Shai Maestro is a creator of moods, a shaper of atmospheres
and a sculptor of sound. The pianist doesn't merely play music; he creates a
world that is distinctly and intimately his. On his new recording, Shai Maestro
Trio - Untold Stories, available on Motema Music on August 28, 2015, Maestro,
and his trio featuring Jorge Roeder (bass) and Ziv Ravitz (drums), explores a
touching and poetic universe of music. Untold Stories contains all that is
great in modern jazz today, and truly displays the camaraderie and brotherhood
in music that this trio possesses.
As a pianist and composer Maestro has been chasing down
beauty his entire life, looking to capture meaningful phrases that are refined,
and clearly communicated. With Untold Stories, the third album from his trio,
Maestro has turned the page and entered a new phase, taking time, fearing less,
daring more, accepting the occasional stumble, and allowing the music to change
and be a representation of who the members of the trio are as people, for good
or bad. Maestro elaborates, "What happened to us on the road in the last
few years is basically a shift in our state of mind. What I want to do today
(and also to hear from other musicians as well) is to express who I am, and who
we are as human beings. Being human is a complex thing to say the least, and
there are many sides to our personalities. Not all are beautiful. So music can
and should contain everything; beauty, ugliness, love, violence, etc. So Untold
Stories is a point in time of us, an entry into a different journey, one that
is much more raw and honest then what I have done so far." The music on
Untold Stories was recorded live and in studios in Brooklyn and Paris, offering
the listener a complete picture of the Trio today ("Maya's Song"-studio-Paris,
"Treelogy", "Painting", "Elusive" &
"Looking Back (Quiet Reflection)"-live-Paris, "When You Stop
Seeing", "Endless Winter" &
"Shades"-studio-Brooklyn).
Untold Stories opens with the compelling triumph,
"Maya's Song", co-written by Maestro, Roeder and Ravitz while
preparing music for a tour. "When You Stop Seeing"was inspired by a
poem Maestro received from a dear friend. The poem speaks about a transparent
bubble floating in space. Maestro elaborated, "this idea of transparency
fascinated me and I tried to look for a transparent harmonic quality which is
how I got to the texture of the song, which is a chord that is made out of
5ths. It's neither major nor minor." This composition was written during
the last armed conflict between Israel and Palestine. "As an Israeli, I
was born into this realty of conflict and that's the only thing I knew until I
started traveling and eventually moved to New York. During the horrible
violence of this last 'round' between Israel and Palestine, I was exposed to the
voices coming from within Israel and Palestine via social media etc. One of the
things that really bothered me is how people referred to people on the other
side as, 'The Palestinians', or 'The Israelis'. We know this reality very well
here in the U.S. with racism, sexism etc., and I feel that people forget that
we are human beings before belonging to a place, race etc. So the extended
title of this song, which didn't make it to the album, is 'When you stop seeing
other human beings as human beings', explained Maestro. "Treelogy"
was written while the trio was on tour in France. After the initial melody is
presented it's a study of new harmonic devices that Maestro found, trying to
create the contrast between a consonant, slow bass motion combined with a fast
dissonant harmony on top of it. Ravitz and Roeder found a way of creating a
long, intense build up, allowing the trio to explore the higher register of
their instruments, which is something new to Maestro's music. This also
displayed a new level of patience that the trio had found. "Painting"
is a song Maestro wrote for the group's first album several years ago in his
Brooklyn apartment. Maestro explains, "it was composed at 3 AM, while I
was staring at a painting I had received as a gift from a friend in Bulgaria.
It is a painting that resembles the work of Marc Chagall. The composition is an
attempt to write music to what I feel the painting expressed instead of trying
to express myself." It is included on Untold Stories mainly because of
Ravitz's enthralling drum solo. "Ziv and I were talking a lot about how
the drum solo got stuck in a concept in jazz music, usually stuck in the shape
dictated by trading or soloing over the form unaccompanied. We spoke at length
about how not many people are questioning this concept any more, and that drum
solos can be treated as any other instrument, playing and reacting to harmony,
melody and space. I felt it's a statement I wanted to make", said Maestro.
Other highlights on Untold Stories include
"Elusive", a study in contrasts in registers and harmonic tension;
"Endless Winter", inspired by NYC's painful winter, and, "an
attempt to deal with harmony in a special manner, finding the harmonic twist
only in the middle voices, while the melody and bass movements are completely
consonant", explained Maestro; the completely improvised
"Shades", which finds Maestro bravely opening the door to presenting
an abstract piece that is not "beautiful" and part of his usual
aesthetic; and the album's closer "Looking Back (Quiet Reflection)",
which is all about time, space and simplicity. Maestro explained,
"Together with this 'abstract world' that I'm discovering, I'm
simultaneously being pulled more towards simplicity, which has to come with
trust. Trust in the band members, and in the music. This is one of the
compositions I'm most proud of on this album, as it opens new possibilities for
me in how to approach music and composition in particular. It's a new direction
that I'm very curious about."
While he was only 19 years old, Shai Maestro began a
five-year stint recording and touring with bass player Avishai Cohen, and is
featured on the albums Gently Disturbed (2008), Aurora (2009) and Seven Seas (2011).
Maestro moved to New York City in 2010 and created his acclaimed trio with
Peruvian bassist Jorge Roeder (Gary Burton, Miguel Zenon), and Israeli drummer
Ziv Ravitz (Lee Konitz, Esperanza Spalding). The Trio's debut album for the
French label Laborie Jazz, simply titled Shai Maestro Trio, was very well
received and set the trio in motion, touring the world, playing major
festivals, concert halls and jazz clubs (Jazz In Marciac, Nice Jazz festival,
Montreal Jazz festival, Cotton Club-Japan, Duc des Lombards, New Morning, Jazz
Cafe-London, A Trane, Smalls, ShapeShifter Lab, The Jazz Gallery, etc), and
receiving incredibly positive responses from audiences, peers and the press. In
2012 at the Jazz In Marciac Festival they shared the stage with Chick Corea's
group, Tigran Hamasyan's quintet, Esperanza Spalding's group and Diana Krall's
band, indicating the echelon they had reached in the jazz world. The Shai
Maestro Trio's third album Untold Stories will be released on August 28 on
Motema music.
Maestro is based in Brooklyn, and when not leading his Trio,
the pianist can be found performing and recording with international artists
such as Theo Bleckmann, Donny McCaslin, John Patitucci, Mark Guiliana, Avishai
Cohen (trumpet), Anat Cohen, Jorge Rossy, Ari Hoenig, Myron Walden, Gilad
Hekselman, Jonathan Blake, Clarence Penn and many others.