Áurea (ArtistShare)

Geoffrey Keezer

Released February 4, 2009

Grammy Nominee for Best Latin Jazz Album 2010

YouTube:

https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mz5CMaTZnr2l8Vba4MEFazo-WmPb2iiDY

Spotify:

https://open.spotify.com/album/74347sn5BwvtGfa2K9gqG2?si=rXzZ2ZnvQyuA4T-NpgKBWQ

About:

Greetings! Welcome to my brand new musical adventure called ÁUREA. After nearly 20 years (yikes!) in the jazz piano and composing business, I can say with complete confidence and enthusiasm that I’ve never been as excited about making a new CD as am about this one! As a participant, you’ll get an exclusive pass to experience the completion of this significant recording as my special guest. Through this project you will gain exclusive insight into my creative process, and a window into the wonderful, crazy world of making music with a band of international all-stars!
This project invites you along on a journey as I develop, record and complete my new CD. As the work progresses, I will provide compositional sketches along the way. In addition, I’ll share my candid commentary on this music, the players, and important and influential experiences in my life that help shape and guide my music, through interviews, audio lecture/demonstrations, rehearsal recordings and journals. And the best part is, at the end, you will receive the completed CD!
Check out my various Participant Offers to see which one might suit your needs. I look forward to co-creating my new CD with you!

Geoffrey Keezer

Track Listing:

1. Cayendo Para Arriba 7:11

2. Una Bruja Buena 5:23

3. La Flor Azul 4:05

4. Arana Amarilla 7:58

5. La Nostalgiosa 7:07

6. Leucadia 6:12

7. Miraflores 6:37

8. Vidala de Lucho 5:59

Personnel:

Geoffrey Keezer: piano
Hugo Alcázar: drums/percussion
Ron Blake: saxophone
Essiet Okon Essiet: bass
Sofia Rei: vocal
Mike Moreno: guitar
Phil O’Connor: bass clarinet
Peter Sprague: guitar
Jon Wikan: drums/percussion
Steve Wilson: sax

Review:

Geoffrey Keezer is a pianist of immense technical ability. As a musician and composer he is able to express himself in different idioms and settings. On Aurea, for instance, he makes a remarkable foray into the realm of Afro-Peruvian music. And he emerges from this colorful expedition with such a high degree of excellence that you wonder why more practitioners of jazz on the piano, for all its use as a primary rhythmic instrument in modern ensembles, have not made the journey into the ever-inviting musical realm of Afro Latin America earlier. Now it appears that so many musicians – especially New York based artists – playing in the jazz idiom seem to be besotted with the music of Latin America, especially Colombia and Peru.

It certainly appears, from the music on this record, that Keezer has not only imbued almost every aspect of Afro-Peruvian idioms and the rhythmic phrasing, but that he has also made it his own, emerging here with a virtually original musical avatar. So much so that it is almost impossible to tell “Cayendo Para Arriba” and (especially) “Una Bruja Buena” and “Leucadia” from say “”La Flor Azul” and “La Nostalgiosa”. But more than character Keezer may have also stretched even further the textures of a very elastic rhythmic culture. “Miraflores” with its layers of dark-to-light Afro-Peruvian rhythms under Keezer’s soaring piano improvisations, is a resounding classic. What this suggests is that, at least in terms of charts alone, Keezer may certainly have added to the contemporary catalogue.

He is doubtless, successful in this endeavor in no small measure because of the presence of his musical cohorts. Firstly, the Peruvian percussionist, Hugo Alcázar brings a wild, yet sophisticated reading of both, Keezer’s as well as the Latin standards and traditional songs. Jon Wilkan is the other percussionist and when they are together, they work up a dynamic storm. Also noteworthy are exquisite solos by Ron Blake (“La Nostalgiosa”) also Steve Wilson especially on “Araña Amarilla”. And then there is the majestic reading of all the bass parts by Essiet Okun Essiet and the stylish plucking on acoustic guitar by Peter Sprague. However by far the revealed star on this recording may be vocalist Sophia Rei Koutsovitis, who brings a raw, primal quality to the gut-wrenching readings of the vocal parts and is specially memorable on “Una Bruja Buena,” “La Flor Azul” and “La Nostalgiosa,” where she conjures the spirit of heartland of Peru. The elemental sadness of “Vidala De Lucho” is all too memorable thanks to the vocalist’s reading of the emotional phrasing of the song. Keezer of course set the mood with a spectacular introduction to the song.

In Aurea, Geoffrey Keezer has created a record of unforgettable grace and power. And the artist tells us that he has also made an extra-artistic commitment to the people of Peru. In going with ArtistShare, Keezer has committed to making a contribution to social projects in that country to alleviate some of the economic distress there. In this regard he has broken fresh ground in commitment to the artists whose traditions he shares here on this record.

Raul da Gama (Latin Jazz Network)