Aaron Diehl Interview, NYC

By Filipe Freitas

Aaron Diehl, photo by © Ingrid Hertfelder (used with permission)

Aaron Diehl, photo by © Ingrid Hertfelder (used with permission)

 

Name: Aaron Diehl
Instrument: piano
Style: postbop, contemporary jazz
Album Highlights: The Bespoke Man's Narrative (Mack Avenue, 2013); Space Time Continuum (Mack Avenue, 2015).

 

 

 

 

 

Tells us one adjective that accurately describes you.
Realist.

If you weren't a musician, what would you have been?
Airline pilot.

What do you picture in your mind while improvising? 
The finish line.

Which color would you pick to associate with your music and why?
Chartreuse… I don’t know - I just like the drink.

Tell me two persons who marked you the most as a musician. 
Benny Golson and Wynton Marsalis.

And two musicians whom you've never worked with but you'd love to.
Ron Carter and Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla (conductor)

Can you briefly describe the hardest moment of your career?
That’s every day! Nothing is guaranteed. But this is also what drives me.

You are going to perform at Greenwich House on April 27 with pianist Dan Tepfer for the Uncharted concert series. How did this collaboration with Dan come up? 
Dan suggested the idea of performing duo piano for a performance at Bard College in October 2015. I’ve had a lot of respect for Dan’s musicianship, so I was very excited at the prospect of this collaboration.

Is it a challenge to play with another pianist?
Yes, because you are dealing with two instruments of the same timbre, with a wide tonal range. It would be like placing two symphony orchestras on stage, with two conductors. With two pianists, extra care has to be taken in playing within certain registers. Adding syncopation on top of that, each pianist has to be sensitive to one another’s sense of time.

On what other projects are you working right now?
I’m preparing for debuts with the Cleveland Orchestra (Gershwin’s Concerto in F) and LA Philharmonic (Gershwin’s “I Got Rhythm” Variations) this summer. 


Dayna Stephens Interview, NYC

By Filipe Freitas

Dayna Stephens, © Gulnara Khamatova (used with permission)

Dayna Stephens, © Gulnara Khamatova (used with permission)

 

Name: Dayna Stephens
Instrument: saxophone, EWI
Style: postbop, contemporary jazz
Album Highlights: That Nepenthetic Place (Sunnyside, 2013); Peace (Sunnyside, 2014); Gratitude (Contagious Music, 2017).

 

 

 

 

 

Tells us one adjective that can accurately describe you.
Lucky

If you weren't a musician, what would you have been?
Car Designer, most designs are hideous (lol).

What do you picture in your mind when you're improvising?
Bouncing circles.

Which color would you pick to associate with your music and why?
If I had to pick just one it would be green because it signifies life to me, blue would be a tie or close second.

Tell me two persons who marked you the most as a musician.
Sonny Rollins and Brad Mehldau.

And two musicians whom you've never worked with but you'd love to.
These answers would differ from day to day. I would love to work with Jack DeJohnette and Kurt Rosenwinkel, perhaps at the same time!

Can you briefly describe the hardest moment of your career?
Selling my baritone saxophone (my favorite saxophone voice) to move to NYC.

Besides gratitude, what other messages do you intend to convey with this new album?
Gratitude is also an attempt to exemplify a universal beauty with the goal of creating space for common ground and stronger connections in a time of increased fragmentation. 

Any other projects in mind at the moment or for a near future?
If limited to four burners: a project featuring the EWI and more (not necessarily taking a “fusion” approach), Big Band (long overdue), a traditional Quartet (featuring standards), a Sextet with 3 horns (featuring original compositions). Lots more in the oven, though.


Ben Monder Interview, NYC

By Filipe Freitas

            Ben Monder, 2015, NYC ©Clara Pereira

            Ben Monder, 2015, NYC ©Clara Pereira

 

Name: Ben Monder
Instrument: guitar
Style: contemporary jazz
Album Highlights: Excavation (Arabesque, 2000); Hydra (Sunnyside, 2013); Amorphae (ECM, 2016).

 

 

 

 

 

Can you tell me one adjective that better describe your personality?
Mumpish.

If you weren't a musician, what would you have been?
There honestly wasn't a backup plan.
 
What do you picture in your mind when you're improvising?
Armageddon. 

Which color would you pick to associate with your music and why?
Periwinkle, my favorite crayola crayon.

Tell me two persons who marked you the most as a musician. 
Irwin Stahl, who instilled important musical values at an early age, and Chuck Wayne, who was the best possible jazz guitar teacher.

And two musicians whom you've never worked with but you'd love to.
I would love to work with Jack DeJohnette and Wayne Shorter, but I'd settle for coffee.

Can you briefly describe the hardest moment of your career?
Maybe the winter (in 1989) I spent working Wednesday through Saturday in a lounge band for $240 a week, commuting from Queens to New Rochelle, all the while convinced I had ball cancer.

Besides jazz, what other styles do you listen to? Tell me your favorite musician(s) for each style you mention.
Metal (Meshuggah, Defeated Sanity, Devourment, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum); Classical (Luigi Nono, Helmut Lachenmann, Georg Friedrich Hass, Bernard Parmegiani).

Any other projects in mind?
My next record will be a recording of cover tunes done in trio and solo guitar arrangement.