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Hal Galper
About Me
In his fifth decade as a major jazz artist, Hal Galper continues the innovation that
has made him one of the most surprising and satisfying pianists alive. Galper is at
the forefront of players reaching audiences through the time-tested magic of swing
while integrating adventurous rhythmic and harmonic concepts. The exploration of
rubato playing in his trio is uncovering possibilities that deepen the jazz experience
for musicians and listeners alike. On the All About Jazz website, reviewer Dan
McGlenaghan summarized the Galper effect:
“He has also found two like-minded musical brothers in bassist Jeff Johnson and
drummer John Bishop, versatile and sophisticated players who can keep up with
his “Rubato” concept, one of playing loose and free with tempo and harmony—
even structure—twisting the familiar forms like a rubber band, then pulling them
back and letting them fly free.”
Galper’s albums with Johnson and Bishop on the Origin label have attracted
enthusiasm in Jazz Times, Downbeat, JazzIz and a variety of other publications. A
typical reaction came in Downbeat’s review of Aerigin Revisited (2012): “…the high
level of integration and communication the trio displays is rare and quite thrilling to
experience…”
In his work as an educator, Galper’s teaching and writings provide emerging
musicians and veteran players with theoretical knowledge to bolster their music
making, and with business sense to help them toward professional success. A
founding member of the New School of Jazz and Contemporary Music, where he
still teaches, Galper is also on the faculty of Purchase Conservatory and frequently
travels the college lecture-workshop circuit.
His theory of Forward Motion, first published as a series of articles in Downbeat,
offers insights into the workings of melodies, secrets of phrasing and ways of
practicing scales to enhance jazz performance. “As most problems with playing
music are perceptual in nature,” Hal says, “to change the way you play you have to
change the way you think.” He gives private instruction in person and in one-on-one
lessons via broadband computer connections. His book Forward Motion has been a
big seller since it first appeared. The E-book version was the first interactive E-book
in which its more than 300 musical examples could be played in a computer
browser. Both the E-book and the hard cover edition are available at
www.halgalper.com. Galper’s The Touring Musician: A Small Business Approach to
Booking Your Band on the Road is a practical guide to selecting and managing
musicians, creating budgets, booking engagements and practical matters such as
how to deal with the complexities and frustrations of air travel. Details about his all
of his publications and educational videos and articles may be found on his
website.
Born in Salem, Massachusetts on April 18, 1938, Galper was a classical piano
student of from the age of six. In the 1950s he went to the Berklee School of Music
in Boston on a scholarship. He absorbed formal jazz training at Berklee and
supplemented his academic work by listening to trailblazing local heroes like pianist
Jaki Byard, saxophonist and flutist Sam Rivers and drummer Alan Dawson. Soon,
he was sitting in at The Stables, the club managed by Herb Pomeroy, one of his
Berklee teachers. Before long, he became house pianist at The Stables and at two
other Boston jazz landmarks, Connelly’s and Lenny’s On The Turnpike.
Among Galper’s first influences were Red Garland, Wynton Kelly, Jaki Byard, Bill
Evans and Sonny Rollins. From his earliest days as a professional, he was noted for
a stylistic range that encompassed not only the bebop that first inspired him but
also the free approach pioneered in the late 1950s and early ‘60s by Ornette
Coleman. Free jazz was important to the development of his concept, but bop was
at the heart of his creative process. He told Cadence magazine, “ I would not be
able to play the way I’m playing now if I hadn’t spent all those intervening years,
since I heard that first album of Ornette’s, acquiring a firm jazz foundation via
absorbing the vocabulary of bebop.”
On his journey through jazz, Hal has played with artists whose range of styles
demanded flexibility. Among them have been Johnny Hodges, Roy Eldridge, James
Moody, Art Blakey, Lee Konitz and Slide Hampton. He spent six years with his
Boston mentor Sam Rivers and worked with Donald Byrd, Joe Henderson, John
Scofield, the Bobby Hutcherson-Harold Land Quintet and the Brecker Brothers.
Galper’s discography includes 99 albums, 32 of them under his leadership.
Reviewers in the mainstream and music press have singled out Galper for his daring
ways. The New York Times found his music “adventurous, exploratory;” Billboard,
“Four Star;” Record World, “Startling, very exciting indeed’; Downbeat, “energy-
driven and versatile.”
That versatility is reflected in Galper’s days as a sideman. His first major
engagement was three years as trumpeter Chet Baker’s pianist, followed by three
with Cannonball Adderley and ten years touring and recording with the Phil Woods
group. Baker said of the young Hal, “He’s a very good player…I like the way he
plays and I like the way he writes. I asked him to sit in with me at the Jazz
Workshop and hired him—just like that.” The work with Baker put Galper on the
road, into important clubs in New York and other cities for the first time, and
introduced him to recording. He is on Baker’s Baby Breeze (Verve) and The Most
Important Jazz Album Of 1964-65 (Roulette). The 26-year-old pianist was launched.
“I learned a lot from Chet,” Hal says, “about dynamics, restraint, listening and how
to play a ballad, but the parting of the ways came when I wanted to play more
modern stuff. I couldn’t make it in New York alone and went back to New England
in 1966.” Shortly, in an encounter that looked ahead to one of his most important
associations, he met alto saxophonist Phil Woods.
“I was with the house band at Lenny’s,” he said. “Phil was the guest soloist and we
played a week together. It was love at first beat.”
Back in New York in 1967, he joined Woods for one-nighters and played short
engagements with a number of other top players including Byrd, Henderson, Stan
Getz, Chuck Mangione and the Al Cohn-Zoot Sims quintet. Now established in the
jazz community, leading the freelance jazz life in the jazz capitol of the world, he
recorded three albums under his leadership for the Mainstream label, The Guerilla
Band, Inner Journey and Wild Bird.
In 1973 Cannonball Adderley was looking for a keyboard player when George Duke
was leaving to rejoin Frank Zappa. Galper auditioned by playing for a weekend with
the Adderley quintet at Boston’s Jazz Workshop. That led to three years with the
band and a practically nonstop round of touring. His primary role was to play
electric piano, but he also composed for the quintet (“Second Son” and “My Lady
Blue” are among his contributions) and appeared on three Adderley albums, Inside
Straight; Love, Sex and The Zodiac; and Pyramid. “I’m still absorbing what I learned
from Cannonball’s band,” Hal said. “I loved the high level of rapport and the energy,
but I knew that after three years I didn’t need the road. The time had come to
develop my own musical identity.” With regret and anticipation, he left Adderley in
1975.
Another factor in his departure was renewal of his dedication to the kind of piano he
had spent most of his life playing. “After all, I was an acoustic pianist,” he said.
Galper sealed his decision by wheeling his Fender Rhodes to the end of a dock on
the Hudson River and tipping it into the water. He remembers watching bubbles rise
to the surface as the instrument sank out of his life.
Supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, Galper mapped
out a plan that included trumpeter Randy Brecker, his saxophonist brother Michael,
bassist Wayne Dockery and drummer Billy Hart. The new Hal Galper Quintet
debuted at Sweet Basil in New York’s Greenwich Village. They recorded albums for
Steeplechase in 1976 (Reach Out) and Century in 1978 (Speak With a Single Voice).
Bob Moses having replaced Hart on drums, they played at the 1978 Berlin Jazz
Festival. Galper described the quintet as, “a very contemporary band. Everyone
played with one hundred percent freedom. But after a while, the direction, the
concept, became only a part of what I wanted to play.” Ready for more disciplined,
more melodic music, he disbanded the quintet in 1978.
A sideman again, Galper toured with Lee Konitz, Nat Adderley, John Scofield and
Slide Hampton. Then in September of 1979 he sat in for a week at the Village
Vanguard with the Phil Woods Quartet. Woods hired him to be the award-winning
band’s pianist-composer-arranger. “What a gig,” Galper said, “ten years recording
and touring the world, playing acoustic bebop, a rare and fortunate experience.”
Galper’s discography includes 14 albums as a member of Woods’s band. During
his last year with Woods, Galper’s success with Portrait, his trio album for Concord,
encouraged him to again strike out on his own. Beginning in 1990, he toured six
months a year with drummer Steve Ellington and and bassist Jeff Johnson. They
recorded three more albums for Concord, trio CDs for ENJA and Double Time,
collaborations with tenor saxophonist Jerry Bergonzi and trumpeter Tim Hagans,
and the Galper-Johnson Maybeck Duets on the Philology label. Hal’s ESP-like
compatibility with Johnson looked ahead to the transcendent achievements of his
new trio.
“Everything is clear in hindsight,” Galper said, “so when I look back at my musical
history I see that I’ve always displayed a penchant for ‘broken-time’ or rubato
playing, where the beat is maintained but using subdivided or superimposed
rhythms.” His mastery of that approach in the context of his trio with Johnson and
Bishop produces some of the most intriguing and satisfying music of the 21st
century.