Search

This form does not yet contain any fields.
    To Buy Gilad's Music and Books
    Twitter
    Wednesday
    Dec152010

    Sarah Gillespie's In The Current Climate 

    Hi everyone,  in January- February I’ll be touring with the incredible  Sarah Gillespie. We are very excited to announce the imminent release of our new album ‘In the Current Climate’

    Sarah Gillespie guitar & vocals

    Gilad Atzmon - clarinet, sax, accordion & electronics

    Enzo Zirilli - drums

    Ben Bastin - bass & cello

    Musical production Gilad Atzmon

    We will be touring across Britain in playing 30 dates and will officially launch the album at Pizza Express Jazz Club, Soho on Thurs 20th Jan. Tickets *HERE*

    “In the Current Climate is an utterly wonderful new record. Expected and got in spades Sarah’s unique way with words plus terrific guitar playing, inspiring production and not just great songs, but totally original music. Brilliant, the bee’s knees.”  Robert Wyatt

    In the Current Climate by sarahgillespie

     

    www.sarahgillepsie.com 

    Jan 7 BRIGHTON Komedia 8pm 01273 709709

    Jan 8 WENDOVER St Mary’s Church, Bucks

    Jan 13 NOTTINGHAM Jazz Steps

    Jan 14 SOMERSET The David Hall, South Petherton 01460 240340

    Jan 15 GLOSSOP Lift Global Music Club 01457 853821

    Jan 20 LONDON Pizza Express Jazz Club, Soho

    Jan 27 NORWICH Norwich Arts Centre 8pm £10/£8 01603 660352

    Jan 28 GOOLE, The Junction Theatre, Yorks 01405 763 652

    Jan 29 MUCH WENLOCK The Edge Arts Centre

    Jan 30 ABERGAVENNY Black Mountain Jazz 01873 855074

    Feb 2 NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE The Cluny 2  0191 230 4474

    Feb 3 GARTLY The Tin Hut, Aberdeenshire 01466 720247

    Feb 4 ANGUS Links Hotel, Montrose 01674 671000

    Feb 5 BANCHORY Woodend Barn, Aberdeenshire 01330 825431

    Feb 6 HALIFAX Square Chapel Centre for the Arts 01422 349422  

    Feb 10 BRACKNELL South Hill Park Arts Centre 01344 484123

    Feb 11 BASINGSTOKE Anvil Arts Centre

    Feb 12 CORNWALL The Old Chapel, Calstock 01822 833183

    Feb 13 12pm Exiter Bar Venezia Lunchtime Concert for Palestine

    Feb 13 BRISTOL Jazz @ Future Inns 07515 051 695

    Feb 17 NEWCASTLE UNDER LYME Old Brown Jug

    Feb 18 ALTRINCHAM Cinnamon Club 0161 926 8992

    Feb 19 BARNSLEY Civic Theatre 01226 327 000

    Feb 22 BUXTON Buxton Festival

    Feb 27 COLCHESTER Fleece Jazz Fundraising Concert 

    Feb 28 LONDON The 606 Club

     

    

    Tuesday
    Nov092010

    Joe Rennison: Gilad Atzmon More Than Just a Musician

    Gilad Atzmon: Ahead of our London Jazz Festival Concert (Arts Depot, November 18),  I was interviewed for the London Student Paper by Joe Rennison.

     

     

     

    Joe Rennison: Gilad Atzmon More Than Just a Musician

    Few students currently at University of London will remember Gilad Atzmon’s gig at SOAS in 2006. His performance was exemplary, as all of his live performances are. Four years later, Atmon is still gigging, still writing and still pushing the boundaries of thought and expression.

    I met Atzmon in Soho opposite Ronnie Scotts. As I wait for him to

    arrive I spot his name on the October listings for Ronnie’s, a testament to Atzmon’s status within the Jazz community. We meet and go around the corner for breakfast.

    On 18 November, The London Jazz Festival will play host to Atzmon and the Orient House Ensemble (OHE) as they celebrate their 10th anniversary. The group is Atzmon’s mainstay and has seen him develop as a musician.

     

    London Jazz Festival in association with BBC Radio 3 presents: Gilad Atzmon and The Orient House Ensemble Tenth Anniversary Celebration.
    Arts Depot Thursday 18th November 2010 7.30PM

     



    The OHE began back in 2000. “I started with Asaf Sirkis,” says Atzmon, “and we realised that we needed two other people and we basically auditioned quite a few and we couldn't find anyone and then Frank came back from Boston.”

    ‘Frank’ is Frank Harrison, a pianist of considerable talent who spent time at the prestigious Berklee College of Music in Boston before returning to England. “The first thing he asked me is, 'Gilad, do you want me to try and play like you?' I said, 'You do whatever you want to do' and it was heaven and it has been heaven since then. The man,” Gilad pauses, “is a fucking genius.”

    The gig will consist of three sets; Early OHE, Gilad with strings, and recent OHE. “We will play a marathon. Three or four hours. Three sets. We will play material from our first few  albums. Then we play our strings project. Then we play our new offering The Tide Has Changed.”

    People have said to Atzmon that The Tide Has Changed is the closest thing to his live show. The recorded Atzmon and the live Atzmon are distinct. Live, his improvisations are often hard bee-bop that make you sit up and listen. His albums tend to be more melodic and incorporate Middle Eastern styles as well.

    Particular highlights on the album are Bolero At Sunrise, Atzmon’s take on the well known Ravel tune, and We Lament, which seems to echo aspects of Michael Brecker’s Ballad Book. The album is also an example of the close relationship between Atzmon’s music and his writing. The title of the album refers to the Arab-Israeli conflict. “I think that the tide has changed,” says Atzmon.

    He is more than just a musician. Depending on when you meet him, you could describe him as a musician, an activist, an academic, a teacher or a philosopher - the list could go on. Atzmon attended Essex University, achieving a Master’s degree in Philosophy. “I think that what university is all about is a genuine and profound attempt to understand the world and to understand the subject that is part of understanding.” He goes on: “The problem is that we have lost our ability to philosophise. We don't know how to ask questions.”

    Atzmon is critical of political correctness. He says that the construction of critical thought is the only weapon that we have against political correctness and that all we can do is follow the premises of an argument and dismantle it logically. “What is political correctness? Political correctness is a political scent that doesn't allow political negation,” says Atzmon. “In this society that is supposed to be tolerant and liberal, there are a few topics that we cannot address.”

    “And I am sorry to say it, but Iran, for me, is freer. To quote Adorno's idea about freedom; Adorno says that in Soviet Russia you were freer because you were aware of the boundaries of your freedom. When you are a jazz player and you are in C minor, you are free because you can do a lot of things but when you play free jazz, you are far less free because there are no boundaries.”

    It is another example of the overlap between Atzmon’s music and his political thought. Certainly, Atzmon is not afraid to ask questions. He is true to himself and fearless of criticism. “In the beginning, when I started to say what I'm saying, a lot of political groups tried to cling to me and I had to shake them all out because once you start to work with them you have to fit into an agenda. I don't want to do anything with the left wing. I don't want to do anything with the right wing. I don't want to anything with anybody.

    “My job as an artist is to look into the mirror and to say what I think and believe. I don't want to start to say what I think and then have to make sure it fits into a political agenda.” It is Atzmon’s view that, “philosophers, artists, poets, shouldn't fit.”

    “We are not doing it for power. I don't say, 'vote for me', I don't want you to vote for me. Fuck off. Buy my album if you think I'm good enough, come to my concerts, talk to me, let's have a beer.”

    We speak at length about many different issues, from philosophy to politics to music. The pertinence of the topics Atzmon speaks on are exemplified when a young women on the table next to us interjects into our conversation.

    Atzmon was speaking about multiculturalism. She is a black woman who lives in Germany. She said that her race dictated how easy it was for her to find a flat in certain areas. If she wanted a flat with other black people then it was easy, but to venture outside these areas made it much harder.

    Atzmon understands. His drummer is black. “We go to a kebab after the gig and there would be some redneck yobs or whatever and he would go out because he would understand that there was potential conflict.”

    We have finished our breakfast and with it our conversation. If you can, attend on 18 November. It’s a rare chance to see every stage of Atzmon’s music in one evening and perhaps what’s more, you will be seeing Atzmon live - a phenomena that can never be reproduced onto record because Atzmon is so much more than just his music.

     

    Amazon.co.uk

    

    Monday
    Nov012010

    Gilad Atzmon And The OHE: 10th Anniversary Marathon, London Jazz Festival

    Check out this extract of an amazing Anti War Video Art (by Yeast) of our  Re-Arranging the 20th Century (QEH, London Jazz Festival 2005)

    Gilad Atzmon & the OHE, Re-Arranging the 20th Century, Video Art by Yeast from Gilad Atzmon on Vimeo.

    We will be playing it again on  Thursday 18 November 2010

     
    7:30pm  @ the Artsdepot, London

    London Jazz Festival 2010

    Hello Everybody

    We will  celebrate ten years of the  Orient House Ensemble, with a special three set performance.  featuring special guests Asaf Sirkis, Guillermo RozenthulerTali Atzmon, Romanno Viazaani  and the Sigamos Quartet. Materials from our early albums,  will be followed by  our acclaimed In Loving Memory of America  tribute to Charlie Parker.  We will also play some materials from our new collaboration album with Robert Wyatt and Ros Stephen For The Ghost Within. We  will conclude with new music from the band’s new release The Tide Has Changed.
    To read a Guardian 4 stars review of The Tide Has Changed,click  here 
    To read a Guardian 5 stars review of For The Ghosts Within, click here

    Thursday 18 November 2010
    7:30pm

    Artsdepot
    5 Nether St
    London
    N12 0GA
    020 8369 5454

              Tickets
    £16 (£14 conc.) + bkg

     

     

    Thursday
    Oct212010

    Gilad Atzmon And The OHE: 10th Anniversary Extravaganza

    Gilad Atzmon And The Orient House Ensemble: Tenth Anniversary Celebration
    Thursday 18 November 2010
    7:30pm  @ the Artsdepot, London

    London Jazz Festival

    Hello Everybody

    You do not want to miss this one.

    This is our Orient House Ensemble mini jazz festival.

    We will  celebrate ten years of the  Orient House Ensemble, with a special three set performance.  featuring special guests Asaf Sirkis, Guillermo RozenthulerTali Atzmon, Romanno Viazaani  and the Sigamos Quartet. Materials from our early albums,  will be followed by  our acclaimed In Loving Memory of America  tribute to Charlie Parker.  We will also play some materials from our new collaboration album with Robert Wyatt and Ros Stephen For The Ghost Within. We  will conclude with new music from the band’s new release The Tide Has Changed.

    To read a Guardian 4 stars review of The Tide Has Changed,click  here 
    To read a Guardian 5 stars review of For The Ghosts Within, click here
    Thursday 18 November 2010
    7:30pm

    Artsdepot
    5 Nether St
    London
    N12 0GA
    020 8369 5454

              Tickets
    £16 (£14 conc.) + bkg

     

    Sunday
    Oct102010

    Tonight BBC Jazz on 3, Jez Nelson presents Gilad Atzmon's Orient House Ensemble  

    Tonight  at  23:15  we will be playing The Tide Has Changed on BBC Radio 3 (75 min)

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00v4n85

    Jez Nelson presents Gilad Atzmon's Orient House Ensemble in concert at Ronnie Scott's during the band's 10th anniversary tour. Alongside Atzmon on reeds and accordion are pianist Frank Harrison, Yaron Stavi on double bass and drummer Eddie Hick.

    Bolero at Sunrise by Gilad Atzmon

    Great news. Amazon dropped the price of our new Album to £8.99.

    Amazon.co.uk

    We have received some some very good reviews  last week:

    …this blistering, beautiful set…a fluid, hypnotic, optimistic blending of sounds from North Africa, the Arabian peninsula, John Surman and Charlie Parker, resulting in a multicultural balm of Gilad to soothe all aching souls.
    Andew Male, Mojo, October 2010.

    The vivacity, urgency and spontaneity of the best contemporary jazz spurs him always  John Fordham, The Guardian.

    Spirituality and time-bending alto-sax virtuosity Mike Hobart Financial Times (4 stars)

    Astonishing invention and virtuosity  Robert Shore, Metro

    Soulful soprano-sax Jack Massarik, The Evening Standard (4 stars)

    ..serious messages and stunning music-making BBC Music Magazine

     Riotous mix of oompah music-hall cavortings, slurred-pitch Middle Eastern rhapsodising, luxuriously sensuous clarinet love-songs, and stormy collective blasts reminiscent of the 1960s John Coltrane quartet John Fordham, The Guardian (4 stars)

    a blend of passion, intensity, superb musicianship and an underlying political commitment as Atzmon continues to campaign against all kinds of oppression..... a man who has done so much to enhance the cultural landscape of the UK in recent years The JazzMann (4 stars)

    Intense and involved but at the same time highly entertaining  Alan Joyce This Is Nottingham

    Incredible and unprecedented  Rainlores World of Music

     

    

    The wandering who- Gilad Atzmon

    GiladAtzmon on Google+