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Eldar Djangirov

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Birth name
  
Eldar E. Djangirov

Website
  
www.eldarmusic.com

Origin
  
United States

Name
  
Eldar Djangirov

Instruments
  
Piano

Genres
  
Jazz

Years active
  
1996-present




Born
  
January 28, 1987 (age 37) Kyrgyz SSR, Soviet Union (
1987-01-28
)

Role
  
Jazz Pianist · eldarmusic.com

Education
  
Interlochen Center for the Arts, University of Southern California

Albums
  
Re‑Imagination, Live at the Blue Note, Virtue, Bach / Brahms / Prokofiev, Eldar

Similar People
  
Roy Hargrove, Michael Brecker, Chris Botti, Johannes Brahms, Sergei Prokofiev

Profiles

Eldar djangirov trio hope live at atlanta jazz festival


Eldar Djangirov (born January 28, 1987), also known as Eldar, is a US-American jazz pianist. He was born in Kyrgyz SSR, Soviet Union. He is of Volga Tatar and Russian descent. He grew up in Kansas City, MO from the age of 10. Born to Tanya and Emil Djangirov, he also lived in San Diego, California during his teenage years. As of 2016, he resides in New York City.

Contents

Eldar Djangirov rELDARDJANGIROVlarge570jpg

Eldar djangirov trio performing hope at the vladivostok international jazz festival


Career

Eldar Djangirov httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

He began playing the piano when he was three years old. The first piece he remembers learning was "C Jam Blues". He later took classical lessons and was "discovered" at age 9 by the late New York City jazz aficionado Charles McWhorter, who saw him play at a festival in Siberia. The family relocated to Kansas City, drawn there in large part by the city's jazz history. During his Kansas City years, even before reaching his teens, Eldar already started building a reputation as a child prodigy, appearing on Marian McPartland's NPR show, Piano Jazz, when he was only 12 years old, being the youngest performer to appear on her show. Eldar attended Interlochen Center for the Arts in his young teenage years. Eldar attended St. Elizabeth's grade school and the Barstow School in Kansas City. Eventually, the family moved to San Diego where he attended the Francis W. Parker School (San Diego), and then to the Los Angeles area where he attended University of Southern California's Thornton School of Music. Eldar's playing style is characterized by prodigious technique and musicality. Downbeat noted in a review by Bob Doershuk: "his command of the instrument is beyond staggering." He was signed to Sony Music at 18 and released 5 albums. One of the albums was nominated for a Grammy. Eldar has extensively toured throughout Europe, Asia, North America.

Eldar Djangirov Eldar Djangirov Is On Our Radar New York Jazz Pianist

Djangirov has been variously compared to Art Tatum, Oscar Peterson, Herbie Hancock and more; yet he also seems to absorb harmonic expansiveness from McCoy Tyner and at times the lyrical sensitivity from Bill Evans. Djangirov performed at Grammy Awards telecast and was honored the first time in many years as a jazz artist. Eldar has also been seen on Conan O'Brien, CBS Saturday Early Show, Jimmy Kimmel Live and CBS Sunday Morning.

Discography

  • Eldar (2001, D&D Records)
  • Handprints (2003, D&D Records)
  • Eldar (2005, Sony): the debut album on Sony featured John Patitucci on bass and Todd Strait on drums. Michael Brecker makes a guest appearance on one track.
  • Live at the Blue Note (2006, Sony): the album had guests Chris Botti and Roy Hargrove.
  • Re-Imagination (2007, Sony): the album resulted in a Grammy nomination for Eldar.
  • Virtue (2009, Sony): features Eldar's now regular trio consisting of Armando Gola on bass and Ludwig Afonso on drums. The album had Joshua Redman on one track, as well as Nicholas Payton.
  • Three Stories (2011, Sony): Eldar's first solo piano album which has garnered critical acclaim.
  • Breakthrough (2013, Motéma Music LLC)
  • Bach / Brahms / Prokofiev (2013, Motéma Music LLC)
  • World Tour Vol. 1 (2015, New Struggle Music, LLC)
  • References

    Eldar Djangirov Wikipedia