In-person activity
Private Half Hour Orchestral Lessons with Sarel (In Studio)
In home, In studio, or Via Webcam, Harris, Hewlett, NY 11557
Overview
Ages
All ages
Attendance
Optional: adults can stay or take a breather
Frequency
One-time
What your child’s day will look like
Years of Experience: 20 Location Options: In Studio, In Home Travel Radius: 15 Genres: Jazz, Classical Age Groups: Children, Young Adult, Adult Instruments Taught: Guitar Lessons,Orchestral Lessons Overview: New York, NY, April 1, 2006--- Guitarist Sarel is announcing the immediate release of Mr. Blue Eyes, his third studio recording. Recorded in April 2005 at Acoustic Sound, Mr. Blue Eyes features eight of Sarel ’s original compositions, supported by an ensemble that includes Ron McClure (Bass), Bruce Hall (Drums), David Berkman (Piano), Dave Scott (Trumpet Flugelhorn), Adam Kolker (Soprano, Alto Tenor Saxophone, Alto Flute), and Allen Ferber (Trombone.) Mr. Blue Eyes follows 1999’s 2 In One, characterized by the unique blend of Mr. Sarel’s guitar and Matan Klein’s flute. Sarel’s love affair with music began in his childhood home in Haifa, Israel, where he was surrounded by European classical music and opera, the most prevalent influences on Israeli listeners in the early 1960’s. Sarel learned to play the violin and spent every minute possible gleaning information from the recordings and radio to which he had access. When the pop revolution started to filter onto Israeli radio from England, Sarel began buying the new music and soon became a Beatles fanatic, captivated and motivated by their simplicity and lyricism. His interest broadened to include nearly every type of music that he could find, and he learned to play the guitar at the age of eighteen. It was after his mandatory military service in the Israeli army that he was introduced to jazz by his first teacher. That fortuitous event instantly determined Sarel’s musical path. Says Sarel, “After that, it was all jazz, all the time.” Sarel decided to leave Israel in 1989 to enter Boston’s Berklee College of Music, one of the world’s most prestigious musical laboratories. His move to the U.S. was prompted by Sarel’s belief that if you want to learn something, you have to go to the source. At Berklee, Sarel began an intensive collaboration with professor Jerry Bergonzi, the private teacher who encouraged and honed Sarel’s improvisational skills. He describes Bergonzi as “an unbelievable player and personality.” Sarel would often show up early to class just so he could listen discreetly to what Bergonzi was saying to other students. Bergonzi’s influence, along with that of Larry Bione and Sarel’s other teachers, laid the foundation for Sarel's philosophy as a performer, and a teacher. Says Sarel, “What I learned at Berklee, which was almost more important than anything else, was that music is a language which evokes a mood. You have to create sentences, which in music are phrases with a beginning, a middle, and an end. Fancy licks are earned by masters like Scofield and Montgomery because the fundamentals of phrasing and melody are the basis of their vocabulary. “ Sarel began to step out professionally while still a student at Berklee, soloing in concerts with The Boston Afro-American Artist Association Festival in Copley Square, and at the Lawrence and Alma Berk Recital Hall. After graduating in1994, Sarel moved to Budapest with his wife while she attended medical school. In Eastern Europe, the jazz scene was just emerging from underground after the relatively recent demise of the BerlinWall. At the time, people spoke little English, but Budapest was slowly emerging as a musical destination for the festival crowd. During the cold, bleak winter of 1995, Sarel began to teach, play sessions and write. One result of that experience is his unusual composition, “Budapest in 95,” which appears on 2 In One. Sarel returned to Boston after a year and within months, he relocated to NYC to pursue his career, while his wife remained abroad to complete her degree. Sarel quickly became sought after on the Manhattan jazz scene, gigging on every session and live date that came his way, paid or unpaid. He has held fast to his commitment of showcasing his original compositions, playing gigs at Small’s and The Garage Café among other clubs . In 2001, Sarel contributed big band arrangements for the tribute to saxophone legend James Spaulding presented by The Brooklyn Conservatory of Music. Now an established performer looking back on his first decade in New York, he stresses the ideas he feels are essential to an artist’s development. Says Sarel, “Everyone has to eat, but if you turn music into a grind, playing things you don’t want to play, with people who don’t interest you, you might as well be a plumber. You will lose, or never even develop, your edge. You have to free your mind from forms and limitations. You have to notate ideas and develop them. The most important thing is to find your own voice, to infuse your playing with your own personality, and to practice. Not to learn fancy licks, but to expand ideas. I like the challenge of taking a line and seeing how far I can go, how many variations I can create.” When reflecting on the jazz he encountered and wrote in Budapest, Sarel stated that everyone’s personal expression is influenced by his environment and experiences. Sarel can make that statement with a bittersweet confidence about his newest release,Mr. Blue Eyes. The Mr. Blue Eyes of the title refers to Sarel and Daphne Sack’s baby boy Ethan, who passed away from cancer in June of 2004, at the age of eight months. The idea for the title song came just two weeks before the baby’s sudden illness and death, as Sarel was looking into his son’s eyes one day, understanding for the first time in his life the meaning of “unconditional love.” In the grief and shock that followed, Sarel was unable to touch his guitar for several months. When he finally did, his project became a dedication to his first child, with each title and composition having a reference to the baby’s innocent, joyful life. The recording is at once ebullient and brooding, complex and completely accessible. It reflects the skills of a maturing artist who has by necessity transformed tragedy into a stunning homage. Sarel’s career goals are forthright and simple: to learn every day how to write better, play better, how to mature as a musician; to secure a distribution deal for Mr. Blue Eyes; to continue doing choice gigs where he showcases his original compositions. He listens to his favorite jazz instrumentalists and vocalists for inspiration. But lately, when he’s driving, he listens to pop. Says Sarel, ”Sometimes simple things have a greater impact than all that complicated stuff.” * Formal Education: 1994 Berklee College of Music: Boston, Mass. Performance Bachelor of Music 2003 Brooklyn-Queens Conservatory of Music: Queens, NY Performance/Jazz Guitar Graduate Diploma 2011 Five Town College: Dix Hills, NY USA Performance Master's of Music Private Education: Ihave been studying for twenty years with the top jazz musican such as Jerry Bergonzi, Gary Dail,Mordy Ferber,Jene Bertoncini and more. Performing Experience: During the last 25 years I have performed regularly in Boston(1991-1994) Budapest, Hungary(1995) and in New York City and Long Island from 1996. I also recorded two original CD's. Experience Teaching: May 1991 to August 1994 Private studio teaching Boston, Mass. Guitar teacher October 1994 to December 1995 Private studio teaching Budapest, Hungary Guitar teacher October 1996 to June 2004 Private studio teaching Queens Guitar teacher During these years I taught different topics such as theoretical classes, ear training, harmony and improvisational skills. October 2005 to Current Private studio teaching Hewlett, NY Guitar teacher October 2005 to June 2006 Music Gallery Hewlett, NY Guitar teacher May 2009 to Current Take lesson Hewlett, NY Guitar teacher
Location
In home, In studio, or Via Webcam, Harris, Hewlett, NY 11557
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Music
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