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Susie Ibarra

 
Artist: Susie Ibarra

Similar Artists:

Matthew Shipp Trio, David S. Ware Quartet, Tom Rainey, Hamid Drake, Jim Black, Gerry Hemingway, Andrew Cyrille, Han Bennink

Influenced By:

Formal Connection With:

Relationship With:

Assif Tsahar
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Drums, Percussion
  • Representative Albums: "Folkloriko," "Songbird Suite," "Radiance"

Biography

By the end of the 1990s, Susie Ibarra had emerged as one of the leading current free jazz drummers, impressing jazz and new music audiences alike while performing in various lineups that included the David S. Ware Quartet, the Matthew Shipp Trio, and a duo with saxophonist Assif Tsahar. Although born in California, Ibarra grew up in Texas. She later studied at N.Y.C.'s Mannes College of Music, and after graduating went on to attend Goddard College. Ibarra studied drumming and percussion with Milford Graves and Vernel Fournier, and later with Denis Charles, who had a weekly duo session with Ibarra for the few years preceding his death in early 1998. A live recording of this duo, Drum Talk, was released within the year by the Wobbly Rail label. Ibarra also learned and performed in several percussion groups, including gamelan (Balinese and Javanese) and Philippine kulintang ensembles. A resident of N.Y. throughout the 1990s, Ibarra replaced Whit Dickey (who went on to lead his own trio) as drummer in the David S. Ware Quartet by 1997, first appearing with Ware, Matthew Shipp, and William Parker on Wisdom of Uncertainty, the inaugural release of the AUM Fidelity label. She was also a member of the Matthew Shipp Trio (same lineup as the Ware Quartet, minus Ware) during this time, and with these two groups recorded not only for AUM Fidelity but for DIW, Sony, and Hatology as well. In 1998, she was awarded Best New Talent of the Year by Jazziz Magazine. The next year, Ibarra started up her own label, Hopscotch, with saxophonist and husband Assif Tsahar. No longer active in the Ware Quartet or Shipp Trio, Ibarra toured in a duo with Tsahar to support Hopscotch's first release, Home Cookin'. In 1999, she began leading her own trio with pianist Cooper Moore and violinist Charles Burnham. The trio's first recording, entitled Radiance, was released at the end of that year. Ibarra led her first larger group (which included the trio members) for her first Tzadik release, Flower After Flower (2000). ~ Joslyn Layne, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Susie Ibarra
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Susie Ibarra (b. Anaheim, California, November 15, 1970) is an American percussionist and composer of jazz, opera, experimental, and avant-garde music. She is probably best known for her work as a jazz drummer, and is noted for her dynamic range and expressive technique, as well as her incorporation of diverse styles and influences, such as blues, gamelan, and kulintang.

A Filipino American, Ibarra was born in Anaheim, California, and was raised in Seabrook, near Houston, Texas. She learned to play piano as a child, and played drums for a punk rock band while in high school. While at Sarah Lawrence College in the late 1980s, Ibarra attended a Sun Ra performance which she has credited with kindling her interest in jazz. She also attended the Mannes College of Music, and Goddard College, where she received her B.A. Ibarra has lived in New York since 1989.

She has performed with, among others, the David S. Ware Quartet, the Matthew Shipp Trio, William Parker, Assif Tsahar (her ex-husband), John Zorn, Pauline Oliveros, Derek Bailey, Wadada Leo Smith, Yo La Tengo, and Thurston Moore. In 1999, she began recording as a bandleader, and she continues to collaborate with other musicians performing in a variety of genres. Ibarra's current collaborations include the Susie Ibarra Trio with Jennifer Choi and Craig Taborn, Electric Kulintang with her husband Roberto Rodriguez, Mephista with Sylvie Courvoisier and Ikue Mori, Mundo Ninos, and the Mark Dresser and Susie Ibarra Duo.

Awards and accolades

  • "Best Drummer" nomination - Village Voice
  • "Best Drummer" nomination - Down Beat
  • "Best Drummer" nomination - The Wire
  • "New Talent of the Year - 1997" - Jazziz Magazine

Films

  • 2001 - Inside Out in the Open (2001). Directed by Alan Roth. Asymmetric Pictures. Distributed by Third World Newsreel.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Drum Talk (1998 Album by Susie Ibarra & Denis Charles)
Entomological Reflections (2004 Album by Mephista)
Deep in the Neighborhood of History and Influence (Album by Cooper-Moore)

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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