Home » Jazz Articles » Radio & Podcasts » ELEW Finds His Frequency: From Camden Roots to ELEW Play...
ELEW Finds His Frequency: From Camden Roots to ELEW Plays Sting at SFJAZZ
ByEric Lewis
pianob.1973
At the


Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961
A phone call from

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008
"What if I could create a piano style threaded through the guitar-driven ethos of rock for that audience?" he asked himself. The answer became Rockjazzmostly rock and some jazzby design. It was not a novelty but a method to translate voltage into pianistic terms. Rockjazz reimagined the solo piano as a kinetic installation: standing technique, inside-the-strings articulation, percussive muting, and prepared timbres that feel like orchestration rather than stunts. The show scaled from clubs to tech conferences and film events because the musical grammar stayed clear: left-hand weight, right-hand line, and the throughline of groove.
"All the betrayal I felt led to my fiery and humongous treatment of rock," he says, linking emotional urgency to rigorous technique. That voltage search now flows into a dialogue with

Sting
bass, electricb.1951
The album emphasizes counterpoint: a bass line with heft in the left hand, a tenor-range melody carried in the right, and inner voices braided between. One announced guest,

Immanuel Wilkins
saxophone, altob.1997

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
He plans to share initial tracks in September 2025. The live question arrives at SFJAZZ's intimate Joe Henderson Lab: four solo sets across two nights. Expect a surge from the openingoften "Message in a Bottle"and a program that threads the needle between agile grooves, shadowed ballads, and erudite hooks. He will tap the full palette: inside-piano muting, percussive taps, prepared timbres and nuanced pedaling to shape decay and resonance. "It is going to be high energy and high virtuosity," he adds with a grin. "I am just going to release the Kraken."
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz

Go Ad Free!
To maintain our platform while developing new means to foster jazz discovery and connectivity, we need your help. You can become a sustaining member for as little as $20 and in return, we'll immediately hide those pesky ads plus provide access to future articles for a full year. This winning combination vastly improves your AAJ experience and allow us to vigorously build on the pioneering work we first started in 1995. So enjoy an ad-free AAJ experience and help us remain a positive beacon for jazz by making a donation today.
San Francisco
Concert Guide | Venue Guide | Local Businesses
| More...
