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  • Jazz Pianist Tigran Hamasyan On His New Album, Shadow Theater, And H

    JAZZ PIANIST TIGRAN HAMASYAN ON HIS NEW ALBUM, SHADOW THEATER, AND HIS ARMENIAN INFLUENCES

    WestWord
    Oct 29 2013

    By Jon Solomon Tue., Oct. 29 2013 at 10:00 AM

    Although jazz pianist Tigran Hamasyan, who's just going by his first
    name these days, is only in his mid-twenties, he already has more
    than two decades of playing under his belt. Having started on piano
    at the age of three, he was already playing festivals by the time
    he was thirteen. With a technical proficiency of someone much older,
    the virtuosic pianist won the 2006 Thelonious Monk Piano Competition,
    in addition to winning several other awards over the past decade. We
    spoke to Tigran about his daring forthcoming album, Shadow Theater,
    which is slated for release next spring on Verve, and his Armenian
    influences.

    Westword: From what I understand, Shadow Theater was about four years
    in the making?

    Tigran Hamasyan: I've had those compositions for a while. About six
    years ago, all the compositions came together, and obviously, I had to
    revisit all of them, but it's the feeling of what I'm doing right now.

    It's actually the first album where I really spent a lot of time
    producing it. There's a lot of details, a long time mixing, working
    on the treatments, like the electronics and the voices. You don't
    really get a luxury like that when you're doing a jazz album. So it
    was pretty fun recording and working on this album.

    Why did you spend more time on this record versus your others?

    The compositions that I had for this project, it just needed that. The
    more I thought about it, it just needed a record that has a pop
    approach. I spent a lot of time on producing something that not only
    sounds musically deep but also sonically something that has a lot of
    time spent on it.

    Did you have an overall concept in mind when you first started writing
    the songs?

    Not really. Not in the very beginning. I just had songs that I really
    wanted to record for this specific band. Then, slowly, when everything
    came together, the concept of the shadow theater originated. Usually
    the inspiration comes directly from musical experiences, but then
    I had the idea of putting in sort of a theatrical vibe to it. So
    everything is like shadow theater. Every piece is part of a theater --
    an imaginary sort of world

    I know you have two guys from Kneebody on the record -- Ben Wendel
    and Nate Wood. What made you want to pick those guys for the album?

    Actually I've been working with Nate and Ben, especially, since 2004.

    Ben is on my first album. I found out later that Ben is in this band
    Kneebody. But basically when I moved to L.A. from Armenia in 2003, I
    wanted to record my first album, and I was looking for a sax player,
    and a lot of people recommended Ben. So that's how I met Ben, and
    then I got introduced to Nate later that year, actually.

    So those guys... I mean, I needed a drummer that can play all these
    beats that I write. At the same time, I needed a really strong pop-rock
    drummer, and Nate has the most incredible sense of improvisation,
    and just makes everything feel so natural and fluid, so he was the
    perfect drummer.

    It definitely seemed like there were some odd time signatures and
    lots of changes and that sort of things, as well, right?

    Yeah, we've been working with Nate a lot on that. We've been sort of
    working together for the last few years, since that Red Hail album
    I did.

    Can you talk about some of your Armenian influences?

    Yeah, sure. Well, Armenian music has become part of me as a musician.

    I discovered it when I was thirteen. Since then, I got into it, and
    it's like a language that I learned, but this language was so familiar
    and so dear to me and so natural to me. It became part of... Like I
    am what Armenia music is, you know what I mean? It's just something
    that comes out every time I play music. Obviously, I can control
    it. Not all of my compositions have that Armenian influence in them,
    but this record does. Whenever I write a melody, I can write a melody
    that sounds like modern Armenian folk songs, but it's not a folk
    song. It's just something that I wrote in that musical language.

    It seems like even some of your improvisations and soloing that you
    throw in some Middle Eastern modes and scales and that sort of thing.

    Yeah, it's Armenian modes. I've been working on it for a long time
    now. It's a vocabulary. For me, what a jazz musician is a musician
    that is a master of improvisation. To me, that's what jazz is. Then,
    obviously, when you learn jazz, there's certain vocabulary, like
    classical vocabulary that comes with it, but you master improvisation,
    like just being an improviser; it doesn't matter what knowledge you are
    using, like what vocabulary you are using to improvise, no matter what,
    you become a master of improvisation when you become a jazz musician.

    But then, for me, later, I realized that the vocabulary doesn't need
    to be the Western classical vocabulary. It can originate from any
    folk music. If you delve deep down into the roots of classical music,
    it's all European folk music. So, for me, I just use my vocabulary --
    Armenian vocabulary -- to improvise.

    Your uncle is the one who originally got you into jazz when you were
    a kid, right?

    Yes. My uncle was a jazz fan, and my father was, at the same time, a
    huge classic rock fan. So I grew up listening to both of those musics.

    I first heard about you listening to an interview with Wayne Kramer
    of the MC5. He was really raving about how good you were.

    Yeah, Wayne is great. We haven't toured together for a while, but there
    was a time when I was living in L.A. when we played a lot together.

    You were on that soundtrack that he did for the documentary, The
    Narcotic Farm.

    Yeah.

    I guess you're living in New York now, right?

    Yeah, but part time. This year I've been mostly living in Armenia.

    Every time I don't have any tours or anything. I will go back home. I
    have an apartment there. I just wanted to see what it was like to
    live there after not living there for a while.

    You've been going by just your first name for while, right?

    Yeah. I'm sort of trying to make it easier on people. That's pretty
    much why.

    That's all the questions I had for you unless there's anything else
    you wanted to add.

    Well, the only that I would like to add is that basically for this
    show at the Oriental Theater we're going to be playing about 90
    percent of the music on Shadow Theater, with a trio, though.

    Basically, it's not really a Shadow Theater release because it's not
    released year. But we're releasing an EP with one track from the album
    called "The Poet" and a few remixes by different electronica artists.

    This other song on the album called "Road Song"... Do you know
    Prefuse 73?

    Yeah, sure.

    He did a remix of a song on the record. And also, there are two DJs
    from the UK called LV -- they did a remix. And also my drummer did a
    remix -- Arthur Hnatek, who's going to be touring with me. So we're
    basically doing an EP release tour as a trio, and in March, we're
    planning on doing an album release tour.

    Was Shadow Theater originally supposed to come out this fall?

    It was supposed to. The full album you're talking about?

    Yeah.

    Yeah, it was supposed to, but it was sort of like we weren't prepared
    to do a proper release. So I wanted to have more time to properly
    release the album. I didn't want to rush. So we decided put out an
    EP and get a good release and good PR and everything in the spring.

    http://blogs.westword.com/backbeat/2013/10/interview_tigran_hamasyan_jazz_pianist.php

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