Emre Kartari profile picture

Emre Kartari

About Me

From "All About Jazz": A line-up featuring two horns (saxophone and trumpet), and two percussionists (tympani and drum kit) might seem an odd choice, but for Turkish drummer Emre Kartari it’s simply a different means to a very musical end. Make no mistake: while there’s plenty of free play on Origin, it’s based around conceptual sketches, written by Kartari, that provide his group with a series of different contexts that are surprisingly varied and unexpectedly complete.There are plenty of chord-avoidant groups out there, but they often have something holding down the bottom end, and in this case it is tympanist Howard Curtis. Like Kartari, Curtis also plays a variety of percussion instruments, but it’s his tuned tympanis that sometimes provide an underpinning, though in ways far from the norm. Meanwhile, trumpeter John D’Earth and soprano saxophonist David Liebman—who both also play wooden flutes on tracks including the gentle “Welcome Piece”—provide Kartari with melodic, harmonic and interpretive foils, comfortably traversing territory ranging from the surprisingly beautiful yet often slightly dissonant “Free Ballad” to the more extreme but undeniably structured “Dirty and New.”There’s considerable implication to be found, often in place of explicit direction, and in many cases it’s possible to envision Kartari’s material in a more conventional context. While Kartari, a dynamic player who can turn from creating spare textures to pulsing rhythms on a dime, provides plenty of forward motion throughout, he’s also a powerfully responsive player. It is, in fact, the communicative skills of all four players that ultimately draw one into Origin; once over the surprise of this unorthodox line-up, there’s a sense of logic and inevitability that begins to unfold.The improvisation on Origin is clearly collective; while an individual voice, like Liebman’s unmistakable soprano, might dominate at times, more often than not the four voices are interacting, as they do on the title track where Liebman and D’Earth seem to orbit around each other, magically coalescing on occasion for melodies that are sometimes scored, other times drawn from the ether.The music ranges from turbulence (“Istanbul”) to ethereal (“Anadolu”), and from near-cinematic (“Hitchcock Scene”) to near-funk (“City Groove”). Throughout, Kartari, Curtis, D’Earth and Liebman give the writing surprising shape and a group sound that you’d be hard-pressed to find anywhere else.Origin is an album that may seem hard to approach at first, but those with open ears and open minds will welcome this strange confluence of instruments, and be rewarded with an hour of music that continues to engage the head and heart long after it’s over. John Kelman - Senior Editor - All About Jazz ******** Having grown up in two different countries, I am drawn to music that falls in between genres, and uses odd sounds/instrumentation. My last recording featuring David Liebman on sax/wooden flutes, John D'earth on trumpet, Howard Curtis on tympani, and myself on drums is available here through myspace. I have more cool music in the works, please stay tuned. For a more detailed bio, visit my website: www.emrekartari.com ********* if you need to get in touch with me, please use my email: [email protected] a

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 30/09/2007
Band Website: www.emrekartari.com
Band Members: Good Day Bad Day: Zulfugar Baghirov / John Lee ********** David Liebman / John D'earth / Howard Curtis **********Signals: Paul Pieper / Gavin Fallow **************Big Girl: Darius Jones / Trevor Dunn
Influences: Miles Davis, Led Zeppelin, Otis Redding, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Headphones, Jack DeJohnette, People, Jackson Five, Elliott Smith, Lalo Schifrin
Sounds Like: Rock. Jazz. Punk. Dada. Beat. These words and their longer cousins, the ism-family (surrealism, postmodernism, abstract expressionism, minimalism), are used to commodify and commercialize an artist's complex personal vision. This terminology is not about understanding. It has never been. It's about making money. Once a group of artists, writers, or musicians has been packaged together under such a banner, it is not only easier for work to be marketed-it also becomes easier for the audience to 'buy it' and for the critic to respond with prepackaged opinions. The audience is deprived of its right to the pleasure of creating it's own interpretation, and the critic has no longer to think about what is really happening or go any deeper that the monochromatic surface of the label itself, thus avoiding any encounter with the real aesthetic criteria that make any individual artist's work possible. -John Zorn
Record Label: RecBySaatchi
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

current listening April 4 2008

Listening:Steve Lehman "Manifold"Steve Lehman saxophones; Jonathan Finlayson, trumpet; Nasheet Waits, drums; John Hebert, bassRob Brown Ensemble "Crown Trunk Root Funk"Rob Brown alto sax;Craig Taborn ...
Posted by on Fri, 04 Apr 2008 06:03:00 GMT

current listening Jan 27 2008

I've heard these recordings many times over the years..they're still great.Dave Holland "Triplicate"Elliott Smith "Either/Or"
Posted by on Sun, 27 Jan 2008 16:57:00 GMT

Current Viewing/Listening January..

Movie: Microcosmos by Claude Nuridsany and Marie PerennouListening: Dave Liebman "Quest" (first Quest recording with Al Foster)Robert Wyatt "Comicopera"Reading: Minimalism:Origins by Edward Stickland
Posted by on Fri, 04 Jan 2008 04:24:00 GMT

Current Viewing/Listening 2

DVD:Weather ReportLive At Montreux 1976 ..WOW!! Book: Forces In Motion - Music and Thoughts of Anthony BraxtonAlso the film: The Bicycle Thief...
Posted by on Sat, 03 Nov 2007 16:26:00 GMT

Current Listening/Viewing

"Filles De Kilimanajro" - Miles Davis"Misbegotten Man" - People"The Helicopter String Quartet" by Karl Stockhausen"Headphones" with David Bazan and Frank Lenzand,"Blow-Up" - Michelangelo AntonioniThe ...
Posted by on Thu, 11 Oct 2007 10:15:00 GMT

Origin CD featuring David Liebman, John Dearth, Howard Curtis now avaliable through MySpace

"Origin" featuring David Liebman on saxophones, John D'earth on trumpet, Howard Curtis on tympani and percussion, Emre Kartari on drums..now available through MySpace.
Posted by on Tue, 02 Oct 2007 20:22:00 GMT