Jorge Roeder
Jorge Roeder | |
---|---|
Born | Lima, Peru | 26 May 1980
Genres | jazz |
Occupation(s) | musician, composer |
Instruments | bass guitar, double bass |
Years active | 1998–present |
Website | www |
Jorge Roeder is a Peruvian bass player and composer. He has performed and collaborated with many jazz artists including Gary Burton, Nels Cline and John Zorn. As part of the Julian Lage Group, he received a 2010 Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Jazz Album, for Sounding Point.[1]
In 2020, Roeder released his first solo album, El Suelo Mío.
Early life[]
Roeder was born in Lima, Peru and at 14 took cello and electric bass lessons. At 16, he went to Russia to further his study of the cello for a few months. At 18, he took up the double bass. In 2001, he was appointed assistant principal bassist for the Lima Philharmonic and Opera orchestras.
As a fixture on the local rock scene, his first professional recording job was as bassist for the Lima heavy metal band, Ni Voz ni Voto, on their self-titled debut album released in 2000.[2] Roeder met trumpeter/educator Gabriel Alegría, and performed with him at the 2002 IAJE Conference. There he was noticed by Ken Schaphorst, chair of jazz studies at Boston's New England Conservatory, and was invited to audition for the school.[3]
In 2002, Roeder was given a scholarship to the New England Conservatory of Music to study jazz. Upon completion of his degree in 2005, he stayed in Boston two more years, before he moved to Brooklyn, New York and took gigs in the city's jazz scene.
Musical collaborations[]
In New York, Roeder got together with both guitarist Julian Lage and pianist Shai Maestro, and began long-standing recording and performing relationships with both.[3][4]
Roeder's style of playing gelled in that group context. "When we’re about to do a set we all get together backstage. Julian will say something like ‘Let’s keep the idea of patience in our heads, and hold it as much as you can.’ And we'll really try to keep that concept in mind. We’re playing the same music, but it comes out different every time with the help of one word," he told the Boston Globe.[5]
In 2005, Roeder's first jazz recording was on the Before The Storm album from Dan Tepfer.[6] The following year, he appeared on trombonist Michael Dessen's Lineal album,[7] and then again he played with Tepfer on Oxygen, released in 2009.[8]
In 2010, Roeder was nominated for a Best Contemporary Jazz Album Grammy, as a bandmember of the Julian Lage Group and his work on the group's Sounding Point.
Over the years, Roeder played with various bandleaders including trombonist Ryan Keberle, vocalist Thana Alexa,[9] vibraphonist Gary Burton, guitarist Nels Cline, saxophonist John Zorn,[10] vocalist Sofia Rei,[11] pianist and accordionist Carmen Staaf, guitarist Brad Shepik, saxophonist Dan Blake, vocalist Ulita Knaus, among others.
Recognition[]
Roeder won the International Society of Bassists Jazz Competition in 2007, and reached the semi-finals of the Thelonious Monk Jazz Bass Competition in 2009.[2]
Solo career[]
In July 2020, Roeder released his debut solo album, El Suelo Mío, a collection that Bass Musician magazine called "thirteen tracks of unadulterated upright bass at its finest."[12] A recording of solely bass music, the album reflects his Peruvian background, and was self-produced.[9]
“El Suelo Mío can be interpreted as ‘the floor of mine’ or ‘the ground of mine’, which I attribute to references to the role of the bass in music. The bass is usually regarded as the foundation of any musical rendition, and the way I see music is and has always been through the lens of the bass part. So when I present this body of work, it comes from the roots, the ‘ground’ of the music that is a part of me."[4]
On the United States’ Presidential election day on 3 November 2020, Roeder performed in the live streaming Deep Tones for Peace 2020, a public Facebook group formed by bassists Mark Dresser and William Parker the previous August with the mission for all bass players "to musically send healing vibrations to be felt worldwide." Membership is over 2,000 international bass players.[13]
Discography[]
Year | Album | Artist | Label |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | Ojala | Sofia Rei | Cascabelera |
Before The Storm | Dan Tepfer | DIZ Productions | |
Homework | Richie Barshay | Barshay Music | |
2007 | Oxygen | Dan Tepfer | DIZ Productions |
2009 | Sounding Point | Julian Lage | Emarcy |
Sube Azul | Sofia Rei | Lilihouse Music | |
Bien Sur | Emilio Solla | Fresh Sound | |
2011 | Gladwell | Julian Lage | Emarcy |
Across The Way | Brad Shepik | Songlines | |
Augmented Reality | Augmented Reality | Daywood Drive | |
2012 | Primero Amarillo Después Malva | Lara Bello | Galileo Music Communications |
Shai Maestro Trio | Shai Maestro | Laborie | |
De Tierra y Oro | Sofia Rei | Lilihouse Music | |
2013 | The Road To Ithaca | Shai Maestro | Laborie |
Music Is Emotion | Ryan Keberle and Catharsis | Greenleaf | |
2014 | Into The Zone | Ryan Keberle and Catharsis | Greenleaf |
Second Half | Emilio Solla | Emilio Solla Music | |
Sanctuary | Richie Barshay | Barshay Music | |
Ode To Heroes | Thana Alexa | Jazz Village | |
Lonely City | Allegra Levy | SteepleChase LookOut | |
2015 | Untold Stories | Shai Maestro | Laborie |
2016 | The Stone Skipper | Shai Maestro | Sound Surveyor |
Azul Infinito | Ryan Keberle and Catharsis | Greenleaf | |
Expanding Heart | Jarrett Cherner | Bald Hill Records | |
2017 | Find The Common, Shine The Light | Ryan Keberle and Catharsis | Greenleaf |
2018 | The Dream Thief | Shai Maestro | ECM |
2019 | Love Hurts | Julian Lage | Mack Avenue |
The Hope I Hold | Ryan Keberle and Catharsis | Greenleaf | |
2020 | Songs For Petra | John Zorn | Tzadik |
Azoth | John Zorn | Tzadik | |
El Suelo Mío | Jorge Roeder | T-TOWN | |
2021 | Heaven And Earth Magick | John Zorn | Tzadik |
Squint | Julian Lage | Blue Note | |
Human | Shai Maestro | ECM |
References[]
- ^ Beuttler, Bill (25 April 2019). "Julian Lage: Gladwell". Jazz Times. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Buchanan, John D. "Jorge Roeder". allmusic.com. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Bilawsky, Dan (19 March 2021). "Jorge Roeder: Present to the Players". Jazz Times. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Jorge Roeder – "El Suelo Mio" (solo bass album)". London Jazz News. 13 July 2020. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Gilbert, Andrew (11 September 2009). "Lage and his group practice patience". Boston Globe.
- ^ Beuttler, Bill (11 March 2005). "The piano is his universe these days". Boston Globe. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Dorward, Nate (17 April 2007). "Michael Dessen Lineal". Exclaim!. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Longley, Martin (5 September 2009). "Dan Tepfer: Oxygen & Duets With Lee". All About Jazz. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Premiere: Watch A Video For Bassist Jorge Roeder's 'Bounce'". Downbeat. 30 April 2020. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Jisi, Chris (7 August 2020). "Bass Magazine Lockdown Check-In With Jorge Roeder". Bass Magazine. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Valdez, Pepe (26 July 2020). ""El Suelo Mío" – Jorge Roeder". Sonidos. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Amador, Raul (27 August 2020). "Review: Jorge Roeder, El Suelo Mio". Bass Musician. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Espeland, Pamela (30 October 2020). "Latté Da's 'All Is Calm' to air on PBS in November; a new musical about Harold Stassen?". Minnesota Post. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- 1980 births
- Living people
- Peruvian musicians