Reed Player/Composer Matt Renzi
To Release 8th CD as a Leader,
"Rise and Shine,"
On Three P's Records Jan. 14
To Release 8th CD as a Leader,
"Rise and Shine,"
On Three P's Records Jan. 14
CD Features His Longtime Trio,
Bassist Dave Ambrosio and Drummer Russ Meissner,
Plus Guests
Ralph Alessi, Giridhar Udupa, A.R. Balaskandan
Bassist Dave Ambrosio and Drummer Russ Meissner,
Plus Guests
Ralph Alessi, Giridhar Udupa, A.R. Balaskandan
CD Release Show at Shapeshifter Lab, Brooklyn,
Feb. 18
Feb. 18
"We've developed our language," Renzi says of his trio-mates.
"Once I explain the essence of a particular song, we let the music
breathe and go where it wants to go in that particular moment, which
takes a lot of trust musically."
The 41-year-old Renzi, a San Francisco native who lived, worked, and
studied in New York, Boston, and India before relocating to Rome,
performs throughout Europe as well as the United States, where he has
strong followings in New York and on the West Coast. "During my time in
Europe, I've matured as a composer," he says. "Wherever I am, I'm
continuously analyzing contemporary scores, experimenting with
orchestration, and researching my new sounds. I've developed a lot as a
performer as well."
Upcoming European appearances include Perugia Jazz Winter 1/16 with Renzi/[Stefano] Senni/[Jimmy] Weinstein Trio (which plays completely improvised music from beginning to end); and 2/27
with Matt Renzi's Arm-Sized Legging at La Cantiere, Rome. He's also
curating a twice-monthly concert series, "Esplorazioni," at Teatro
Studio Keiros in Rome, and will perform a CD release show there 1/24 with European musicians.
Sharing the frontline on three tracks on Rise and Shine is the acclaimed trumpeter Ralph Alessi, while South Indian masters Giridhar Udupa and A.R. Balaskandan contribute vocal percussion and mridangam respectively on the CD opener "Noasis," an arresting swinger with its dancing, warm-toned tenor, double-stop bass figures, and exacting vocalisms.
(Renzi studied Indian classical music with the brilliant improvising
vocalist and composer R.A. Ramamani and has been studying Carnatic
Rhythm on the kanjira, a South Indian frame drum, for many years now.)
But even without the Indian accents, Renzi creates magnetic currents
through his interaction with Ambrosio and Meissner.
Matt Renzi is a third-generation musician. His father, Paul Renzi, was principal flutist for the San Francisco Symphony for 50 years (he retired in 2004). His grandfather, Paolo Renzi,
was principal oboist with Arturo Toscanini's legendary NBC Symphony
Orchestra; his father also played with Toscanini. "I knew I wanted to
play the saxophone when I was 12 or 13," says Matt.
He studied for a time with Joe Henderson,
who lived in the neighborhood and continued to be a friend and
influence once their formal studies ended. Other mentors included his
father, drummer Eddie Marshall, and bassist Herbie Lewis.
Renzi headed to Boston
to pursue a degree in music performance at Berklee College of Music,
then to New York, where he first connected with Ambrosio and Meissner.
"Musically it was fantastic," he recalls of the trio's busy time on the
jazz scene. "We did various tours of Japan as well as Europe and the
U.S. together."
Returning to the West
Coast to acquire a master's degree in arts in classical composition at
San Francisco State, Renzi immersed himself in the compositions of
20th-century giants including Stravinsky and Elliott Carter. His
studies there, he says, "got me away from using traditional chords to
organizing more abstract sounds, and to thinking more in terms of
orchestration."
"Vetro," the atmospheric final track on Rise and Shine, pairs Renzi's oboe with lyrical modern percussion. "I
plan to use the oboe more in improvisational settings," he says. "These
days, I use it in my cello quartet, in which I try to mix contemporary
classical music with improvisation. I also play oboe on certain gigs I
have as a sideman. It's a technically and physically demanding
instrument, so it makes you really think about every note you play."
Matt Renzi, Dave Ambrosio, Russ Meissner.
In addition to his work with the cello quartet, he performs a separate repertoire with a larger version of the band, Arm-Sized Legging,
which features cello, viola, reeds, bass, and drums. He's also working
on a solo CD using saxophone, clarinet, and English horn and exploring
texture, sound, and microtonality. "I would love to write a piece for
orchestra and saxophone," says Renzi. He also is continuing his studies
of south Indian percussion to become even more fluent in that musical
language.
On a West Coast swing next month, Renzi plans to feature his cello quartet at a Chez Hanny concert (San Francisco) 1/12,
with the leader on saxophone, oboe, and English horn joined by cellist
Misha Khalikulov, bassist Kim Cass, and drummer Smith Dobson V. His U.S.
CD release show takes place 2/18 at Shapeshifter Lab, Brooklyn (with Alessi, Ambrosio, Balaskandan, Meissner).
Web Site: mattrenzi.com
Media Contact:
510-234-8781
hudba@sbcglobal.net
www.terrihinte.com
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