Brazilian tenor saxophonist
Ivo Perelman is a remarkably productive recording artist known for combining Brazilian folk themes with free jazz and an improvisational aesthetic that has grown increasingly varied as he has become a more prolific recording artist. While he continues to play well in the heavily distorted, abstract-expressionist vein developed by
Albert Ayler, his sound also fits nicely alongside similarly inclined contemporaries including
Elliott Levin and Ken Simon. Early trio recordings such as 1996's thematically related Slaves of Job and Revelation showcased compositions that opened doors into exploratory flights of fancy. These flights provided foundations for the music that would ensue over the following decades, particularly his many fruitful, wildly varied recordings for Leo Records -- including 2011's The Hour of the Star -- and his many
Art of the Improv Trio recordings. On 2013's The Edge and
Art of the Duet: Vol. 1, he began an ongoing recording partnership with
Matthew Shipp. Their collaboration has netted dozens of albums, including 2015's
Callas, and 2018's seven-volume The Art of Perelman-Shipp series. 2019 saw a move to ESP-Disk and the quartet offering
Ineffable Joy, which included
Shipp, bassist
William Parker, and drummer
Bobby Kapp. 2021 saw the release of five
Perelman titles including
Garden of Jewels with
Shipp and drummer
Whit Dickey, and Purity of Desire with
Gordon Grdina and
Hamin Honari. In 2022, a nine-disc box of sax-piano duets featuring some of
Perelman's favorite pianists was released as Brass and Ivory Tales.
Born in Sao Paulo in 1961,
Perelman played classical guitar, cello, clarinet, trombone, and piano while growing up. At the age of 19 he adopted the tenor saxophone as his primary instrument. After arriving in the U.S., he attended the Berklee School of Music in Boston for a semester before dropping out (he is purportedly a mostly self-taught player).
Perelman's travels took him to Los Angeles in 1986, where he studied privately and performed. His first album, 1989's
Ivo, featured an all-star cast that included drummer
Peter Erskine, bassist
John Patitucci, percussionist
Airto, and vocalist
Flora Purim, among others. Also around this time,
Perelman relocated to New York.
During the '90s, he founded his own Ibeji label, releasing albums like Soccer Land and Tapeba Songs. Ever explorative, in 1997
Perelman combined Jewish music and avant-garde jazz, making
En Adir: Traditional Jewish Songs for the Music & Arts label. Quite prolific,
Perelman recorded often with players of the avant-garde; he's made albums with bassist
Dominic Duval, pianist
Borah Bergman, drummers
Rashied Ali and
Jay Rosen, and pianists
Marilyn Crispell and
Matthew Shipp, to name just a few.
In the 2000s,
Perelman continued his busy recording schedule, playing most often with pianist
Shipp, as well as adventurous collaborators like violinist
Mat Maneri, guitarist
Joe Morris, drummer
Gerald Cleaver, and others. Many of these efforts were issued on Leo Records, including such albums as 2011's The Hour of the Star, 2012's
Clairvoyant, 2014's Book of Sound, and 2016's Blue. Also in 2016,
Perelman released six volumes of a series on Leo called
The Art of the Improv Trio. A similar series detailing his partnership with
Shipp, the seven-volume The Art of Perelman-Shipp, appeared in 2017. In 2018,
Perelman released no less than five recordings for Leo including Strings 1, the duo offerings Kindred Spirits -- with bass clarinetist
Rudi Mahall -- the triple-album Oneness with
Shipp, and
Spiritual Prayers with saxophonist
Jason Stein. In 2019, in addition to continuing his collaborations with
Shipp, the saxophonist, along with violist
Matt Maneri, delivered three more volumes in the Strings series with alternating sidemen who included
Nate Wooley,
Ned Rothenberg,
Jason Hwang, and
Mark Feldman. 2019 also saw
Perelman team up with drummer
Bobby Kapp, bassist
William Parker, and tenor saxophone player
Matthew Shipp for the ESP-Disk-issued
Ineffable Joy.
In 2020,
Perelman issued Deep Resonance with the
Arcado String Trio, followed by the digital, six-album Strings & Voices Project placing the saxophonist in the company of various guitarists, bassists, violinists, and singers. Also released was Dust of Light\Ears Drawing Sounds in duet with guitarist Pascal Marzan.
In January 2021,
Perelman issued The Purity of Desire in a trio with oudist/guitarist
Gordon Grdina and percussionist
Hamin Honari. A month later, Polarity, a duo with
Nate Wooley, appeared from Burning Ambulance. In January 2022, Poland's Fundacja Słuchaj! released Brass and Ivory Tales, a nine-disc box set of duos with pianists recorded between 2014 and 2021. His recording partners for the project included
Marlyn Crispell,
Craig Taborn,
Aaron Parks,
Vijay Iyer,
Angelica Sanchez,
Dave Burrell,
Sylvie Courvoisier, Augustin Fernandez, and
Aruan Ortiz. ~ Chris Kelsey & Thom Jurek