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Kendra Shank Trio with Gary Versace & François Moutin

  • Soapbox Gallery 636 Dean Street Brooklyn, NY, 11238 United States (map)

"Imaginative and daring." -Steve Futterman, THE NEW YORKER

"Kendra Shank sounds like sunlight shining through a stained-glass window, her crystalline tone illuminating each song. Working her voice like a horn, she phrases inventively, whether crisp and sizzling or sensuously smoky. She's definitely an original." -Patricia Myers, JAZZ TIMES

KENDRA SHANK's seven CDs have won numerous “Best of the Year” citations, a New York Times Critics’ Choice, DownBeat poll recognition, and accolades for her “delectable voice” (TIME magazine) and “breathtakingly original concept” (Boston Globe). Her career began as a folk singer-guitarist busking in Paris. When her passion turned to jazz, she studied with vocalist Jay Clayton while honing her craft in Seattle and Paris jazz clubs. Shank soon caught the attention of three other mentors: Bob Dorough who took her on tour in 1991; Shirley Horn who co-produced Shank’s debut CD and showcased her at New York’s Village Vanguard in 1992; and Abbey Lincoln who endorsed her as “an original; a singer with a sound” and hired her as guest guitarist on Lincoln’s "Over The Years" CD and live at the Blue Note. Shank’s ground-breaking 2007 release “A Spirit Free: Abbey Lincoln Songbook” reimagines songs composed by Lincoln. Her most recent recording “Half Moon” is a live concert with pianist Geoffrey Keezer. Since moving to New York in 1997 Shank has become a mainstay on the city’s jazz scene, headlining at the Blue Note, Birdland, Jazz Standard, Iridium and holding a 19-year residency at the historic 55 Bar. She’s appeared on NPR's "JazzSet" and Marian McPartland's "Piano Jazz" and has toured in Europe, Japan, South Africa, Australia, Canada and the U.S. performing in clubs, concert halls, and festivals. In addition to a 21-year collaboration with pianist Frank Kimbrough and bassist Dean Johnson, Shank has performed and/or recorded with Fred Hersch, Larry Willis, Bruce Barth, Geoffrey Keezer, Joe Locke, Abbey Lincoln, Bob Dorough, Jay Clayton, Gary Bartz, Steve Wilson, Peter Leitch, John Stowell, Ben Monder, Pete McCann, Victor Lewis, Matt Wilson, and many others.  kendrashank.com

GARY VERSACE: Since basing himself in NYC in 2000 (originally hailing from Cos Cob, CT) jazz pianist, organist and accordionist Gary Versace has become one of the busiest and most versatile musicians on the international jazz scene, often featured in bands led by musicians such as John Scofield, John Abercrombie, Al Foster, Regina Carter, Ellery Eskelin, Ray Anderson, John Hollenbeck, Ralph Alessi, Kurt Elling, Anat Cohen, Maria Schneider, Madeleine Peyroux, Matt Wilson, Brad Shepik, Ingrid Jensen and many others. Versace, along with bandmates vocalist Kate McGarry and guitarist Keith Ganz, was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2019 for his work on “The Subject Tonight is Love,” the band’s latest trio recording. He won the “Rising Star” category on the Hammond organ in Downbeat's Critics Poll in 2009 and 2010, and has placed in the primary Organ category in both the readers and critics polls in Downbeat and JazzTimes magazines consistently for the last 10 years. Versace won the Jazz Jounalists' Association's "Best Instrumentalist – Instruments Rare In Jazz (accordion)" award in 2018, and their “Organist of the Year” award in 2012. Gary has appeared twice as a guest on Marian McPartland's acclaimed NPR show “Piano Jazz,” and McPartland has described him as “...endlessly inventive...[Versace] really has an extraordinary talent.” He has several CD's under his own name on the Criss Cross and SteepleChase labels, the most recent being a piano trio recording, “All for Now,” featuring bassist Jay Anderson and drummer Obed Calvaire, which received a 4 star review in Downbeat Magazine and was included in their list of the best recordings of 2020. He has appeared on dozens of recordings as a sideman on various labels over the years with nationally and internationally known jazz artists. Before embarking on his performing career, Versace spent eight years as a tenured Associate Professor at the University of Oregon, and currently teaches in the jazz studies department at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY. He remains active as a performer, clinician and guest soloist in the United States and around the world.  garyversace.com

FRANÇOIS MOUTIN: When 27 years old, then Parisian but today New-Yorker François Moutin was recognized as one of the finest young jazz bass players in Europe. He had performed with some of the greatest musicians: Randy Brecker, Peter Erskine, Martial Solal, Lee Konitz, Chet Baker, Toots Thielemans, James Moody and Michel Legrand. He and his twin brother Louis, a brilliant jazz drummer, then began a long-lasting enterprise of co-led projects, relentlessly touring around the world while releasing ten highly and extensively praised albums. In 1997 François moved his base to New York City where he quickly found himself involved in myriad collaborations, including two of the most cutting-edge and exploring jazz groups of this time: Pilc-Moutin-Hoenig, and the Rudresh Mahanthappa Quartet. François has been rewarded several times in the DownBeat Critics Poll as a peer of legendary jazz bassists Ron Carter, Dave Holland and Miroslav Vitous. He has collaborated with many of the premier artists of the New York City and world Jazz scene, from Mike Stern to Jack de Johnette among many more. www.moutin.com/Francois.html

 Kendra Shank - voice
Gary Versace - piano
François Moutin - bass