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Continental

Continental

Rembrandt Frerichs

Label: Challenge Records
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917333527
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Catalog number: CR 73335
Releasedate: 08-03-12
This guy sounds great!” was Michael Brecker’s opinion of pianist and composer Rembrandt Frerichs. One couldn’t hope for a better recommendation.Rembrandt is a pianist with a broad perspective.
He is familiar with the American jazz tradition, but wants to avoid the well-trodden path.He is inspired by European classical music and his passion for Arabic music was developed during his two-year stay in Egypt. 

The now 33-year-old artist played his music in legendary Jazzclub Birdland in New York. in 2007 his debut album was immediately nominated for the Edison Awards.

At age 22 Rembrandt made his debut at the North Sea Jazz Festival. During that time he studied both in New York and Holland. Directly after graduating he was asked to start teaching at various conservatories in the Netherlands.
  • A very original way of combining european classical music with hints to the 1920’s with the improvised jazz of 2012
  • When Rembrandt was living in Cairo, Egypt he developped a love for classical Arabic and Ottoman music, which you can hear sophisticatedly enhanced in his music on this recording
  • The harmonies played by the Rembrandt Frerichs trio are never the same: they are played around with on stage and approached differently every time
  • 9 original compositions by one of the leading new voices on the jazz scene today
  • A striking fresh new version of John Coltrane’s classic jazz piece “Countdown”
  • “This guy sounds great!” was Michael Breckerʼs opinion of pianist and composer Rembrandt Frerichs
One of the highlights of the North Sea Jazz festival” Jazzmagazine wrote about pianist and composer Rembrandt Frerichs. One couldn’t hope for a better recommendation.Rembrandt is a pianist with a broad perspective.
He is familiar with the American jazz tradition, but wants to avoid the well-trodden path.He is inspired by European classical music and his passion for Arabic music was developed during his two-year stay in Egypt. 

The now 33-year-old artist played his music in legendary Jazzclub Birdland in New York.

The Rembrandt Frerichs trio has been a “working” band for a number of years now. Looking back on their musical trip thus far, in the beginning it was a shared love for American jazz that connected them as musicians. After some time, however, this inspiration proved insufficient, and the trio started playing Rembrandt’s compositions exclusively. By doing this a personal development was initiated to look for something that lies more deeply within themselves: they began to create something that felt closer to home. 
The trio does not get lost in a maze of mixed styles and traditions, but always approaches the music openly. As a trio, they are not afraid to step away from controlling impulses and see what the moment brings them.

The harmonies used in Rembrandt’s compositions are mostly not the standard jazz harmonies as you hear them in the Jazz songbook. However, the way they treat these harmonies, play around with them on stage, and approach them differently every time, they are indebted to their “jazz” background.
The Rembrandt Frerichs Trio approaches the content of their own European music with the attitude of American Jazz. Emotional content with a “fun-to-do” attitude.

The long hours the trio spent rehearsing and talking about music have been invaluable to an ongoing developing process, which somehow seems like a trans-Atlantic view of Europe, hence the title of this album: Continental 
From: liner notes of Continental, written by Rembrandt Frerichs.