With a reputation as a piano and improvisational genius, but also witch a background of an interesting life story in which chance played a role, comes the Israeli musician Yaron Herman, forty-three years old.
For most of his childhood and early youth, Yaron Herman was a sportsman. He left his basketball career at sixteen when he felt the urge to get closer to music. Not only a still hidden talent, but also a particular teaching method, in which seemingly detached disciplines such as mathematics, philosophy and psychology had their impact, made him a very promising pianist within two years. He wavered at Boston’s Berklee, but the prestigious school failed to impress him. New York attracted him with its lively environment, where he spent less than a year jamming in clubs before his visa expired.
“So, I needed to travel to Israel, renew my visa, and then return to New York. Since I had almost no money left, I bought a cheap ticket with a change in Paris. However, there was no connection to Israel due to a snowstorm, so I had to spend the night in France. I didn’t speak a word of French at that time, I had no relation to France, I wasn’t interested in the culture there. But because I didn’t want to stay in a hotel, I went to a jazz club and there I started talking to the musicians who were playing that night. One of them invited me to another gig he was going to have a week later. He offered me to play with him then. And that I could sleep on his air mattress until then. When you’re 18 and someone offers you a week at his place in Paris, you don’t turn it down. And so, I stayed, and gradually it all sort of went wrong,” said Yaron Herman, for whom Paris became a new home, as he recalled in the magazine Harmonie the pivotal “accident” of his life.
He made his debut in 2003 with Takes 2 to Know 1 and his recording and concert work is divided between purely solo and band work, most often as a trio. For Herman, improvisation is essential, in concerts, where especially in solo concerts he does not have a pre-determined programme to play, but also in the studio: “What I appreciate about musicians who have influenced me and whom I consider to be greats is that although they improvise, you get the feeling that it is written music. Because improvisation is not something completely arbitrary, improvisation is composition in real time. I try to do something similar on my albums.” This is also the case with his latest album Alma, which is a purely solo and fully improvised album. “On this album, I wanted to go to the essentials. Without a predefined concept, a plan, an idea of specific themes. Just to sit at the piano, close my eyes and let the music guide me. On an inner journey,” he says.
In addition to his own compositions, Yaron Herman also works on adaptations of taken compositions, which he uses as themes for improvisation. Sometimes he pays homage to his roots by playing pieces by Jewish composers – he has even recorded a jazz version of an Israeli anthem. But like some of his other instrumental colleagues, such as Brad Mehldau, he is not afraid to reach into the realm of popular music for inspiration: he has fished out Leonard Cohen, Nirvana, The Police, and even Britney Spears for his playlist in this way.
Let’s see what the beautiful surroundings of Villa Tugendhat will inspire this extremely creative and somehow naturally original artist to do. And will this inspiration, and therefore the pianist’s programme, be different in the evening and in the afternoon, i.e. between the two concerts Yaron Herman will play in Brno?