Pianist/Composer Richard X Bennett
Connects Mumbai & New York City
With 2 New Ropeadope Releases,
His First Recordings on an American Label,
Due October 6 
Trio Date "What Is Now" &
Indo-Jazz Quintet Album "Experiments With Truth"
Both Feature Rhythm Section of
Bassist Adam Armstrong & Drummer Alex Wyatt
 Baritone Saxophonist Lisa Parrott &
Matt Parker on Tenor/Soprano
Are Added on "Experiments ... "
CD Release Show Set for October 11,
Rockwood Music Hall, NYC
August 25, 2017
Until now, however, Bennett had yet to put an album out on an American label. On October 6, a dual release by Ropeadope Records will mark the pianist's first American recordings -- the trio date What Is Now and the Indo-jazz quintet session Experiments With Truth.
 Bennett displays his loose, percussive, and conversational instrumental
 style on the trio album. The raga-infused music on the quintet album is
 something else again, as stylistically remote from his trio opus as the
 Big Apple is from Bollywood. 
Bennett describes the quintet's sound on Experiments With Truth
 as "Mingus meets raga in the 21st Century." Music he originally 
conceived and performed with North Indian classical musicians is 
arranged and performed in a jazz context. "As far as I can tell it's the
 first time it's been done," Bennett says. "I don't claim to be a raga 
musician, because first off, the piano isn't a raga instrument. I'd say 
it's raga-based. I like the analogy they use on cooking shows, 'This is 
my take on a dosa.' As a jazz musician, this is my take on raga," the 
vast vocabulary of melodic structures, or modes, upon which classical 
Indian music is based. 
"I was always somewhat of a minimalistic player," Bennett 
adds. "The blues is also like a specific raga, and if you play it 
academically it won't sound right. You can't just run the scales. With 
Indian music, everybody else was doing fusions based on complicated 
rhythmic figures. I'm much more interested in the melodies."
Experiments With Truth opens with "The Fabulist," a long, persuasively surging piece based on a particularly ancient raga (raga malkauns). "Portrait in Sepia"
 feels like an Ellingtonian tone poem by way of Calcutta, opening with 
an ominously swaying cadence designed for Parrott's brawny horn. The 
album's centerpiece is the two-movement "Durga Suite," 
which evokes dual but very diverse aspects of the warrior goddess Durga 
(also known as Devi and Shakti). The title track, which borrows its name
 from Gandhi's autobiography The Story of My Experiments With Truth, is a stimulating and increasingly wild piece inspired by the early morning raga ramkali.
He introduced his Indo-jazz concept on the 2009 solo album Ragas on Piano
 (Dreams Entertainment), and expanded the instrumentation with the late 
bassist Gaku Takanashi and tabla master Naren Budhkar on 2011's Raga and Blues (Mystica Music). Picked up by Times Music, India's biggest label, he released 2013's critically hailed New York City Swara, with Takanashi, Budhkar, Carnatic violinist Arun Ramamurthy, and drummer Michael Wimberly, followed by the 2015 duo album Mumbai Masala with Hindustani vocalist Dhanashree Pandit Rai. Today Bennett also works with Honk & Tonk,
 a "N.O.L.A. meets noir" duo with saxophonist Michael Blake, and 
composes for modern dance, most recently a piece for the Alvin Ailey 
Company performed at the Essence Festival in New Orleans.
Photography: Sean Yoo
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