Zoe Rahman
Born in Chichester, UK, to a Bengali father and English mother, Zoe studied classical piano at the Royal Academy of Music, took a music degree at Oxford University and then won a scholarship to study jazz performance at Berklee College of Music, Boston, where she studied with the inspirational pianist JoAnne Brackeen.
Her second album, "Melting Pot", was nominated in 2006 for one of the UK’s most prestigious music awards, the Nationwide Mercury Prize and it also won ‘Jazz Album of the Year’ at the UK’s first Parliamentary Jazz Awards.
Since then, she has recorded two more critically acclaimed albums. "Live" showcases her superb trio, American drummer Gene Calderazzo and British bass player Oli Hayhurst, as well as featuring the hauntingly beautiful playing of her brother, clarinetist Idris Rahman. Her fourth album, "Where Rivers Meet", is a stunning collaboration with her brother Idris, exploring music from their Bengali heritage. Originally they toured this project in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh as a duo but for the album they teamed up with Zoe’s trio as well as Dhaka-based vocal stars Arnob and Gaurob, violinist Samy Bishai and percussionist Kuljit Bhamra to produce “a wholly original brand of Anglo-Asian music” (Sunday Times).
Zoe has toured extensively throughout the UK and internationally, including, most recently: North Sea Jazz Festival; Molde Jazz Festival; Palermo Jazz Festival; Algeria’s European Cultural Festival; Cork Jazz Festival; Estonia’s Nargen Festival; Barbados Jazz Festival among many others.
She has been featured on numerous TV and radio programmes, including BBC2’s Jools Holland, BBC4’s Women in Jazz and ‘Way To Blue’, BBC2’s Desi DNA, Channel S, Bangla TV, Meridian TV, BBC Radio 4 (Front Row, Loose Ends, Woman’s Hour), BBC Radio 2 (Jools Holland, Courtney Pine, Charles Hazlewood), BBC Radio 3 (Late Junction, World on 3).
Aside from her own groups, she has worked with a diverse range of other artists, including: Courtney Pine; Jerry Dammers’ Spatial AKA Orchestra; Soothsayers, Clark Tracey; Martha Wainwright; Danny Thompson; Tony Bianco; Tom Bancroft’s ‘Band of Eden’; Steve Williamson; James Carter; Keziah Jones, Bob Moses among many others.