenc, Edward, Jack, Eldad, Abro, Ushmi, Yurifaz, Hakimi, Yoav, Pini, Gon, Shimrit, Eran, Dandan, the Glicks, Amnon, Daniel, Eytan, Hodeya, Shelly, Katya, Ilan, Eddie, Opher, Riklis, Shay, Rosen, Oshri! Thanks to the guys from Montreux and to Al Di Meola. Thanks to Mitch Borden and all you guys at Smalls and Fat Cat for supporting my music. It’s an honor and a privilege to be a part of this scene. Thanks to Luke Kaven for recording me and working so hard to make this album happen. Thanks to The New School Jazz & Contemporary Music Program. Thanks to The America-Israel Cultural Foundation. Thanks to Laboga Cables. Many thanks to you the listeners. And last but most certainly not least, thank you to the most beautiful soul I could ever ask to meet: Naama, thank you for accepting me the way I am, and for loving me without boundaries. I love you endlessly.

The producer would like to give special thanks to Debbie Millman, Jeffrey Brown, Tom Currier, and Marcy Granata for their gracious assistance in making this recording possible.

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REVIEWS

SplitLife
author: Gerri Gordon
Gilad is amazing. My SplitLife CD plays constantly.
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One of the best musicians on the planet and he keeps getting better!
author: Gary
I was there for the recording. I remember Gilad walked up to the stage kind of down and said to someone in the crowd, "I'm not hearing anything man..I'm just not hearing anything." But as soon as that downbeat came, and he heard Ari and Joe behind him, HE STARTED HEARING THINGS!! Wonderful things!! His playing is so natural, soulful, swinging, rich, creative, MUSICAL! He is his own person, has his own voice at 24!! He is truly one of the greats and it is only a matter of time before he is selling out the Village Vanguard and touring festivals as a headliner! Not to mention his compositions. They are wonderful..they stick in your mind and tug at your heart. I felt like they were all standards and had to check the CD case to verify that he wrote them! This album is an understatement from Gilad. He was fairly new to this band and the smalls/fatcat scene at the time of this recording and plus it was his first recording as a leader so even though it is great, what he does now is even greater and I can't wait for the second album!! Hurry up Gilad!!
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AWESOME!
author: Steven Bilodeau
Gilad is one of my new idols, i am an eighteen year old jazz guitarist from Ottawa, ontario, Canada and i absolutely LOVE his playing and the trio. The trio as a whole is what i want my trios to sound like! Great Stuff Gilad keep jazzin bro! -Steve
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One of the best arising jazz guitarists
author: Ori Ventura
Gilad just keeps getting better and better in music from the days I've seen him giggin' in clubs in Israel. This cd shows he has a lot to say. Amazing!
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