In the vibrant and tight-knit world of jazz music, there is only one Miles
Davis, one Ella Fitzgerald, and one Wynton Marsalis. But there are two Avishai
Cohens, both of them successful, and both of them Israeli. Fortunately, they
play different instruments: one Cohen's on the trumpet, the other sticks to
bass. It's the trumpeter who's now enjoying his turn in the international
spotlight.
The
trumpeting Cohen leads a post-bop trio called Triveni, with bassist Omer Avital
and drummer Nasheet Watts. Their unusually piano-less numbers range from soft
and bluesy to fiery and Dizzy Gillespie-ish.
In late 2012, the trio released its second CD, Triveni
II. All About Jazz called it a "stunning"
work by a band whose music is "off-the-wall without veering completely off the
tracks." The Jazz Chill Corner wrote that "the quick-time improvisation of the
trio is brilliant." And Downbeat named Cohen a rising star in its 2012 critics
poll.
Born in Tel Aviv
but living in New York, Cohen sometimes performs with his brother Yuval (sax)
and sister Anat (clarinet) in a band called The 3 Cohens – the swinging-est
siblings in the jazz world today (with apologies to Wynton and the boys). Avishai
Cohen (the trumpeter, not the bassist)
No comments:
Post a Comment