Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
17.07.2018

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  • 1 Against the Wind 09:22
  • 2 Bulgarian Hoedown 11:18
  • 3 The Crossing 11:40
  • 4 Migratory Mood 08:57
  • 5 Syria-us 09:47
  • 6 Pirouette 06:29
  • 7 The Crying Candle 07:35
  • 8 Third Shift 11:41
  • 9 Shapka Swing 06:05
  • 10 Elegy for Richard 11:22
  • 11 Medium Message 09:36
  • 12 Ascent 08:07
  • 13 Midnight Forest 13:08
  • 14 Street Strut 05:39
  • Total Runtime 02:10:46

Info for Sweet Spontaneous

Concert pianist and composer Michael Arnowitt, assisted by ImproVisions Jazz, makes his Big Round Records debut with SWEET SPONTANEOUS, the title drawn from a poem by e.e.cummings. This two-album jazz album features 14 of Arnowitt’s own compositions with the composer himself at the piano, joined by a dozen jazz notables including Yosvany Terry on alto sax, Lucas Pino on tenor sax, Dave Smith on trumpet, and Colin Stranahan on drums.

Against the Wind, featuring vocalist Shirley Crabbe, tells the story of a woman summoning the strength to persist in the face of powerful forces. In The Crossing, bassist Rick Rosato’s accompaniment to the spoken words of a Langston Hughes poem evolves into a slow groove of brushes, keys, bass, and sax, rendering the listener completely spellbound.

Syria-us is the creative culmination of a deep study Arnowitt made of Syrian literature and music in preparation for benefit concerts he organized in 2016 to support humanitarian aid for Syrian refugees. The composer’s love of Bulgarian music is shown in Bulgarian Hoedown’s wild, exuberant fiddling and Shapka Swing, which opens with a triumphant fanfare that transitions to klezmer before emerging as the energetic gem of the album. Ascent features a reading of Maya Angelou’s celebrated poem Still I Rise combined with a flirtatious melody and syncopated accompaniment reflecting the spunkiness of both poet and poem.

With SWEET SPONTANEOUS, Michael Arnowitt encapsulates the journey of world music into jazz with dignity, class, and just the right amount of swing. The Washington Post wrote of an Arnowitt concert: “He played with an exquisite sense of touch, color and musical imagination.” Come join Michael Arnowitt as he takes us on voyages into these highly absorbing musical landscapes.

Michael Arnowitt, piano
Yosvany Terry, alto saxophone
Lucas Pino, tenor saxophone
Dave Smith, trumpet
Colin Stranahan, drums




Michael Arnowitt
is one of the most creative and imaginative musicians of today. He is best known for his beautiful and sensitive touch at the keyboard, for the clarity and elegance of his musical ideas, for his abilities to find new articulations and colors from the piano, for his innovative and thought-provoking concert programs, and for his natural and warm on-stage manner with audiences of all ages.

His life and music is the subject of a documentary film, Beyond 88 Keys (2004). The documentary, filmed in both the United States and Europe, contains footage of concert performances, educational talks, and interviews. The film has been broadcast on public television in various states and has been shown at film festivals and venues including the Rode Pomp, an arts center in Gent, Belgium and the Anthology, a theater in New York City’s East Village.

Michael Arnowitt has toured Europe on seven different occasions, performing in France, Belgium, Germany, Holland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Russia. His most recent European tour featured 12 performances with his ImproVisions Jazz Quartet in addition to classical solo piano concerts. In June 2015 he went to Korea, where he gave 10 performances in Seoul, Busan, and other cities. He plans to return to eastern Asia for a multi-country, extended two month tour in September and October of 2016.

Michael Arnowitt has performed twice as piano soloist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, playing piano concertos of Bach and Beethoven; he has also appeared as soloist with the Kiev Chamber Orchestra under Roman Kofman, the Savannah Symphony Orchestra, and others. He has performed in concert with the Ying Quartet, and has toured Canada and the United States giving duo performances with Beverley Johnston of Toronto, one of the world’s leading classical percussionists. He recently marked his 50th birthday with a well-received gala concert for piano and orchestra with music by Bach, Brahms, and the premiere of his new composition Haiku Textures for three cello soloists and orchestra.

The internationally-known flutist and composer Louis Moyse said while in his 90’s:

“During my long musical career, I have met few really great artists in the various disciplines of the field and I am very pleased to name Michael Arnowitt, pianist and musician as one of them. He expresses his art on the highest level. I have great respect for his interpretations and his way to communicate to any audience his feelings through his love for music.”

In 1989 Michael Arnowitt began his novel, 26-year long presentation of the complete 32 Beethoven piano sonatas, matching up his age as he performs the various sonatas with Beethoven’s age as Beethoven composed them. The eight concerts in the project, spaced out over 26 years, thereby become a study in the psychology of aging and development. Audiences have seen how Beethoven developed as a composer, how Arnowitt develops as a pianist, and the intersection of the two processes. 2015 marks the culmination of this project with the final installment in the series, a program of Beethoven’s last three piano sonatas. He has performed these “Beethoven & Arnowitt” concerts throughout the United States and in Canada, Korea, and Germany, where the Rheinische Post of Düsseldorf said, “he played with a striking virtuosity and deeply felt passion.”

Past concert programs by Michael Arnowitt have included performances of Charles Ives’ Concord Sonata with excerpts from the literature of Emerson, Hawthorne, Alcott, and Thoreau read aloud prior to the part of the sonata which is the author’s musical portrait, and “1911,” a fascinating program offering seven contrasting compositions by Bartok, Rachmaninoff, Ives, Ravel, Scriabin, Schoenberg, and Stravinsky all written in the one year 1911, a remarkable crossroads time between the old and the new in both music and world history.

Other creative projects have included “If Music Be the Food of Love,” a performance of classical and jazz music about food with the simultaneous serving to the audience of the food tastes that inspired the composers, and special events where he combines his piano improvisations with the live creation of paintings on stage by visual artists. He also performs with the photographer Marjorie Ryerson in a multi-media program “Water Music,” where piano music about water is combined with the projection of water photographs and spoken readings on the subject of water written by leading musicians of today.

The Washington Post said of a special piano concert Michael Arnowitt performed at the National Gallery of Art in conjunction with an exhibit about the Russian Ballet, “A beautifully thought-out program ... He played with an exquisite sense of touch, color and musical imagination.”

His recent musical activities have included performances of his “Jazz Suite from West Side Story,” a set of nine jazz arrangements he has made based on music from Leonard Bernstein’s famous musical. He is currently working on a classical composition, “Dark Matters,” for a physics conference on cosmology, and a new piece for jazz quartet and gamelan orchestra to be performed in both the United States and Indonesia.

Michael Arnowitt has five solo piano recordings to date. The London-based Penguin Guide to Compact Discs gave his recording “Constellation” its highest possible rating, calling it a “tour de force of brilliant pianism; splendidly lucid and responsive performances ... full of colour and atmosphere and rhythmically riveting.” The documentary film about Michael Arnowitt, Beyond 88 Keys, has been released on DVD and contains performance excerpts of music by Bach, Mozart, Byrd, Schumann, Brahms, Schoenberg, and Ligeti.

Michael Arnowitt’s future recording plans include a two disc set of four late Beethoven piano sonatas, and a recording combining the piano music of Erik Satie with narrated A.A. Milne Winnie-the-Pooh stories.

Michael Arnowitt is also an active jazz pianist. His recording Classical/Jazz, on the Musical Heritage Society label, was a unique program of jazz-influenced classical music and classically-influenced jazz, exploring the mutual influence of the two fields of music throughout the 20th century. The disc won praise from both the classical and jazz communities, including L.A. Jazz Scene. Arnowitt was the music director of “Ella Fitzgerald Night,” a concert for a 23-piece jazz ensemble featuring transcriptions he made of arrangements used by Ella on historic big band and combo recordings from 1939 to 1964. He has also presented concerts profiling jazz musicians such as Art Blakey, Bill Evans, and Horace Silver. His largest jazz effort was “The Five Chinese Elements,” an original full-concert length suite for trio based on the elements of earth, water, wood, metal, and fire, and their ancient Chinese associations. He has performed jazz at the famed Reduta Jazz Club as part of the 29th Prague International Jazz Festival, at the St. Petersburg JFC Jazz Club in Russia, at the Seoul Concert House, and in New York City at Hunter College. He is planning to release in 2016 a recording of his own original jazz compositions.

Michael Arnowitt’s accomplishments include his role as artistic director of the Vermont Millennium Music Festival. This festival took place over a four-day span in September 2000, and featured 24 concerts and special events presenting in chronological order music from the year 1000 to the year 2000. This novel festival attracted visitors from throughout the United States and was an extraordinary chronicle of the music and culture of the past thousand years. Michael Arnowitt was also the principal organizer in April 1999 of a benefit concert that raised $10,000 for humanitarian aid for Balkan war refugees; in addition to the monetary funds, the concert collected 300 emergency first aid kits and needed clothing for the refugee camps.

Michael Arnowitt’s concerts are more than just concerts. They have the added dimension of his innovative program concepts and his talent for spoken commentary, illuminating the music by drawing interesting connections between the various works on the program. He enjoys researching the social, political, religious, and artistic contexts of a piece of music and sharing with the audience insights and anecdotes that reveal relationships between the compositions and the world around them in which they were created.

Michael Arnowitt was born in Boston, Massachusetts and has lived in Montpelier, Vermont since 1983. Starting in 1997, he has maintained a web-site at http://www.mapiano.com/ which contains a number of his essays on musical topics. He can be found on Twitter at Piano_MA.



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