Andrew Roussak |
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toroddfuglesteg
Forum Senior Member Retired Joined: March 04 2008 Location: Retirement Home Status: Offline Points: 3658 |
Topic: Andrew Roussak Posted: December 25 2010 at 14:00 |
July 28th 1968 saw the birth of Andrew Roussak in the Russian town of Ufa, and from the age of 8 he started an education at a governmental music school, specializing on the piano. Later on private tutoring was called for, and in 1993 his formal education ended. Eight years later, after playing in numerous bands and getting quite a lot of experience as a studio musician, Andrew Roussak moved to Germany, where he has established himself as a professional musician. Andrew Roussak released his new album earlier this year and I got in touch with him for his story. ##########################
Please
tell us more about your background. Your home city Ufa is far east of
Moscow, but not in Siberia proper, I guess. How was life in Ufa,
musical education ?
Ufa
is about 1500 km from Moscow eastwards – it is still Europe, not
Siberia…It is a big industrial city, with population of more that a
mln. people . There is a high school for music there,a state musical
college, an opera theater, a state philharmony with an organ hall
etc. That is, it never was something like a cultural province in
Russia. On the other side of it, it was all about the classical music
in the Soviet times. Rock was completely underground, of course; jazz
was not forbidden though, but still was regarded as a somewhat exotic
thing.
So,
I was born in Ufa and began to learn piano at the age of 7, later
graduated as a pianist from the Ufa state college of arts. I happened
to have a great piano teacher at my late stage of studying…It was
all very strictly classical, but actually nothing can be better for
the proper piano technique, and having received a solid theoretical
basis you are free to go in any direction.
Who
were your musical inspirations, and why did you want to play this
type of music instead of any other form of music ?
My
all-time favourite composer is J.S.Bach, two other main classical
piano preferences are Chopin and Gershwin. I was also always tending
to improvising and to composing pieces of my own, even as I was
exercising some classical works. And I was blown away as I had first
heard Pictures From Exhibition of ELP – the idea to combine
classical music with such instruments like Hammond and Moog was alone
striking enough for me. Then, the piano technique of Keith Emerson
itself is actually a mix of classical, blues , jazz and even boogie
piano, all on the edge of perfectness. This is a very unique blend,
and I guess I have simply first heard it at exactly right time – so
it was the initial push in the prog direction…))
Let's
go to your releases. Please tell us more about your first album No Trespassing from 2006
NO
TRESPASSING was a collection of pieces I have composed for various
occasions or projects I was playing with over years, that’s why
many reviewers said it was an eclectic album. Indeed it was…)) It
is built up of ten compositions, five of them are instrumentals,
among them there are two renditions of Bach’s pieces, and my own
three works. Exactly due to these five numbers album had received its
stars by some prog reviewers who found that it sounded similar to the
works ELP or Rick Wakeman…
I
had lots of fun experimenting with various synthesizer sounds; I also
had invited some of my friends and band's colleagues to help me with
other instruments, because I didn’t want to have something like the
programmed drums or midi-guitars on my album.
So
finally it sounded like a band production. I had firstly published
the album myself in 2006, promoted it myself and then in 2008
received an email from MALS Rec. with a deal proposal, so the CD was
republished in 2008.
You
are currently a keyboarder of a prog metal band Dorian Opera, and you
have played on their No Secrets album. Please tell us more about this
album and your life in Dorian Opera.
Actually
I have grounded Dorian Opera together with my friend, a virtuoso
guitar player Oliver Weislogel. In 2005 Oliver had invited me to join
a cover band he was leading. Joe Eisenburger was another professional
musician whom he invited. After a while it became clear, that the
music we wanted to play just did not fit in the frames of a cover
band, and Oliver had already many musical ideas ready-to-go which had
later found their way to our first release. But then we needed an
appropriate drummer.
So,
I have contacted a really fantastic drum player Harry Reischmann whom
I knew from a blues band we had both played with in 2003. Harry had
just said - yes, of course! - and so Dorian Opera was finally born,
that time as a quartett.
As
we simply had no proper vocalist in sight that time, one of us had to
grab the mike, and it was Joe who had made this job on No Secrets. I
think it was pretty well done, especially regarding it was Joe’s
debut as a vocalist! The album was published by MALS Records, too.
Later
in 2009, Joe had left the band for some private reasons, and we had
found some new prog metal forces –
a lead vocalist
Sven “The Axe” and the bass player Wolfgang Fetzer. A female
vocalist Alexandra Goess had made a great job featuring on our new
album. The CD is called Crusade 1212 , it will be released no later
than in March 2011…So be alerted – Dorian Opera is back! ))) Please
give us your long or brief thoughts on your new album Blue
Intermezzo.
It
is my solo piano album built up of 12 original pieces, among them
two renditions of Bach’s arias, one rendition of an English
traditional song – Greensleeves, and the rest is my own music. I
would generally describe the style as a neo-classical, with many
elements of jazz technique in it. It is conceptually close to some
solo piano works of Emerson, Moraz, Wakeman – some even call it
“prog piano”. I want also to especially mention a wonderful
artwork made by Martin “Man In The Mountain” Kornick – it is
not simply beautiful , but it perfectly fits the music and
accomplishes the overall impression of the album.
The
CD has been published by MUSEA Rec. in October 2010, and can be
purchased worldwide via many online retailers like Amazon…Whereas
a purchase on CDbaby or on my website would be more appreciated..))
How
is your writing and creative processes ?
I
work with the DAW called Cakewalk Sonar. Normally I would try to fix
any coming idea in a new project, simply playing it down using
something like Steinberg’s Hypersonic…As
I am working on this concept later, the composition is growing and it
may finally have nothing to do with what it sounded like in the
beginning. This is a creative and always very fascinating process!
Your
music is somewhere between a concert pianist and the likes of Rick
Wakeman. What in your view is the difference and similarities between
a concert pianist and the likes of Rick Wakeman, John Lord & Co ?
Both technics wise and the approach to the music.
Well,
pure technically there can be even no fine line in between, I
believe. Think of Emerson’s 1st
Piano Concerto, or Modular Symphony of Moraz. These are extremely
challenging works, whereas the traditional classical technique might
even be not enough – you have to also to be at least acquainted
with jazz scales, licks, you have to be able to improvise etc. It all
belongs to the contemporary piano technique in some respect.
I
guess that Emerson, Moraz, Wakeman, Rudess are more likely
comparable in this context to the big names of the past like Chopin,
Liszt or Rubinstein . Because each of the latter had also performed
their own compositions, which were very innovative that time, and
they also used the full arsenal of the compository and technical
means available to them. At the end of the day, what counts is the
overall level of performance and composition.
Do
you do solo concerts or is your solo work only confined to the studio
?
Actually
I have always played on various piano events and have given private
solo concerts "on demand" in my area. Now as I have Blue
Intermezzo finally released , I am planning to perform the pieces
from it as a live program, and there must be a lot of promotional
work ahead to be made for it. To organize a piano event is not the
same job as to make a gig for a rock band - the venues, the promotion
and the audience itself is very different.
What
are your plans for next year ?
There
are lots of! First off, the new release of Dorian Opera in
February-March of 2011. Then, my solo piano program and DO live set
must both go onstage.
I
am also working on a piece for Decamerone - an international studio
project of Colossus Finland - MUSEA France, with 33 bands
participating. As the recordings are proceeding, the result sounds
more and more promising...Looks like this recording and the
collaboration with my guest musicians may lead to the next solo
album, like No Trespassing.
There
are also some videos planned...So the year of 2011 may be very
exciting.)) Thank you to Andrew Roussak for this interview Edited by toroddfuglesteg - December 25 2010 at 14:07 |
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