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Yayoi Ikawa
Pianist and composer Yayoi Ikawa, originally from Tokyo, Japan, has been living and working in New York City for a decade. Her trio and quartet was featured on a historic nation- wide Japanese radio program Session 2008 as well as on the leading Internet radio station jjazz.net.
Yayoi expressed her sincere feeling for her roots in Japan and Asia by integrating Japanese Folk melodies into her liberating performance style on her pieces “Motherland” and “Folk Song.”
Yayoi also dedicated the composition “Peace Requiem” to a Japanese journalist killed in Myanmar 2007 and “Dear Asia” to the tragic earthquake happened in Sumatera 2004.
Yayoi’s release “Color Of Dreams” (2005) displays original compositions that reflect her visions of life. The rhythmic and harmonic complexities may catch the listeners’ attention, but the main focus of the trio is to reach the listeners’ soul on a spiritual level as a united positive vibration.
Carl Allen
drumsb.1961
The trio features three New York based young female musicians, and their lyrical and modern approach to jazz standard was evaluated in the leading magazine Swing Journal as “post
Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
In 2008, Yayoi started “The Bridge Project” with the sold- out concert at “Jazz House Alfie” in Roppongi, Tokyo, Japan.
Central to this project’s mission is to promote fellowship and create a musical dialogue between up coming New York musicians and Japan musicians in an experimental environment.
The goal for this project is to create a Japanese- American jazz scene in New York and Japan that can be compared to what Israel and South/Central American have brought to the New York jazz scene in the past fifteen years.
Reggie Workman
bassb.1937

Victor Jones
drums
Howard Johnson
tuba1941 - 2021

Charlie Persip
drums1929 - 2020

Richard Bona
bass, electricb.1967

Billy Hart
drumsb.1940

Billy Harper
saxophoneb.1943

Lenny Pickett
saxophone, tenorb.1954

Frank Lacy
tromboneb.1959

Charles Fambrough
bass1950 - 2011
Jimmy Vass
b.1937
Salim Washington
saxophone, tenorTeo Macero
producer1925 - 2008
As a composer, Yayoi received a commission from Modern Music Society of Tokyo, Japan to write for their eighteen piece jazz orchestra in 2008. Yayoi’s first orchestral work for film was premiered in the Film society of Lincoln center at the Walter Reade Theater in 2007. She also received a full-ride scholarship from the Film Music Museum in California to study and record with a full orchestra at the 2007 NYU/ASCAP Film Scoring workshop in Memory of Buddy Baker.
Yayoi holds a bachelor’s degree from The New School University Jazz and Contemporary Music Studies department. She was the recipient of the Henry and Gill Block Scholarship in 2002, and was often selected as an outstanding student. Her performance for “Jazz Now! A Showcase of New Talent” at Birdland in 2002 was mentioned in Down Beat magazine. She also holds a bachelor degree from International Christian University in Tokyo, Japan. Yayoi is currently working on her Master’s degree at New York University studying Jazz Performance/composition, Synthesis, and Film Scoring.
Yayoi has studied with Geri Allen, Jean-Michel Pilc, Vijay Iyer, Gerald D’Angelo, Lee-Ann Lidgerwood, and Kenich Yoshida. Yayoi also studied with Norite Tiles and Kazuko Shirai for classical piano, Gil Goldstein for composition, and Ron Sadoff for film scoring. Source: Yayoi Ikawa
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Thursday, December 27: Dominic Duval Trio: Dominic Duval, Yayoi Ikawa, Brian Willson

Source:
All About Jazz
Thursday, December 27: Dominic Duval Trio: Dominic Duval, Yayoi Ikawa, Brian Willson

Source:
All About Jazz