Ryan Cohan

Ryan Cohan (born 6 June 1971)[1] is a jazz pianist and composer. His style is a blend of world rhythms, traditional jazz, and classical.[2]

Ryan Cohan
Ryan Cohan performs in Lafayette, Indiana in 2009.
Background information
Born (1971-06-06) June 6, 1971
OriginChicago, Illinois
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician, composer, arranger
InstrumentsPiano
Years active1992–present
LabelsMotéma
Websiteryancohan.com

Biography

Early life and career

Cohan's mother, who was a music teacher and classical pianist, introduced him to music from a young age. He could read sheet music by age five and started learning violin at nine. He later switched to piano and, by his sophomore year of high school, knew he wanted his future to be in music.

His pursuit of music took him to DePaul University, where he received a Bachelor of Music in jazz performance, and later to Skidmore College.

In the late 1990s, Cohan wrote and arranged songs for Ramsey Lewis's albums Dance of the Soul and Appassionata,[3] a 2000 album that was named "jazz album of the year" by Billboard Magazine. Additionally, Cohan has worked with Freddie Hubbard, Milt Hinton, Jon Faddis, Joe Locke, Andy Narell, Curtis Fuller, Pat La Barbera, Regina Carter, Nick Brignola, Andy Bey, Kurt Elling, and Michal Urbaniak among others.

As bandleader

Ryan Cohan Sextet
GenresJazz
Years active1997–present
LabelsMotéma Music, Sirocco Jazz
Associated actsRyan Cohan Quartet
Websiteryancohan.com
MembersRyan Cohan
James Cammack
Geof Bradfield
Bob Sheppard
Tito Carrillo
Lorin Cohen
Kobie Watkins

In 1996, Ryan recorded his first solo album, Real World, with jazz artists from Chicago and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

Cohan's second album, Here and Now, was released in 2001 on Sirocco Music. For this album, Cohan formed the Ryan Cohan Sextet, which featured Bob Sheppard and Geof Bradfield on woodwinds, James Cammack and Lorin Cohen on bass, Tito Carrillo on trumpet, and Dana Hall on drums.

In 2007, One Sky was released on Motéma. The album is split into two sections; the first half of the album consists of original compositions and a piano solo of "Lush Life" while the second half consists of a four-part suite titled One Sky: Tone Poems for Humanity. J. Hunter of Albanyjazz.com listed One Sky in his top 5 albums of 2008, saying, "Cohan’s ability to make a sextet sound like a big band gives his message a rich, multi-hued platform, and that message shines ever so brightly."[4]

Tours

With the Ryan Cohan Quartet, Cohan has toured the United States, Canada, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Jordan, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Uganda. In 2009, the Quartet toured Eastern Europe[5] as Jazz Ambassadors with the Rhythm Road: American Music Abroad Program sponsored by Jazz at Lincoln Center and the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs at the US State Department.[6]

gollark: Yes.
gollark: ABR timezone inference has my timezone as not UTC, so if I were to set a reminder for the time it said Sinthorion's reminder was at - which is in UTC - bees would incurse.
gollark: For ABR Reminding 2.1™.
gollark: I should really have an option to parse with the UTC timezone.
gollark: Actually, that's a common misconception.

References

  1. "Biography of Ryan Cohan: Chicago-based recording artist, jazz pianist, composer, arranger, and producer". Ryan Cohan. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  2. Cohan, Ryan (2007). One Sky (CD booklet). the Ryan Cohan Sextet. p. 3.
  3. "Purdue University Jazz Festival - Artist Info". Purdue University Bands. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  4. "albanyjazz.com". J Hunter. Retrieved 2009-01-17.
  5. "Keep up-to-date on jazz pianist Ryan Cohan performances and other events". Ryan Cohan. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  6. "Jazz at Lincoln Center: The Rhythm Road" (PDF). Jazz at Lincoln Center. 2008-11-10. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
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