- Fly Trio
- Los Angeles Jazz Collective
- Artists Recording Collective
- John Abercrombie
- Lisle Atkinson
- David Binney
- Cindy Blackman
- Theo Bleckmann
- Luis Bonilla
- Ralph Bowen
- Don Braden
- George Brooks
- Beaty Brothers
- Bill Cantrall
- Bill Carrothers
- Edmar Castaneda
- George Colligan
- Marc Copland
- Patrick Cornelius
- Eli Degibri
- Mike DiRubbo
- Toru Dodo
- ECM Records
- Nathan Eklund
- Steve Elmer
- Peter Erskine
- Wayne Escoffery
- John Escreet
- Carl Fischer
- Elli Fordyce
- Marshall Gilkes
- Hans Glawischnig
- Richie Goods
- Wycliffe Gordon
- Tord Gustavsen
- Tim Hagans
- Lisa Hearns
- Francis Jacob
- Michael Janisch
- Jazzheads Records
- Aaron Johnson
- Beat Kaestli
- Kevin Kastning
- Manu Katche
- Ryan Keberle
- Kneebody
- Dana Lauren
- Jay Leonhart
- Carolyn Leonhart
- Morrie Louden
- Mike Mainieri
- Ellis Marsalis
- Donny McCaslin
- Melford/Kalmanovitch
- Lewis Nash
- Sean Nowell
- Arturo O' Farrill
- Bill O'Connell
- Meg Okura
- Chris Parker
- Rick Parker
- The Persuasions
- Misha Piatigorsky
- Jean-Michel Pilc
- Victor Prieto
- Dafnis Prieto
- Kristjan Randalu
- Mark Rapp
- Groove Note Records
- Pirouet Records
- Bob Reynolds
- Abigail Riccards
- Reuben Rogers
- The Rubin Museum
- Bobby Sanabria
- Steven Schoenberg
- Second Movement
- Artist Share
- Avery Sharpe
- Yotam Silberstein
- Gwilym Simcock
- Edward Simon
- Marlon Simon
- Alex Sipiagin
- Asaf Sirkis
- Emilio Solla
- Russ Spiegel
- Tomasz Stanko
- Bill Stewart
- Joan Stiles
- Loren Stillman
- Donald Vega
- Miroslav Vitous
- Chris Washburne
- Jeff Watts
- Eberhard Weber
- Mark Weinstein
- Lauren White
- Anthony Wilson
- Ben Wolfe
- Sam Yahel
- Craig Yaremko
- Alper Yilmaz
- Miguel Zenon
Melford/Kalmanovitch
The duo of violist/violinist Tanya Kalmanovitch and pianist Myra Melford came together by accident. Both were performing separately at the 2003 Guelph International Jazz Festival, but when circumstances prevented Kalmanovitch’s quartet performance, the festival’s artistic director Ajay Heble suggest a duet with Melford. Never having played together before, they decided to improvise freely, using a few simple frameworks discussed before they went on stage. An inspired concert resulted from this serendipitous encounter. In early 2005, the Canadian violist and American pianist recorded their debut CD “Heart Mountain” (Perspicacity, 2007).
A convergence of musical interests and a shared commitment to close listening makes this a magically complementary pairing. Both musicians turned to jazz and improvised music after studying Western classical music. Kalmanovitch holds a degree from The Juilliard School, but was attracted to improvisation since she was a teenager auditing jazz workshops led by Dave Liebman, Dave Holland, Muhal Richard Abrams and others at the Banff Centre for the Arts in her native Alberta. Returning to New York in 2004 after extended stays in Alberta, India and Ireland, she quickly made her mark on the city’s improvised music scene, named as “best new talent” that year by All About Jazz - New York.
Melford studied classical music as a child and jazz as an undergraduate, and then moved to New York where she established herself as a composer and bandleader with her trio, and bands such as The Same River, Twice; Crush; and The Tent. As a composer, Melford has been noted for a “commitment to refreshing, often surprising uses of melody, harmony and ensemble playing.” As a bandleader, she's demonstrated a “career-long knack of choosing players who make smaller ensembles sound full and intricate as an orchestra” (Reuben Jackson, NPR).
Kalmanovitch and Melford also share interests in the music of India. Melford studied harmonium in northern India in 2000–01. In 2003–4, Kalmanovitch studied South India’s Karnatic music in Chennai as part of her research for a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology.
Melford and Kalmanovitch draw on their respective backgrounds to create improvised duets with an entirely original vocabulary. Their spontaneous compositions possess formal elegance infused with the urgency of improvisation. Each piece builds from an initial idea, reworked and extended with lyrical economy and intense focus. They perform complex melodic counterpoint in one piece, and then explore timbre and texture in the next. They exchange roles effortlessly, moving seamlessly between leader and accompanist. Theirs is a carefully balanced music, with close attention to dynamics, inflection, and phrasing. It is a multi-faceted conversation between equals that depends on an intimate chemistry, intuitive responses, and conscious manipulation of form.
For More Information go to: www.myramelford.com & www.tanyakalmanovitch.com