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David Lopato

David Lopato's music reflects an involvement with such diverse forms as modern jazz, stride piano, avant-garde classical music, blues, latin and various world musics, most notably those of Indonesia, where he has lived and studied Javanese gamelan. His love of these seemingly disparate traditions has resulted in a body of music that is both universal and personal. Although his main instrument is piano, his interest in other, more exotic timbres has led him to explore new techniques for "preparing" the piano, as well as incorporate other percussion instruments and electronics into his work. He has worked extensively with computers, MIDI, and related digital media to facilitate the creation and realization of his own music and that of other musicians. In 2002, his performance repertoire expanded into the theatrical realm with the debut of his first full-length monologue "Small Matters of Life and Death". In 2009, he ventured further outside the musical realm with the authoring of his first book, Take Alternate Routes, a memoir about marriage, infertility, adoption and the raising of a special needs child.

David Lopato was born in 1954 in Brooklyn, NY. His studies include a B.A. in music composition from Yale University, graduate work in African drumming at California Institute of the Arts and Javanese gamelan at Akademie Seni Krawitan Indonesia in Surakarta, Java as a Fulbright Scholar. He has performed his own compositions throughout the world as a soloist, leader of his own trio, quintet and ten-piece ensembles. Major venues which have presented performances of his music include Westdeutsche Rundfunk, Netherlands National Radio, Radio France, National Public Radio, De Singel, Stedelijk Museum, The Kroller-Muller Museum, The Museum of Modern Art, The Kitchen Center, Symphony Space and The Vancouver Jazz Festival.

As a pianist he has worked with Ray Anderson, Dave Liebman, Joe Lovano, Mark Helias, Jane Ira Bloom, Gerry Hemingway, David Mott, Wadada Leo Smith, Steve Gorn and Steve Reich. He has received much recognition as a composer, having been awarded several grants from the National Endowment for the Arts for both jazz and classical music. In addition, he has received grants from the New York State Council on the Arts, The New York Foundation for the Arts, The Beards Fund and numerous grants from Meet The Composer. Recordings as a leader include Giant Mbira, Inside/Outside, The Standard Line (with David Mott), and Many Moons. Gending For a Spirit Rising, a large ensemble recording of gamelan-influenced music is scheduled for release on Sept. 8.

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23
Album Review

David Lopato: Short Stories

Read "Short Stories" reviewed by Jack Bowers


Short Stories, pianist and composer David Lopato's seventh album, is for the most part modern in the best sense of the word. Lopato's musical influences are wide, ranging from jazz, blues and rock to avant-garde and free improvisation while embracing themes from Africa, Latin America and Asia--most notably Indonesia where he spent a year on a Fulbright scholarship learning to play the Javanese gamelan. Even when fusing these diverse bonds into a single vision, however, Lopato seldom strays from the ...

3
Album Review

David Lopato: Gendhing for a Spirit Rising

Read "Gendhing for a Spirit Rising" reviewed by Mark Sullivan


American composer/pianist David Lopato has a long history with South Asian music, especially the music of Java. Much of the music in the title work--which occupies the first disc of this two-disc set--was inspired by the year he spent in Surakarta (seat of one of the two great kingdoms of Central Java, where most of the Javanese music we hear in the West originates) on a Fulbright grant. As a jazz musician Lopato was intrigued by the prospect of combining ...

193
Album Review

David Lopato: Many Moons

Read "Many Moons" reviewed by Karl Ackermann


Pianist/composer, David Lopato's long career has included turns with prominent players in the fields of avant-garde jazz and classical, world music, theater, free improvisation and modern jazz. In particular, he has done outstanding jazz work with Gerry Hemingway, David Mott, Wadada Leo Smith and Joe Lovano. Given the wide and varied circles Lopato travels in, it isn't useful to have preconceived notions about any particular music as his defining genre. Nevertheless, Many Moons, his second solo piano release, covers the ...

153
Album Review

David Lopato: Many Moons

Read "Many Moons" reviewed by Dan Bilawsky


Pianist David Lopato's Many Moons could just as easily have been called Many Moods, with the variety of approaches he takes on these twelve original piano pieces. Jazz is only one area of expertise on Lopato's large resume, which also includes extensive studies on African drumming and Javanese gamelan, scoring work for theater and dance, and many years spent as the producer of a concert series concentrating on modern improvised music, and he uses his diverse experiences to color his ...

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3

Recording

Pianist/Composer David Lopato's "Gendhing For A Spirit Rising" Set For September 8 Release

Pianist/Composer David Lopato's "Gendhing For A Spirit Rising" Set For September 8 Release

Source: Terri Hinte Publicity

Musical genres have been melding for ages, yet pianist/composer David Lopato has developed an eclectic East-West fusion that truly has no precedent. A respected educator, inventive composer, inveterate musical explorer, and fearless sonic pioneer who has traveled a highly personal “silk road,” Lopato is releasing the extraordinary Gendhing for a Spirit Rising on September 8 via Global Coolant Records. This two-CD set is the culmination of the mesmerizing musical landscape he has cultivated since his first encounter with Javanese gamelan ...

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Music Industry

David Lopato, Solo Piano, "Many Moons"

David Lopato, Solo Piano, "Many Moons"

Source: Gapplegate Music Review by Grego Edwards

When you do a disk of solo piano improvisations, the spirits of Keith Jarrett and Cecil Taylor loom over your shoulder. They have been so influential that virtually all who have followed after have felt the pull of their respective magnetic zones. David Lopato comes into the fray with Many Moons (Global Coolant 01) and perforce experiences the opposite tugs. His response is to try and keep to the center of influences by evoking jazz tradition, albeit expanded and loosened ...

"An inventive and resourceful pianist...his compositions never faltering for a second” —The New York Times

“Lopato’s technique is enviable, and his playing communicates a real sense of joy. Highly recommended.” —Keyboard Magazine

“Mr. Lopato’s jazz playing displayed an omnivorous eclecticism built on an understanding of a very broad range of jazz and classical styles...his playing and his varied compositions displayed considerable grace and charm.” —The New York Times

“Lopato ’s stylistic range and technique are prodigious” —Downbeat Magazine

“Remember the name - Lopato. He is a talented musician with vision, roots, and a promise of something further that will undoubtedly be fresh and exciting.” —Coda Magazine

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Music

Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Short Stories

Self Produced
2024

buy

Gendhing for a Spirit...

Global Coolant Records
2017

buy

Many Moons

Self Produced
2011

buy

Inside Outside

Cristal Records
1991

buy

Giant Mbira / Solo...

Cristal Records
1982

buy

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