Pianist/Composer Peter Horvath's
Second Album as a Leader,
"Absolute Reality,"
To Be Released March 25
By His Foreign Matter Records
Collaborators Include
Randy Brecker, Bob Mintzer, Victor Bailey,
& Lenny White
March 10, 2016
Based in the San Francisco Bay Area since the mid-1980s, keyboardist/ composer Peter Horvath
has thrived in the region's highly diverse environment, where various
music scenes often overlap. He's played post-bop with Bobby Hutcherson,
Joe Henderson, Eddie Henderson, and Charles McPherson, and funk fusion
with the Victor Bailey Group, Marcus Miller, Bennie Maupin, and Lenny
White. He's played Latin jazz with Arturo Sandoval, Ray Obiedo, and Pete
Escovedo, and funk and R&B with Pee Wee Ellis, Lalah Hathaway,
Melba Moore, Ledisi, and Rosie Gaines.
But his in-demand status left him little time for his own
music. Now, picking up where he left off in 1995, when Lake Street
Records released his critically hailed chart-topping debut Foreign Matter, Horvath is following up with Absolute Reality,
his second album as a leader. The CD, which will be released by his
Foreign Matter Records on March 25, showcases some of most potent
improvisers in jazz and Latin music including trumpeter Randy Brecker, saxophonist Bob Mintzer, drummer Lenny White, bassist Victor Bailey, and guitarist Ray Obiedo.
"It's kind of crazy it's been 20 years since my last album,"
says the Hungarian-born musician. "During that time I was on the road
constantly, both nationally and internationally, with artists like Victor Bailey and Lalah Hathaway. When my touring schedule slowed down a bit in 2012, I decided it was time to focus on my own music and get it out there."
Absolute Reality is a highly
personal and supremely engaging album by an artist eager to celebrate
the musical riches he's experienced in the Bay Area. The opener and
title track is both a manifesto and a statement of purpose co-written by
saxophonist Norbert Stachel, who provides consistently smart horn
arrangements throughout the album. "Carla," featuring a
gently insinuating groove from Lenny White and a soulful, lyrical
performance by Bob Mintzer, showcases Horvath's gift for crafting
yearning melodies.
No tune better captures the singular mélange of styles that came together in the Bay Area than "Fake Out," a funk-driven tune that sounds like a theme for a 1970s street-wise detective show by way of Steely Dan. "Escape from Oakland" marks the first encounter between Victor Bailey and Ricky Lawson, who together "create this ferocious groove," says Horvath.
For pure straight-ahead blowing, Horvath digs in with "Foreign Matter,"
a treacherous post-bop workout that features Randy Brecker's witty and
casually virtuosic trumpet. The album closes with Horvath's tune for his
son, "Braden's Song," a striking, ebb-and-flow solo piano piece that provides a tantalizing glimpse at another side of the artist.
Born in Budapest, Peter Horvath
grew up behind the Iron Curtain at a time when availability of American
jazz recordings was very limited. But as the son of Hungarian pop star Mátrai Zsuzsa,
he had access to recordings she brought back from touring outside the
country. He also credits his maternal grandfather with introducing him
to the infinite possibilities of the piano.
"My mom was the Barbra Streisand of Hungary, but I wanted a
normal mom," Horvath recalls. "In hindsight it was a wonderful thing.
Through her I got exposed to jazz. She still lives in Budapest and still
performs."
Already passionate about the piano, Horvath experienced a jazz epiphany as a young teen when he heard the music of Oscar Peterson.
While pursuing his love of jazz, he continued to immerse himself in the
European classical tradition, studying at the Béla Bartók Conservatory
of Music. At 17, he won the National Jazz Combo Competition in Gyor,
Hungary and a year later he chose to leave his homeland behind.
Horvath went on to study at the Vienna Conservatory of Music,
a move that also led to steady jazz work on the Austrian scene. A
scholarship to Berklee brought him to the United States in 1983, when he
was 22, and by the end of the year he had left Boston to settle in the
Bay Area. He arrived in California as a straight-ahead jazz player, but
working with funk vocalist Rosie Gaines introduced him to the jazz-steeped Bay Area R&B scene, where he flourished.
Web Site: peterhorvath.com
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