
Biz İstanbul
İstanbul’da yaşamış, İstanbul’dan tat almış, İstanbul’a tat vermiş herkes için…
Concert
Akbank Jazz Festival
Concert
Cape Town-born musician and composer Abdullah Ibrahim has played the piano for over 80 years. Throughout his career, in both his solo and orchestra-accompanied productions, he prioritised bringing traditional African music together with styles identified with different lands or times. After being a part of various orchestras in his youth, he founded the quintet Jazz Epistles in 1959, accompanied by musicians such as Kippie Moeketsi and Hugh Masekela; and released the ensemble's first album, "Jazz Epistle, Verse 1" in 1960. Due to the pressures of the apartheid regime, he left his country and moved first to Europe and then to New York, where he worked with names such as Ornette Coleman, Pharoah Sanders, and Duke Ellington. He composed music for many films, including Claire Denis's "Chocolat" (1988) and "No Fear, No Die" (1990), and won several awards. Continuing to record with his band Ekaya and various big bands, the musician most recently released his solo piano album "Solotude" in 2020. Due to the 2020 pandemic restrictions, the album was recorded at Hirzinger Hall in Germany with no one but the technical team. Abdullah Ibrahim, one of the valuable figures of not only the jazz scene but also the history of global music, will be at Atatürk Cultural Center on Thursday, October 6th.
To be notified when it goes on sale
