Anat Cohen & Oded Lev-Ari on a Grammy Nod, and Their Role in an Israeli Jazz Renaissance
Anat Cohen and Oded Lev-Ari sat in the audience at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles last Sunday afternoon, holding their breath. Their most recent release - Triple Helix , featuring the Anat Cohen Tentet - was up for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album at the 62nd Grammy Awards.
Best jazz albums of 2019: Patricia Barber, Miguel Zenon and Anat Cohen Tentet had a very good year
Best jazz albums of 2019: Patricia Barber, Miguel Zenon and Anat Cohen Tentet had a very good year
The creativity of today's jazz artists never ceases to amaze, as this year's best recordings attest: Patricia Barber: "Higher" (ArtistShare). Listeners have come to expect surprises from singer-pianist-songwriter Barber, who's in residence Monday nights at the Green Mill when she's not on tour.
Artemis, the All-Female Jazz Supergroup, Joins the Roster of Blue Note Records
Artemis, the All-Female Jazz Supergroup, Joins the Roster of Blue Note Records
Artemis, the all-star septet formed by pianist Renee Rosnes, has signed to Blue Note Records. In a statement released today, the label confirmed that the group - also featuring vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant, trumpeter Ingrid Jensen, clarinetist Anat Cohen, tenor saxophonist Melissa Aldana, bassist Noriko Ueda and drummer Allison Miller - will release its debut album next year.
Anat Cohen Tentet: Triple Helix (Anzic) A review of the clarinetist-led group's second album
Anat Cohen Tentet: Triple Helix (Anzic) - JazzTimes
Few musical ploys are as riveting as intricacy, especially when the ensemble at hand is sizable. But without a wealth of eloquence in play, elaboration can be its own worst enemy, a knot of tangles void of emotion.
Heading to Jazz Port Townsend? Be sure to catch top-tier clarinetist Anat Cohen
Heading to Jazz Port Townsend? Be sure to catch top-tier clarinetist Anat Cohen
Over the past dozen years, clarinetist Anat Cohen has risen to the top tier of jazz, with a cover story in this month's DownBeat magazine following two Grammy nominations, a commission from Carnegie Hall and perennial wins in polls.
Sisters of Swing
Jazz's Sisterhood: Regina Carter, Renee Rosnes, and More Women Transforming the Genre
For a century, jazz was a men's club. Now a vanguard of women virtuosi-including these 16 standouts-are reshaping this most American of art forms. Half a century ago, the acclaimed music critic George T. Simon said everything you need to know about sexism in jazz: "Only God can make a tree, and only men can play good jazz."
DownBeat Announces Winners of 2019 Critics Poll
The Eclectic Sensibility of Anat Cohen
The Eclectic Sensibility of Anat Cohen
Poised at the kitchen counter in her Brooklyn apartment, Anat Cohen assumed the role of solicitous host. Tall, with waves of cascading hair softening her otherwise commanding presence, the clarinetist reeled off a selection of teas and coffees in such precise detail it would have made a barista's head spin.
At the Hamilton, clarinetist Anat Cohen and her quartet explode with intensity
At the Hamilton, clarinetist Anat Cohen and her quartet explode with intensity
June 8 Memo to jazz producers and promoters across the world: If you want your jazz festival to be festive, have Anat Cohen open it. The Tel Aviv-born, New York-based clarinetist played a set of contemporary jazz at the Hamilton on Friday night - the opening night of 2019's D.C.
Clarinet star Anat Cohen brings new concerto to Chicago
When the Anat Cohen Tentet played the University of Chicago’s Logan Center in 2017, listeners had to be struck not only by the band’s range of repertoire but its breadth of instrumental color.
Cohen’s buoyant clarinet lines soared above and among the plush tones of fluegelhorn, vibraphone, accordion, drums and what-not. To hear a soloist of Cohen’s stature surrounded by so much glowing, shimmering sound was to encounter her music in a welcome new light.
All of that – and more – should emerge in Orchestra Hall on Friday evening, when Cohen plays just the second performance of “Triple Helix,” a concerto written for her and the Tentet by longtime collaborator Oded Lev-Ari. Co-commissioned by Carnegie Hall and Symphony Center, the three-movement work had its world premiere Jan. 12 in Carnegie’s Zankel Hall and appears to have stretched the talents of both soloist and composer.
Listen: Anat Cohen Tentet “Footsteps & Smiles” Premiere
Geno Thackara’s Best Releases Of 2018
Anat Cohen & Fred Hersch
Live in Healdsburg
What could have merely been a nice one-off gig turns out as a contagiously happy meeting of kindred spirits. The duo’s serendipitous debut set just begs for further followups.
Women In Jazz? For Artemis, It’s Bigger Than A Cause
[…] We sat in on a conversation between Cohen, Jensen and journalist Natalie Weiner, which touched on both the magical qualities of the group and some of the challenges its members have faced as female musicians in what’s still a male-dominated field.
“I don’t think we’re there yet, where somebody would look at a group like Artemis and just think of it as a band without actually having to mention, ‘Oh, it’s an all-woman band,’ or ‘It’s an all-female band,’” Rosnes says. But listen to the music in this show and you’ll understand how a project like this is making a difference — and plenty of noise, in the best possible way.
Israeli Arts @ 70
“Israeli Arts @ 70” is a half-hour CUNY TV special, celebrating Israeli Arts in honor of Israel’s 70th anniversary. Hosted by Donna Hanover, this Special features a vibrant array of leading and emerging contemporary Israeli artists in Dance, Literature, Film/TV and Music: Anat Cohen, the top Jazz clarinetist in the world; Ravid Kahalani, founder and lead singer of Yemen Blues which combines Yemenite Jewish, Jazz and African music; critically acclaimed Israeli authors Ayelet Gundar-Goshen of “Waking Lions” and Ruby Namdar of “The Ruined House”; the internationally renowned Vertigo Dance Company, the first Israeli dance company ever to appear in London’s Royal Albert Hall; the exciting Israeli film directors Eran Riklis of “Shelter”, Mike Burstyn of “Azimuth” and TV director Keren Margalit of “Sleeping Bears” and much more. Jerry Carlson, host of CUNY TV’s “City Cinematheque”, and Lisa Beth Kovetz, CUNY TV Reporter, are also featured.
Get a front row seat to this special TV event! This Special was produced in collaboration with Israel’s Office of Cultural Affairs in North America at the Consulate General of Israel in New York, with assistance from America Israel Cultural Foundation, Jewish Book Council and Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan.
Anat Cohen on the Art of Musical Uplift
“It’s important to me that music is an engine for feeling,” says Anat Cohen.
“If the music is grooving, then I respond. When everybody’s focused on that feeling, it’s elevating – for the people onstage, and for the audience.”
A clarinetist, tenor saxophonist and bandleader known to impart good feeling in almost any setting, Cohen is taking a moment to reflect on our fall fund drive, Feeling Good with WBGO. It’s a theme that resonates with her — as an artist, as a person and as a WBGO listener herself.
DownBeat: 66th Annual Critics Poll
Happy Song comes in second in DownBeat's Jazz Album of the Year Critics Poll!
#2: Anat Cohen Tentet: Happy Song
Anat Cohen's Happy Song is the result of a diverse, remarkably talented cast of players, composers, and arrangers. Cohen wrote or co-wrote three of the tracks here, and the musical director for the project was Oded Lev-Ari. Cohen's clarinet work is consistently compelling throughout, whether she's exploring fusion on Lev-Ari's "Trills and Thrills" or unleashing the toe-tapper "Oh Baby."
Anat Cohen: Musical Zelig
Since arriving on the New York City scene in 1999, via Tel Aviv and the Berklee College of Music, Anat Cohen has exhibited qualities in music where one wonders where she is going to be next—musically—and what group of musicians she will be associated with. She plays Brazilian music like she was born there. She swings her ass off with George Wein’s all-star band. If you can’t feel her when she blows some blues, a physical examination may be in order. Cohen’s choices spring from her wide-ranging tastes, her unabashed passion for all kinds of music—and the courage of her convictions to pursue them.
She plays in every genre with unbridled joy. Anyone who has seen this wonderfully talented reed player on stage can’t help but be touched by her elan.