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Borah Bergman
American pianist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Borah Bergman (December 13, 1926 – October 18, 2012) was an American free jazz pianist.
Training and influences
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Perspective
Bergman was born in Brooklyn to Russian-Jewish immigrant parents.[1][2] His grandfather Meir Pergamenick was a cantor.[3] Accounts of when he began to learn the piano vary: some assert that he learned clarinet as a child and did not commence his piano studies until adulthood;[4] others, that he had piano lessons from a young age;[2] one of his own accounts is that he took piano lessons as a child, then changed to clarinet, before returning to piano after being discharged from the army.[5] As an adult, he developed his left hand playing to the point where he became essentially ambidextrous as a pianist, and could play equally fast in both hands,[4] and they could act completely independently of each other;[6] Bergman himself preferred the term "ambi-ideation" to "ambidextrous", as it conveyed the added ability to express ideas achieved when both hands were equal.[5] Bergman cited Earl Hines, Bud Powell,[2] and Lennie Tristano[6] as formative influences, although his own style was based on free improvisation rather than song form. Commenting on his other influences, Bergman said that "I was influenced strongly by Ornette Coleman... I was also very influenced by chamber music and Bach and Dixieland or New Orleans, where all of the instruments were playing contrapuntally and polyphonically. So I figured I'd like to do it myself".[5] He died in New York in 2012.[7]
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Performance and recordings
Until the 1970s he played little in public, concentrating on private practice and his work as a school teacher.[2] He recorded four albums as a soloist, most notably on the European label Soul Note, before embarking on duo and trio albums from the 1990s. A small number of solo and quartet albums were also released from the mid-1990s. The style for which he is best known is described in The Penguin guide to jazz recordings: "His astonishing solo performances recall the 'two pianists' illusion associated with Art Tatum, though in a more fragmentary and disorderly sound-world".[8]
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Discography
As leader/co-leader
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References
External links
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