Brittany Anjou
Enamigo Reciprokataj Pianist-composer Brittany Anjou blends the influences of a
wide range of jazz and classical piano, and a fascination with the Esperanto
language, on her stunning debut Enamiĝo Reciprokataj. A trio album featuring bassist Greg Chudzik and
drummer Nicholas Anderson (as well as two tracks with special guests, bassist
Ari Folman-Cohen and drummer Ben Perowsky), it also includes 10 original
compositions, highlighted by an eponymous five-part suite that showcases both
Anjou's ambition and her originality.
Enamiĝo Reciprokataj (pronounced En-ah-mee-joh
Reh-sih-pro-kah-tye) translates into English as Reciprocal Love -- or,
alternately, as Mutual Breakdown. "[It's] a double entendre about
improvisation and the push/pull of relationships," Anjou writes. She also
refers to multiple levels of relationships: "It represents the enigma
improvisers face to spontaneously fall in love with their instrument/the
sound/the situation/each other," she says. "And additionally, to
convince an audience to fall in love with their love."
If the concept sounds somewhat esoteric, the music itself is
anything but. The album's bookend tracks, "Starlight" and its reprise
"Reciproka Elektra," alternate instantly compelling, electronically
processed washes with warm and confidently swinging piano-trio melodies. Each
of the suite's five parts comprises an expressive, hook-filled tune and
improvisation set to a joyful dance of a rhythm, from the whirlwind "Reciprokataj
I: Cyrene (Flight of the Butterfly)" to the 5/4 bounce of
"Reciprokataj IV: Olive You." Even the grim determination Anjou
presents on "Reciprokataj V: Flowery Distress" is offset by
Folman-Cohen and Perowsky's irrepressibility.
The album also honors Anjou's most important pianistic
influences. Her phrasing and chord voicings channel the respective spirits of
Oscar Peterson and Red Garland; in addition, she separates the parts of the
suite with songs that directly pay tribute to favorites Ahmad Jamal
("Snuffaluffagas") and McCoy Tyner ("Hard Boiled Soup").
"All of the music celebrates my love affair with great jazz
pianists," she says.
Anjou's use of Esperanto is not incidental: With Enamiĝo
Reciprokataj, she begins a planned trilogy of albums based on the concepts and
structures of world languages. (The next two installments will center on Dagara
and Arabic, respectively.) "To me, Esperanto is a romance," she says.
"The language mirrors jazz improvisation . . . . Jazz and Esperanto are
both contemporary languages of the last century, and both promote intercultural
dialogue, democracy, and self-expression."
Brittany Anjou was born in 1984 in Minot, North Dakota,
moving to Seattle as a very young child. Her mother was a pianist, flutist, and
music teacher, and Brittany began playing piano herself at age five. Her mother
also played a lot of jazz recordings around the house, and at 12, hearing a
solo by the Panamanian pianist Danilo Perez, Brittany was inspired to begin
studying jazz.
As a high school student, she joined and toured with
Seattle's Roosevelt High School Jazz Band, meeting and performing with Wynton
Marsalis in New York. Attending the Stanford Jazz Workshop at 16, she worked
with Clark Terry, who became her idol. It was around that same time that Anjou
began composing -- including much of the material that eventually became
Enamiĝo Reciprokataj.
Arriving in New York to study music at NYU, Anjou studied
with Stefon Harris, Tony Moreno, and Sherrie Maricle, as well as with Jason
Moran and Vijay Iyer at School for Improvised Music. She also studied classical
music in Prague with composer Milan Slavický, and West African gyil music in
Ghana with master player Bernard Woma and his protegees. She has since
performed in 13 countries on three continents with a number of ensembles
including the New York Arabic Orchestra, the Shaggs, Bi TYRANT, and the LARCENY
Chamber Orchestra (founding and leading the latter two).
Anjou began performing selections from Enamiĝo Reciprokataj while
living in Prague in 2005 and continued honing it thereafter, including in a
well-received performance with Bi TYRANT at New York's Zinc Bar during the 2018
Winter Jazz Festival. In the fall of 2018, she returned to Kuwait to teach
piano and jazz ensembles as part of a nine-month residency at the Sheikh Jaber
Al-Ahmad Cultural Center opera house, in an experimental music program, the
first of its kind in the country.
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