Shai Maestro, Roeder, Nehemya: The Dream Thief - LP 180g Vinyl

ECM Records

€22,90
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SKU:
ECM 2616
UPC:
0602567867487
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Edition:
1x LP Vinyl
Rotation Speed:
33rpm
Record Weight:
180g
Vinyl Record Type:
LP
ECM Records Cat#:
ECM 2616
Released:
28.9.2018 in Germany
Genre:
Jazz
Artist:
Shai Maestro, Roeder, Nehemya
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The first ECM leader date for Shai Maestro (following his label debut with Theo Bleckmann on Elegy) features the gifted pianist fronting his superlative trio with fellow Israeli Ofri Nehemya on drums and Peruvian bassist Jorge Roeder, and also playing alone. A solo interpretation of Matti Caspi’s “My Second Childhood” opens the curtain on a programme of characteristically thoughtful Maestro originals, each one with a story to tell.  “Hearing the Shai Maestro Trio is like awakening to a new world”, All About Jazz has suggested. “Expressions of joy, introspective thoughts and heightened intensity all come to the fore.” Maestro’s differentiated touch is special; he can convey a range of fleeting emotions in a single phrase. A deconstruction of “These Foolish Things”, the album’s sole standard, serves as a prelude to “What Else Needs To Happen”, a sombre meditation on inner city violence and its aftermath.  The Dream Thief was recorded at Lugano’s Auditorio Stelio Molo RSI in April 2018, and produced by Manfred Eicher, and issued on the eve of a European tour with concerts in Spain, Germany, Netherlands,  Sweden, Belgium, Italy, France, and Switzerland.

FEATURED ARTISTS

TRACKLIST

A1 My Second Childhood, Composed By – Matti Caspi 4:39
A2 The Forgotten Village, Composed By – Shai Maestro 6:21
A3 The Dream Thief, Composed By – Shai Maestro 8:29
A4 A Moon's Tale, Composed By – Shai Maestro 2:36
A5 Lifeline, Composed By – Shai Maestro 3:54
B1 Choral, Composed By – Shai Maestro 3:50
B2 New River, New Water, Composed By – Shai Maestro 6:59
B3 These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You), Composed By – Holt Marvell, Jack Strachey 4:24
B4 What Else Needs to Happen, Composed By – Shai Maestro, Speech [Excerpts] – President Obama 7:08

BACKGROUND

“Hearing the Shai Maestro Trio is like awakening to a new world – a world of wonders, excitement, beauty and uncertainty,” All About Jazz has suggested. The Dream Thief, the first ECM release by Maestro as a leader, presents the Israeli pianist fronting the latest incarnation of his uncommonly interactive, atmospherically expansive trio, featuring new drummer Ofri Nehemya, a fellow Israeli, and its bassist from the start, Jorge Roeder, a native of Peru. The album also includes several searching solo performances by Maestro. His solo interpretation of Israeli singer-songwriter Matti Caspi’s “My Second Childhood” raises the curtain on a program of characteristically vivid Maestro originals.
 
Maestro, who made his first ECM appearance on vocalist Theo Bleckmann’s 2017 album Elegy, made a name for himself playing in Israeli bassist Avishai Cohen’s popular band from 2006 to 2011. A resident of Brooklyn and a dual Israeli and American citizen, the pianist also played in star drummer Mark Guiliana’s quartet and has recently worked in a duo with saxophonist Chris Potter. After four trio albums with Roeder and drummer Ziv Ravitz, Maestro drafted Nehemya into the group, which gathered to record The Dream Thief at the studio in Lugano. Maestro chose the darker-toned of two Steinway model D pianos on offer, apt for what he calls “the dreamy, cinematic quality” of the music he had written for the session. With Manfred Eicher producing, the atmosphere in the studio was one of being “open to the magic of the moment,” Maestro recalls. “I had a clear intention for the pieces, but I knew that Manfred likes to let the music breathe, to get to the essence of the music. For instance, my composition ‘Lifeline’ had been a double-time burner live, but Manfred suggested that we take it down about 50 bpm and concentrate on making the melody sing, in the way Charlie Haden might do. That really transformed the tune.”
 
Another spontaneous creation was Maestro’s solo performance of Caspi’s “My Second Childhood,” a song about experiencing life anew via the eyes of a child. The Israeli composer is one of the pianist’s “all-time favorites – I grew up listening to him, and even took lessons with Caspi when I was 12,” he says. “I had arrived at the studio early before Jorge and Ofri, just to commune with the piano. I hadn’t planned to include that tune, but it just came out, as it’s so deep in my system. I have a real appreciation for the DNA of a great song, where the melody and the harmony go perfectly together. It’s the same thing with ‘These Foolish Things,” which is also such a beautifully crafted song. I was just improvising, and it morphed into a kind of avant-garde treatment – yet with the melody still like a red thread wound through it.”
 
Maestro and Roeder have played together for about seven years, developing a synergistic partnership even though they come “from the opposite ends of music in a way,” the pianist explains. “Jorge has experience playing a lot of free music, while I studied both classical and jazz and have played a lot more arranged, rhythmically defined music. I’ve become freer playing with him. He can travel back and forth from off the grid to in the pocket, and he has such great ears. I can take the music where I want to go, and he’s right there with me, where we can almost improvise in unison.” Although Nehemya is new to the group, he and the pianist have an innate kinship. “Ofri and I share a lot of influences – we don’t even have to talk about things to come to the same emotional expressions,” Maestro says. “But he also has an advanced, new-generation rhythmic understanding, so he can really push and challenge Jorge and me.”
 
Whether it’s “going with the melody or really burning and playing free, we always try to be attuned to the moment, trying to find that magic in it,” Maestro says. “With ‘Lifeline,’ ‘The Forgotten Village’ and ‘A Moon’s Tale,’ we were concentrating on melody, while rhythmic interplay was the focus of ‘The Dream Thief’ and ‘New River, New Water’.” As for the deeply moving end piece, “What Else Needs to Happen,” incorporating parts of speeches by Barack Obama, the pianist explains: “An acquaintance of mine, the saxophonist Jimmy Greene, lost his little daughter in the massacre at Sandy Hook, Connecticut. These school shootings in America have become so common, almost ‘normal’ – it’s surreal, insane. When I realized what happened for Jimmy and the rest of those parents, it felt so close – it was heartbreaking. I understand that in jazz a piece like this I could be ‘preaching to the choir,’ but ‘What Else Needs to Happen’ is about being open to the moment in another way. I think performing artists, because we have a stage, have a responsibility to speak about the world we live in today. Maybe the combination of Obama’s words and the music will help people hear and feel the emotional reality a bit more. It is, for me, at least some measure of resistance to that horrible new ‘normal’.”
 
Reflecting on his influences when it comes to jazz piano Maestro concludes: “The tremendous history of jazz is a great inspiration but also a great challenge. We each have our own individual gift, which is the choices we make – whether we turn to major or minor, whether we play pianissimo or fortissimo at a key moment. I always try to remember to embrace history while not trying to be anything or anyone else – to let the music come out of me.”

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3 Reviews Hide Reviews Show Reviews

  • 5
    Works that bring out the charm of this person

    Posted by Nicolas on 10th May 2022

    I was expecting this person, Jai, but the work that came out of another label didn't come up well, but I didn't know it was out of ECM, so I hurriedly bought it, and it was still a great answer. At last, he created a work that brought out the charm of this person. The divine power of Manfred Eicher is still alive. When I listen to this work, I feel that producers still play an important role. It brings out the appeal of the player to the maximum. There is no half-hearted feeling that I felt in previous works, and I consistently have a firm sense of confidence as Shy's work. For example, what if it came out of the current Blue Note or something? I suddenly think about it. I can no longer trust the name of the label alone. However, as long as Manfred is there, I reaffirmed that even more attractive works from ECM will clearly highlight the patterns of attractive people and produce works.

  • 5
    ECM finds yet another treasure

    Posted by Chris on 10th May 2022

    This guy is yet another fantastic find for ECM. I've been listening to lots of ECM piano trios lately (Marcin Wasilewski, Tord Gustavsen, Keith Jarrett, Bobo Stenson, Colin Vallon) and Maestro's ECM debut is a stunner. Beautifully recorded and well-paced. Exceeded expectations.

  • 5
    Great sounding vinyl

    Posted by Tom on 10th May 2022

    This vinyl feels like the same build quality that you could expect when records were the way to listen to music. That's a big compliment. No gimmicks, just nice sound and mastering. As for the album, you've probably already streamed it. It's different and cool music. Something to put on when you want something jazzy, but you're just not feeling the other jazz records.