FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
REZA KHAN AND PAINTED DIARIES ANNOUNCE THE LAUNCH OF THEIR
NEW STUDIO RECORDING, A SIMPLE PLAN, AVAILABLE NOW ON THE PAINTED MEDIA LABEL Features Andy Snitzer, Graham Hawthorne and Grammy Nominee Fabrice
Dupont ----------
“It’s like a nice walk on the beach with your family,” says
Reza Khan, speaking about his latest CD, A Simple Plan (on the Painted Media
label). Following the 2009 release of
Painted Diaries, a paean to the affecting stories of everyday life that “mostly
disappear in peoples’ diaries,” Khan’s restless artistry has turned inward now.
A Simple Plan reawakens the special times in the artist’s life, uncomplicated
and familiar yet profound and inspirational, which he is happy to share, for he
knows that his listeners, too, have lived these vignettes of time, feeling and
spirit.
Every song on A Simple Plan is a soundscape distilling the
universal loveliness of that day at the beach, the night by the fire, a walk in
the park, even the hours stuck in traffic and longing for home. From the first track, “Almost Home,” to the
last, “September Morning”, A Simple Plan uses “catchy melodies, hooks and
grooves” in a smooth and polished delivery to evoke those special, indelible
times.
“Blue Dreams in RIO,” for example, evokes not the blue of
loss but of sitting at a café in Ipanema, a caipirinha frosty and redolent at
the lips while gazing out at the surf.
And “Back to the East” is a nostalgic reverie as Reza teases us with
lines he could just as readily be playing on the sitar. “Back to the East” asks us all to think
about where we’ve come from.
Raised in Bangladesh where he was schooled in Indian
classical music by his father, Reza has, since trading in his sitar for a
guitar, integrated East with West. Reza’s touch on the guitar is light yet
definitive, not unlike that of the great sitar masters. At the same time, A Simple Plan is his most
Western-friendly project to date. He
has, with this CD, settled snugly into a smooth jazz groove after finding
critics and marketers unsure as to where to shelve his music which boasts a
number of world and genre influences.
With an extended stay in Southern Africa, Reza has lived
most of his adult life in the States where he has joined a groundswell of
contemporary South Asian jazz musicians--saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa and
pianist Vijay Ayer come rushing to mind--who have hurtled themselves full
throttle into jazz, endowing our most uniquely American idiom with the
hallmarks of the East that these two sophisticated genres share: virtuosic
playing, deep understanding of tone, and improvisation.
The side players he’d painstakingly searched for to complete
Painted Diaries have remained, evolving into a tight-knit unit, one that jelled
so well that, not only do they return for A Simple Plan, but Reza now calls his
collective Reza Khan and the Painted Diaries. A number of the players have had
a longer, earlier life with David Byrne.
Smooth Jazz programming families will instantly recognize Andy Snitzer's
collaborative contributions on Tenor and Alto Sax, as well as Graham Hawthorne's
contribution to the tracks on drums and percussion. And two new members have
come aboard for A Simple Plan: Viviane Arnoux has been stinging some of the top
Afropop bands with her bumble bee accordion licks, and Jesse Kopansky’s violin
has been finely honed in Balkan and Middle Eastern melody.
A Simple Plan is a unique addition to the smooth jazz canon,
intimate and accessible with its full share of masterly composing, arranging,
execution. It’s a perfect album to put
your feet up to for arm-chair travel, to reminisce, or to plan for the future.
Reza Khan and Painted Diaries will be announcing their tour
dates for the summer shortly.
Please join Reza Khan and Painted Diaries on their CD
Release web site http://asimpleplan.painteddiaries.com/
Reza Khan, Andy Snitzer and Graham Hawthorne are all
available for interviews through Knight Mediacom.
Contact Ron Knight
310 779 9885 or 619
573 9919
[email protected]
SKYPE: ron.knightkmi
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