Michael Levy, piano | Madeline Renard, voice | Charley Krachy, tenor saxophone
Tracklist:
1. Preface 2. Dites-Moi 3. Strong Signal 4. The Pursuit of Charleyness 5. Mad’s Line 6. Wrapsody 7. Mmm-Ma! 8. My Salmon Croquette 9. Soup 10. Siren Sings 11. Two Lines Forming 12.Lover Man 13. Kakeout Road 14. Honey on the Moon 15. 6 Cents 16. Tri-Ode 17. Simultenacity 18. Somewhere Southwest of Sweden
Recording Date: 1994
“Noquestion about it, this is the most challenging music on the list. This isn’t background music. You can’t put it on and walk away from it.” – Bob Snyder, WRST-FM
“Quixotic, sometimes mysterious and constantly shifting in mood and focus… Stimulating music for the adventurous listener.” –Lois Moody, Jazz News
When Mike was tall enough to reach the keys of his sister’s Baldwin Acrosonic, he played his first notes. They were improvised… and original. This first expression of what was to come could only be defined as noise by most people, except, of course, Mike’s mom, who interpreted it as “potential”. The fact that Mike could not even see the keys at that point had no bearing on his mother’s insight, an insight only a mother could have. This native state, which might have led immediately to an improvisitory epiphany if left to itself, was marred by the introduction of two extraordinary musical compositions about a year later. “Chopsticks” and “Heart And Soul” became the musical nexus by which the young artist touched the universal longing for musical consciousness (in the West at least. Although “Chopsticks” seems to be of Asian origin, extensive research has shown it to have been composed by a Benedictine monk in the 1920’s, playing on a keyboard that was having the sharps relaquered.).
Observing his remarkable progress, his mother engaged a local piano teacher to nurture Mike’s obvious gifts at age nine. Mr. Lisanti was a nice man from Italy who told Mike’s mom after a year of study that her son was a hopeless case and should instead try carpentry. Mike was in agreement. Hitting a key or a nail seemed pretty much the same to him at the time. Mike’s mom implored both student and teacher to try it for one more year. Both reluctantly agreed. Remarkably, at the end of that year, Mike was still playing and Mr. Lisanti, unfortunately, returned to his native Italy to die. A coincidence that does not go unnoticed at this writing. Next on the scene was Mr. Feldman, a knob engineer from Long Island who played a hell of a “Revolutionary Etude” and had long spatulated fingers and gaunt eyes.
After four or five years of that, Mike was ready to play in a band. After countless renditions of “Chatanooga Choo-Choo” and “The Swinging Shepherd Blues” he found himself in the forefront of mundane adolescent improvisors in Queens, NY. Upon his graduation from college and several rock bands later, Mike was writing his own material and singing in a voice that sounded like a hound from hell. He was angry. So angry, in fact, that he told his mother to sell his piano so he could spend the money on dates. At this fateful juncture, destiny whose name was “Mom” stepped in. She told Michael there were no offers (she lied) and that the piano was there if he ever wanted it again. He did. The problem for Mike was that his attempts at improvising lasted for about twenty seconds and then collapsed. So, without the aid of his mother this time, Mike sought professional help. He asked a serious musician for a suggestion and he recommended Lennie Tristano, a name Mike had never heard. After a brief interview, Mike was informed that Lennie didn’t have room in his schedule, but that he could study with Connie Crothers, a long time student of his, and great teacher in her own right.
Mike agreed and began studying with Connie. Together they attacked the problems that prevented Mike from improvising real music. The issues were mental, emotional and physical: How to ignore the condemning judgemental voices in his head. How to develop a note-to-note feeling that circumvented conscious thought. How to develop a non-muscular touch. How to breathe. How to improvise based on melody and not chord progressions. How to be himself, musically. Progress was made. But Mike was not quite there. So, he quit. Instead of improvising he decided to write musicals. After writing several with a brilliant guy named Joe Safferson, the fledgling team was selected to particiapate in an ASCAP workshop directed by Stephen Sondheim. This small taste of success was too frightening to contemplate, so the partnership broke up.
Onhis own now, Mike wrote another musical based on the Nazis’ occupation of Czechoslovakia. This effort met with some success and the show was optioned by two producers who promptly went bankrupt. Finally seeing the light, Mike abandoned show business and returned to his early interest, improvising. He began studying with Connie Crothers once again, and this time, after almost thirty years of playing, Mike started to succeed. He could really improvise, and his sound was… original. In 1989 he performed a solo concert at Greenwich Music House in NYC. It was later released as Michael Levy at Greenwich Music House on New Artists CD 1009. In 1994 he released SOUP, a collaborative effort with Madeline Renard (vocal) and Charley Krachy (tenor sax). In 1996 he released his second solo recording ON THE SPOT (NA 1024). In 1999 he released KOO-KOO (NA1031) with vocalist, Dori Levine.
CD version (incl. shipment cost world-wide)
MP3 version (76.39MB zip download)