Renee Rosnes

Renee Rosnes
Background information
Birth name Irene Louise Rosnes
Born (1962-03-24) 24 March 1962
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Genres Jazz
Occupation(s) Musician, composer, bandleader
Instruments Piano
Years active c. 1985–present
Website reneerosnes.com

Irene Louise Rosnes (born 24 March 1962), professionally known as Renee Rosnes (REE-nee ROSS-ness), is a Canadian jazz pianist, composer and arranger.

Early life

Rosnes was born in Regina, Saskatchewan and grew up in North Vancouver, British Columbia, where she attended Handsworth Secondary School. She was three when she began taking classical piano lessons. She became interested in jazz music in high school, introduced to it through her band director Bob Rebagliati. She then attended the University of Toronto, where she pursued classical performance with pianist William Aide. In 1985, Rosnes was awarded a Canada Council of the Arts grant, and moved to New York City to further her studies.[1]

Career

After tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson hired her to play with his quartet in 1986, Rosnes began an international career. In 1988, she was a member of the Wayne Shorter Band and in 1989, she joined trombonist JJ Johnson's Quintet and remained his pianist of choice until he retired in 1997. In 1989, she also began working with tenor master James Moody and was the pianist in his quartet for the next 20 years.[2][3] Rosnes frequently performs with vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson, and recorded "For Sentimental Reasons" with his quartet in 2007.[4] Rosnes was a founding member of the SFJAZZ Collective, and played with the all-star octet from 2004 through 2009.[5] Since 2012, she has been a member of bassist Ron Carter's Foursight Band. The group toured Europe during the Fall of 2015.[6] As a leader, Rosnes has released twelve recordings, nine of which are on the Blue Note Records label. The most recent (from 2010) is Manhattan Rain (Pony Canyon Japan), featuring Steve Nelson on vibes, Rich Perry on tenor sax, Peter Washington on bass and Bill Stewart on drums. She also made four Japanese trio recordings for the VideoArts label with The Drummonds, featuring herself, drummer and ex-husband Billy Drummond and the unrelated Ray Drummond on bass.[7]

Rosnes married jazz pianist Bill Charlap on 25 August 2007, and the couple released a two-piano duet recording titled Double Portrait[8] on Blue Note Records in 2010.[7][9][10] She was also the host of "Jazz Profiles", a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation one-hour radio show, in which Rosnes profiled famous names in Canadian jazz. Guests included pianists Paul Bley, Joe Sealy and Oliver Jones, bassists Don Thompson and Michel Donato, trumpeters Guido Basso and Kenny Wheeler, and drummer Terry Clarke.[11]

Discography

As leader

With SFJAZZ Collective

As sideperson

Awards and recognition

References

External links

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