NEWS

  • Eliane Caps the Season at Folly Theater in Kansas City

    Eliane Elias, Brazilian-born pianist and vocalist, presented an enviable image as she grinned and tossed her mane of blonde hair, pounding out rhythms with insatiable enthusiasm.

  • Financial Times review from Ronnie Scott’s in London

    Tonight’s few-frills piano trio gig swirled with invention, pulse and history lived. Marc Johnson was the bass player, alongside drummer Pat LaBarbera, in pianist Bill Evans’ last rhythm section; the legendary jazz impressionist died in 1980. Johnson and LaBarbera sustained Evans’ final years at a creative high, and tonight’s performance resonated with the stealthy rhythms, group interplay and gossamer textures that were the late pianist’s hallmark.

    But with Johnson’s marital partner, Eliane Elias, playing piano this was never going to be a retread of a particular niche of the jazz heritage. Elias’s style-crossing career has Brazilian roots – she was born in São Paulo – but 30 years in New York have given her an encyclopaedic knowledge of jazz. Husky-voiced bossas and light-touch sambas yield to sharp, dazzling runs, impressionist voicings suspended in time, two-handed tremolos, angular abstractions and, at this gig, even a four-to-the-floor bar-room shuffle.

    The first set mixed a Brazilian dalliance into the songbook repertoire and added originals from a newly released album. Two floating chords opened, a tumbledown run set the tempo, cuing the standard “Everything I Love” at a nippy pace. There was counterpoint bass and an understated pulse, breaks and exchanges and then a Bill Evans original, “Five”, with Elias adding a tough edge to this soulful and oddly asymmetric theme.

    As the set progressed, the trio presented a fluttery tribute to nature – “B is for Butterfly” – a brace of husky, rough-at-the-edges vocals and the genre-bending “Sirens of Titan” a showcase for Johnson’s bowed bass. As the evening wore on, Elias came increasingly to the fore, her ideas teeming with dexterity and rhythmic independence over a palette of influences. The set ended with a tribute to another jazz great, Bud Powell. “Bowing to Bud” opened as an angular, unaccompanied, fingers-flying celebration and was eased out as fragments over a mid-tempo lope.

    The second set gave the songbook repertoire precedence. “Autumn Leaves” was obliquely stated, there was Gershwin as a samba and Kern at a romp. Elias was on fire and in command, twisting and turning and putting her stamp on “Desafinado”. Johnson, alongside LaBarbera, played his role to perfection and delivered a solo highlight on “Nardis”.

    By Mike Hobart

  • MidwestRecord.com reviews I Thought About You

    ELIANE ELIAS/I Thought About You:

    As much as I look forward to each new Elias album, I wasn’t sure what to expect here. The opening piano riffs were comforting and they soon eased all fears this vocal tribute to Chet Baker was ill conceived and would roll off the rails. The Brazilian accented vocals give this an insouciance that keeps this from being a museum piece or a desperate career move. With a smart crew underpinning it all with some easy rolling cocktail jazz, these pros make it look way easier than it is and a good time is had by all. The familiarity on paper of the material and Elias’ easy charm at the mic make what could have easily turned into a gift shop record into something way much more. Taken separately, it’s easy to think the elements here wouldn’t work, but when put together this elegantly, the sum of the parts become grandly greater than the whole. A real left field winner that’s sure to raise eyebrows as Elias breaks new ground in a most unexpected way.

  • Swept Away a DownBeat Magazine Editor’s Pick

    How do you improve a tremendous piano trio? Add Joe Lovano. For their new album of acoustic, original music, the husband-and-wife team of bassist Marc Johnson and pianist Eliane Elias recruited the agile drummer Joey Baron. The trio recordings included here are so strong that it’s clear the musicians could have crafted an entire album in that setting and gotten great results. But the addition of Lovano’s saxophone takes a song like Elias’ “Moments” to another level, thanks to his gorgeous tone and empathetic interaction with the pianist.

    BY BOBBY REED

  • Swept Away receives glowing praise

    Jazztimes

    Not halfway into the first track, Swept Away resonates as a perfectly suitable title for this event, Marc Johnson’s first ECM album since 2005’s Shades of Jade. This time around, he shares the bill with one of today’s truly great pianists, Eliane Elias, a key collaborator for many years, and a musical companion who also happens to be his wife. They’ve been together for 20 years, though Elias expresses the relationship could actually be valued at 85 years when accounting for the amount of time spent working side by side, traveling, and being married. Both individuals exuded greatness from the moment they broke ground on their respective career foundations – Elias with Steps Ahead, and Johnson making history with the Bill Evans trio. What thrives as a vibrant and hedonistic partnership continues to speak volumes about the current project, much of which was conceived in the beauty of their New York home in the Hamptons.

    All About Jazz

    Swept Away is certainly a collaborative effort—co-led by Eliane Elias and bassist Marc Johnson—but it seems more like the pianist’s set. The Sao Paolo-born pianist penned five of the disc’s eleven tunes, and co-wrote two more with her musical/life partner, Johnson. The duo, in league with drummer Joey Baron and, on five tunes, saxophonist Joe Lovano, has produced the most sumptuous music imaginable, beginning with the Elias-penned title tune—a floating trio effort, a sensual haiku to unadorned beauty.

    The Jazz Breakfast

    Double bassist Marc Johnson, from the US’s mid-west, was in Bill Evans last trio; pianist Eliane Elias, from Sao Paulo in Brazil, first came to wide attention in Steps Ahead. They have been a couple for a long time now, and the near-telepathic interchange of the bass and piano throughout this album, their rising and falling at one to heighten the tension of a phrase and then to release it, is a joy to hear.

    The Guardian

    Bassist Marc Johnson and pianist Eliane Elias sound so complete as a duo that you might think even one extra player would be too many. Then, after the first number, in come the discreet Joey Baron on drums and that matchlessly inventive tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano and it all sounds – not better so much as deeper, more resonant.