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Video Of The Day: Tigran - 'Road Song'

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  • Video Of The Day: Tigran - 'Road Song'

    VIDEO OF THE DAY: TIGRAN - 'ROAD SONG'

    Oregon Music News
    April 18 2014

    April 18, 2014

    Pianist Tigran is going to be in Portland on April 23rd at Alberta
    Rose Theater in support of his new album, Shadow Theater. Tigran
    Hamasyan with perform with special guest Emmet Lindsay. Doors are
    at 7pm and the show starts at 8PM. The show is all-ages; minors OK
    when accompanied by a parent or guardian. Tickets are $18 Advance
    and $20 At the Door. There are $30 Preferred Seating (first 5 rows
    of the front/center section) available, too.

    We were told:

    When Armenian-born pianist, keyboardist and occasional singer Tigran
    saw a traditional Armenian shadow theater for the first time, he
    felt the power of ambiguity. The silhouetted figures have no faces,
    and they seem to be hiding multitudes of meaning. in that darkness,
    the viewer must place her own story. With Shadow Theater, Tigran picks
    up on that idea, offering a lush and energizing landscape that allows
    listeners to dive in -- and explore their own imaginations.

    Shadow Theater shows the breadth of this young experimenter's vision,
    and it shows how much a young musician these days can make jazz and
    folk music sound like experimental pop -- and the other way around.

    Tigran has already collaborated with figures ranging from American
    electro post-hip-hop producer Prefuse 73 to Tunisian oud master Dhafer
    Youssef, to Swedish cellist Lars Danielsson to French electronic
    producer Fowatile as well as Norwegians Arve Henriksen, Jan Bang and
    Eivind Aarset. Shadow Theater compounds the painterly piano playing
    that won him First Place at the 2006 Thelonious Monk International
    Jazz Piano Competition with folk influences from his native Armenia.

    Along the way, it adds a bodily jolt of death metal and a range of
    kinetic electronic textures that root the record firmly in the present,
    and give it a greater appeal to non-jazz listeners than any of his
    previous efforts.

    The result lands somewhere between Madlib's dragged-out beat wizardry
    and Meshuggah's doom-blasting sonic inferno, Sigur Ros' lapsing
    stratospheric textures and Steve Reich's insistent crosshatchings. All
    are stated influences on the pianist. You might say that it offers a
    new meeting ground for experimental jazz and popular music, pointing to
    a way forward for others -- but then again, it's hard to imagine anyone
    else building something so personal and fluid out of these components.

    More than anything, Tigran hopes that it will help listeners
    investigate and illuminate their own experiences. "The album is
    basically the contrary of the shadows in the theater, because the
    sounds are cinematic and rich in colors. It's the imagination,"
    he says. "I let everybody imagine their own story behind the shadows."

    For the record, he's joined by an A-list band of young innovators
    mostly based in New York, featuring drummer Nate Wood and saxophonist
    Ben Wendel of the jazz-rock band Kneebody, plus the multitalented
    vocalist and Armenian folklorist Areni Agbabian and the bassist Sam
    Minaie. The album is rounded out by a handful of string players and
    electronic percussionists, as well as new touring drummer, Arthur
    Hnatek, and bassist Chris Tordini.

    Tigran was only 19 when he found himself catapulted to jazz stardom
    after winning the prestigious Monk competition, but he was quick to
    avoid picking up anyone else's mantel: he dove into touring projects
    with The Moutin Brothers largely in France and Europe, recorded as a
    sideman with drummer Ari Hoenig and began an ongoing collaboration with
    a group of then Los Angeles-based musicians (Tigran and his family had
    moved to the Los Angeles area when the pianist was 14 and following
    high school he attended the University of Southern California).

    First was the saxophonist Ben Wendel, whom Tigran met at USC. The
    resulting quintet Aratta Rebirth formed in 2009, featuring Wendel,
    Wood (both of Kneebody) and Agbabian and Minaie (who both attended Cal
    Arts), special guest Altura and other young comers on the jazz scene.

    The band was a stunner: 2010's Red Hail proposed an approachable
    synthesis of zinging piano calisthenics, ethereal female vocals
    and ethnic jazz fusion. The X factor was Tigran's love affair with
    metal, which gave the album a surprising ability to transcend its
    own boundaries, matching beauty with destitution.

    Three years later, he pushed himself zestfully into another
    transformation, releasing the surprisingly lush solo album A Fable,
    in which he performed overdubbed duets with himself. The opus --
    which also featured some of Tigran's own vocals -- earned plaudits
    from around the globe. In France he received a 2011 "Victoire de la
    Musique" award (analogous to a Grammy(R) Award).

    For Shadow Theater, Hamasyan abided by a rigorous process: He spent two
    weeks rehearsing and recording the album in the South of France with
    his band, an augmented version of Aratta Rebirth, then added another
    month of postproduction. Listening to the record, you can tell it's
    the result of a fertile push-and-pull between one man's strong vision
    and an entire band's comfortable communication. "I brought the songs
    in all ready -- I even had the drum beats in mind," he said. "But
    obviously, certain things work and certain things don't work. It's
    one thing to do a really killing demo, with everything you imagine,
    then another thing to actually bring it for the musicians to play.

    Sometimes things got shifted around because the guys had their own
    things to contribute."

    Additionally, Universal released a remix EP of the single "The Poet"
    highlighting collaborations with Fowatile, Prefuse 73 and the bass
    music producer LV. An integral part of Tigran's new live show not
    coincidentally involves the pianist leaving his main instrument and
    appearing center-stage using a Roland TR808 drum machine and layering
    his beats underneath his own singing and beat boxing, further revealing
    a desire to shatter all expectations of someone known primarily as
    a pianist.

    When you listen to the Shadow Theater's Technicolor brilliance
    and folksy undercurrents, you feel the depth of what that process
    produced. And you feel like Tigran could have cribbed a concept from
    another crossover pioneer: this album depicts a "bright-size life."

    http://oregonmusicnews.com/2014/04/18/video-day-tigran-road-song/

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