© - Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all
rights reserved.
“All
around they see not rivals but mentors. Gravitating to living masters and young
gurus, they talk not of themselves but of the greatness of others. As a result,
their sound is pure, their language is concise. Although perpetually young-looking,
they are the opposite of naïve. Their groove is light and precise and the smile
in their eyes maintains a near-constant
sparkle.”
- pianist
Aaron Goldberg commenting on Joris Roelofs
It’s hard to
imagine that someone who is only twenty-eight years old could already be so proficient
in today’s Jazz world.
Such is truly the
case with Joris Roelofs who was born 1984 in Aix-en-Provence (France ), raised in Amsterdam (Netherlands ), and plays saxophones, clarinet, bass
clarinet and flute. He began to play classical clarinet at the age of six, and the
alto saxophone at the age of twelve.
For one so young,
Joris has a considerable list of accomplishments and associations.
He was a member of
the Vienna Art Orchestra from 2005-2010. Joris also plays lead alto in
the Jazz Orchestra Of The Concertgebouw in the Netherlands . He graduated
in 2007 as a Master of Music at the Conservatory of Amsterdam. In 2001 Joris
won the Pim Jacobs Price. In
2003 he received, as a first non-American, the Stan Getz/Clifford Brown
Fellowship Award in the US , organized by the International
Association Of Jazz Education (IAJE). The IAJE also honored him with a “First Level”
price. In 2004 Joris received
the first prize of the prestigious Deloitte Jazz Award in the Netherlands , a Dutch Award for young musicians who are
just about to start their international carrier. In 2008 he was selected for
the Thelonious Monk International Saxophone Competition.
Among others,
Joris played with Brad Mehldau, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Christina Branco, Lionel
Loueke, Joshua Redman, Chris Potter, Chris Cheek, Eric Harland, Lewis Nash,
Aaron Goldberg, Greg Tardy, Ralph Peterson, Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, Pete King,
Sonny Fortune, Greg Hutchinson, WDR Big Band, Ari Hoenig, Matt Penman, Alegre Correa.
He was recently
asked by Brad Mehldau to perform with him at the Carnegie Hall in New York and Sanders Theatre in Boston . At age 16 Joris performed the famous
clarinet introduction of Gershwin’s Rhapsody
in Blue for a TV show with the Orkest van het Oosten, and in that same show
was also featured as a soloist with the Jazz Orchestra Of The Concertgebouw. He
also recorded as a special clarinet soloist with the Metropole Orchestra with Laura Fygi (2004). As a leader
he performed several times at the North Sea Jazz Festival, Concertgebouw in Amsterdam , Smalls Jazz Club in NYC, among other
places.
In October 2008 he
did a European release tour with Ari Hoenig, Aaron Goldberg and Johannes
Weidenmueller to promote his debut album Introducing Joris Roelofs. In 2009 and
2010 he did his second and third tour with Aaron Goldberg, Greg Hutchinson,
Reginald Veal, Joe Sanders. Joris also plays in a trio with Jesse van Ruller
and Clemens van der Feen, they
released their album Chamber Tones and toured in Japan . Joris’ new
CD Live
At The Bimhuis will come out the end of August/2011. As a sideman Joris
has been playing at a large number of international jazz festivals and jazz
clubs, all over the world. He
moved to New
York City in March 2008.
Pianist Aaron
Goldberg wrote these thoughts about Joris and Jazz in New York City for Introducing Joris Roelofs:
“New York remains an
artist-magnet. The intrepid flow in from everywhere, their paint brushes or
their saxophones on their back, often still searching for a place to sleep.
Some show up with a point to prove, and they are usually the first to attract
notice. On occasion others arrive with a different kind of special mission.
Instead of a moral to teach or an agenda to push, these brave selves search for
a lesson to learn. Tey are driven by the love of their art.
All around they see not rivals but mentors. Gravitating to living
masters and young gurus, they talk not of themselves but of the greatness of
others. As a result, their sound is pure, their language is concise. Although
perpetually long-looking, they are the opposite of naïve. Their groove is light
and precise and the smile in their eyes maintains a near-constant sparkle.
Perhaps they have some metaphysical guardian, a Vajravarahi
[Tibetan Buddhist diety that helps free one from suffering and gain
enlightenment through meditations] to help uproot the ego?
Or maybe their meditations just focus on the truly important: line
and melody, mouthpiece and embouchure, narrative and harmony, and the rest
follows inevitably. These are the true faithful. From the inside they may see
only detours, but their paths are straight and their bearing upright. From the
outside they glow like the enlightened. More importantly, they are a joy to
listen to. Joris Roelofs is one of the rare arrivals.”
With all of this by way of background, “The Kids” such as Joris,
Aaron, bassist Matt Penman and drummer Ari Hoenig “are doing just fine” as you
can hear for yourself on the sound track to the following video montage.
The tune is pianist Aaron Goldberg’s The Rules which is an excellent example of the kind of tension-and-release, repetitive phrases and sustained tones can create in Jazz. Aaron takes the first solo, followed
by Ari on drums with Joris’s solo closing it out before the piece’s “surprise”
ending.
[BTW, if the music of Lee Konitz, Warne Marsh, and Lennie Tristano comes to mind while listening to Joris' quartet, your memory is a credit to modern Jazz history].
Joris Roelofs recordings
are available as audio CD’s and Mp3 downloads from a number of online
retailers.