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Ben Stolorow

Susan Muscarella (Founder/Director of the Jazzschool in Berkeley, CA) has called Ben Stolorow’s first album, I’ll Be Over Here (2008), a “beautiful, introspective body of work reminiscent of some of the greatest piano trios.” Ben’s latest album, Almost There (2011), brings the sensitivity and lyricism of the first album as well a new fire and emotional intensity, reflecting Ben’s desire to find for himself and to share with the listener the freedom, release, and renewal which he feels can be achieved through music. Joining Ben on this album are two beautiful Bay Area musicians, Dan Feiszli on bass and Jon Arkin on drums.

As the title suggests, this album takes the listener on a journey, and the feeling of being on the way to someplace unknown is a theme that drives the music throughout. Of the album’s ten tracks, seven are Ben’s original compositions. The remaining three tracks are renditions of Thelonious Monk’s “Hackensack”, the standard “You and the Night and the Music”, and a “bonus track” which is a vocal song entitled “Firefly”, written and performed by Ben’s sister Stephanie Stolorow with Ben accompanying.

Ben has spent many years studying classical piano and the great jazz pianists and composers, as is evidenced by his compositions and playing on his latest album. With the variety of touch and range of expression that one can hear in his music, Ben displays the wide scope of his influences, from Bach and Bill Evans to Thelonious Monk and McCoy Tyner. Shortly after graduating from UC Berkeley in 1998, Ben was awarded the Hertz Travelling Fellowship by the music department there to live and study in New York. Since that time he has continued to travel to New York regularly and has been fortunate to be able to receive guidance from great contemporary pianists including Stanley Cowell, James Willians, David Hazeltine, and Fred Hersch. Ben still practices Bach and other classical music, and continues devote himself to the study of the great jazz pianists and composers. The feeling of being always “almost there” continues to drive him to improve himself and search for his own voice in music.

Since moving to the Bay Area from Los Angeles to attend UC Berkeley in 1994, Ben has become one of the most in demand jazz pianists in the area both as a leader and sideman. He has performed at Yoshi’s and the Kuumbwa Jazz Center, at the Healdsburg and SF Jazz Festivals, at Oakland’s Art and Soul Festival, and has also toured and performed throughout Japan.

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Piano

Willing to teach

Advanced only

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Berkeley Jazzschool faculty member

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