Gilad Atzmon

Musician

Birthday June 9, 1963

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Ramat Gan, Tel Aviv, Israel

Age 60 years old

Nationality Israel

#61652 Most Popular

1963

Gilad Atzmon (גלעד עצמון, ; born 9 June 1963) is an Israeli-born British jazz saxophonist, novelist, political activist, and writer.

As a musician, he is best known as a saxophonist and bandleader.

His instruments include the saxophone, accordion, clarinet, zurna and flute.

Atzmon has been known to play over 100 dates a year.

He has been bandleader, successively, of the Gilad Atzmon Quartet, the Spiel Acid Jazz Band and the Orient House Ensemble.

Exploring identity through the folk forms of diverse cultures, his bands and other projects have recorded around 20 albums.

1980

During the late 1980s and 1990s Atzmon was a popular session musician and producer, recording extensively and performing with artists such as Yardena Arazi, Meir Banai, Ofra Haza, Si Himan and Yehuda Poliker.

He started the first incarnation of the "Gilad Atzmon Quartet" and a group named "Spiel Acid Jazz Band", and performed regularly at the Red Sea Jazz Festival.

1981

Atzmon's three-year compulsory service in the Israel Defense Forces commenced in mid 1981; at first he served as a combat medic, including the early months of the 1982 Lebanon War, but most of his service was in the Israeli Air Force orchestra.

Atzmon recounts that, after his demobilisation, he spent an autumn busking in Europe.

In the following years, he trained at the Rubin Academy of Music in Jerusalem.

1990

He has led a bebop quartet since the 1990s and, in 2000, founded the Orient House Ensemble, with Asaf Sirkis on drums, Frank Harrison on piano and Oli Hayhurst on bass.

1994

In 1994, Atzmon, after initially planning to study in the United States, enrolled at the University of Essex, earning a master's degree in Philosophy.

Atzmon recounts that, soon after arriving in the UK, he secured a residency at the Black Lion in Kilburn and, after establishing a following playing bebop and post-bop, began touring Europe with his band.

1998

Since 1998, he has also been a member of the English rock band, the Blockheads.

He has played on albums by Pink Floyd and Robert Wyatt and collaborated with other musicians on their recordings.

He has also produced albums for Sarah Gillespie, Norman Watt-Roy and others.

Atzmon has written satirical novels, non-fiction works and read essays on the subjects of Palestinian rights, Israel and identity politics.

These writings have been described by scholars and anti-racism activists as being antisemitic and containing Holocaust denial.

Atzmon was born in Tel Aviv, Israel, to a conservative secular Jewish family.

He grew up in Jerusalem, where his father served in the military.

Atzmon first became interested in British jazz when he came across recordings of Ronnie Scott and Tubby Hayes.

During his incapacitation for nearly a year following a climbing accident, Atzmon started playing the saxophone in earnest.

Discovering bebop, he said that the albums Charlie Parker with Strings were what made him want to be a jazz musician.

In 1998, Atzmon joined veteran punk rock band Ian Dury and the Blockheads, while sustaining other projects.

2002

In 2002, he became a British citizen, and renounced his Israeli citizenship.

Originally a tenor saxophone player, Atzmon's main instrument is the alto saxophone: he also plays the accordion, the soprano, tenor and baritone saxophones and the clarinet, flute, sol and zurna.

Atzmon's musical method has been to explore cultural identity, including tango and klezmer, as well as Arabic, Balkan, Gypsy and Ladino folk forms.

Atzmon says Arabic music, like Indian music, cannot be notated like western music but must be internalised by "reverting to the primacy of the ear".

His performances have been described as "quotes from jazz standards, torch songs, ideas playfully purloined from Mediterranean or Middle Eastern sources, sultry Paris-cabaret smooches, New Orleans clarinet swing and bebop in hyperdrive", and that "His source materials range from east-European folk music through to hard bop, funk and French accordion tunes".

Atzmon's varies his recording style from that of his performances, saying "I don't think that anyone can sit in a house, at home, and listen to me play a full-on bebop solo. It's too intense. My albums need to be less manic."

Dubbed the "hardest working man in British jazz", Atzmon has at times played over 100 dates a year and recorded and performed with such artists as Ian Dury, Sir Paul McCartney, Sinéad O'Connor and Robbie Williams.

2003

In 2003, Hayhurst was replaced by Yaron Stavi and, in 2009, Sirkis was replaced by Eddie Hick.

2007

He participated in Robert Wyatt's album, Comicopera (2007), and with Wyatt, Ros Stephens and lyricist Alfreda Benge, on For the Ghosts Within (2010).

2009

Atzmon produced and arranged two albums for Sarah Gillespie, Stalking Juliet (2009) and In The Current Climate (2011), and toured with her band, and has produced albums for Dutch-Iraqi jazz singer Elizabeth Simonian, afro-jazz percussionist and singer Adriano Adewale, and Blockheads bassist Norman Watt-Roy.

2010

The band has recorded nine albums and, in 2010, announced a 40-date anniversary tour.

In 2010, Atzmon released a musical transcription of ten saxophone solos.

2014

In 2014, he performed on The Endless River, the final studio album of Pink Floyd and, in 2017, collaborated with Indonesian world and jazz pianist Dwiki Dharmawan and Middle Eastern oud star Kamal Musallam on World Peace Trio.

2017

In 2017, the band collaborated with the Sigamos String Quartet to produce The Spirit of Trane, a tribute to John Coltrane.

Named after Orient House, the former East Jerusalem headquarters of the Palestine Liberation Organization, it has been asserted that "No jazz musicians have done more to honour, publicise and spread solidarity with the struggle of the Palestinians than Atzmon and the Orient House Ensemble."