New
York-based, Israeli jazz pianist-composer Guy Mintus is set to issue a new trio
album, Connecting the Dots, scheduled for worldwide release on February 15,
2019 on France's Jazz Family label. Mintus
is a learned, well-traveled and much honored musician. His awards include the Prix du Public at the
Montreux Jazz Festival's solo piano competition, two ASCAP Foundation/ Herb Alpert Young Jazz
Composer Awards and, in 2018, the ASCAP Foundation Leonard Bernstein
Award. In addition, the Mintus Trio's
debut album, A Home In Between, was selected as a DownBeat "editor's
pick." DownBeat's Brian Zimmerman called Mintus "an artist of
prodigious talent and boundless ambition.
In reviewing A Home in Between, All About Jazz said it is an
"outstanding piano trio disc that heralds the arrival of a significant
talent and a superb band." And New York Music Daily raved, "best trio
album of 2017 by a mile, so far."
A descendant
of Polish, Iraqi and Moroccan Jews, Mintus has made New York his home for the
past six years and has taken his music to locales as varied as India, Turkey,
Brazil, Canada and many European cities.
He has collaborated and/ or shared the stage with such artists as Jon
Hendricks, Trilok Gurtu, the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra and ska-punk band
Streetlight Manifesto.
The
ambitious new Connecting the Dots collection touches on a broad variety of
musical worlds and is a musical summation of Mintus's ethnic and musical
heritage and his experiences and interests.
It wanders easily from the hard bop of Horace Silver's "Yeah!"
to the floridity of "Little Italy," a Mintus original, to the
carefree strut of another Mintus original, "Nothing New Under the
Sun." Most striking, perhaps, are
the performances that evoke the exoticism and spirituality of Mintus's native
Middle East. A poem, "Hunt
Music," by the mystical 13th Century Persian poet, Rumi, is given an
inspired musical setting by Mintus, with an English translation of Rumi's words
sung by Israeli vocalist Sivan Arbel. An
arrangement of the traditional Jewish High Holy Day prayer, "Avinu
Malkeinu" features a haunting sax solo by jazz veteran Dave Liebman. And, to celebrate his own Mizrahi Jewish
heritage, Mintus performs (and sings) a Hebrew language hit associated with the
late Israeli Yemenite singer, Zohar Argov. The other members of the Mintus Trio
are bassist Dan Pappalardo and drummer Phillipe Lemm.
Aside from his work with the Trio, Mintus has been
busy with an array of other projects. He
recently performed Gershwin's" Rhapsody in Blue" with the Bayerische
Philharmonic and premiered his own full-length work, a piano concerto inspired
by the journey of the Jews of Arab origins immigrating to Israel in its early
days, for the Israeli Chamber Orchestra.
He has been commissioned to compose works by the American Composers
Orchestra, the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, and the Jerusalem East & West
Orchestra, In addition, he has contributed original music and piano
interpretations to Fiddler, a forthcoming documentary about Fiddler on the
Roof, directed by Emmy-nominee Max Lewkovicz. In the spring of 2019, Mintus
will make his theater debut, starring as an aspiring young pianist in a new
musical at Tel Aviv's Carmeri Theater.
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