6pm ET via ZOOM
$15/$5 members
limited to 15 people
WORDS + MUSIC WITH MUSICIANS - Mondays, Wednesdays & Fridays - Hear music, interact with one of our musician friends and enjoy some Jazz Gallery community. Reservations are required and available on a first-come, first-served basis at $15/$5 members per session (to offer the artist a small honorarium). Once you have signed up we will send you a Zoom link to the hang with instructions.
Words & Music sessions are limited to 15 people, as we'd like them to be something we can all participate in, and as it is not a concert limiting the number of people on screen means we can all chat!
Additionally, most musicians do not have access to adequate internet bandwidth nor audio/microphone set up at their home, so the music often does not come through as well as anyone would desire; we do not want to create a situation where our artists are not presented at their best.
ABOUT DAVID VIRELLES
“Virelles looks set to make big differences in contemporary music for years to come.”The Guardian
“A different side to the great legacy of pianists that come from Cuba… He is the new school.” Gilles Peterson
“…there is a young Cuban pianist named David Virelles, whom I consider a genius.” Chucho Valdés
“It’s got nerve and soul and memory.” The New York Times
Cuban-born pianist David Virelles grew up in a musical home, his father a singer-songwriter and his mother a flutist and music teacher. Even though classically trained at the conservatory, he was also surrounded by many types of music in the culturally rich Santiago while growing up. Eventually, Virelles also discovered Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk and Andrew Hill, and he would soon start studying the connections between this musical tradition and those from his birthplace.
Since his arrival to NYC, he has appeared on live concerts and recordings with musicians as distinct as Steve Coleman, Mark Turner, Henry Threadgill, Andrew Cyrille, Chris Potter, Wadada Leo Smith, Tom Harrell, Milford Graves and Ravi Coltrane.
Virelles is a Shifting Foundation Fellow, a recipient of the Canada Council for the Arts, Louis Applebaum Award and Jazz Gallery Commission. While a student at Humber College in Toronto he won the Oscar Peterson Prize, presented by Peterson himself.
David’s 2012 release Continuum (Pi Recordings) united Andrew Cyrille, Ben Street and Román Díaz. This album ended on many “Best Of The Year” lists, including The New York Times. Since then, he has released three more albums on the Munich label ECM to critical acclaim, documenting a wide sonic range – Mbóko (a book of compositions commissioned by The Jazz Gallery), Antenna, and his latest Gnosis – these last two works were made possible by the generous support of The Shifting Foundation. Virelles was named #1 Rising Star in the Piano category by DownBeat in 2017. He is also one of the 2018 Cristobal Díaz Ayala Travel Grant recipients.