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Coming Together for the great jazz pianist Richie Beirach

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Dear Friends, Admirers and Supporters of Richie Beirach,

We are reaching out to ask for your support for the renowned jazz pianist Richie Beirach, who is currently facing overwhelming health and financial problems.

Richie has touched countless lives with his music. He has been a dear mentor, friend, teacher, colleague and supporter to so many musicians and now he needs our help to make it through an excruciatingly difficult period.

Richie is struggling with serious health issues that have rendered him unable to perform and led to a severe financial crisis. His medical expenses have piled up, with over €16,000 in outstanding bills and additional costs exceeding €100,000. Despite efforts to secure assistance, the situation remains dire, and Richie is unable to manage these overwhelming financial burdens on his own.

We are organizing a crowdfunding campaign to provide Richie with the financial support he desperately needs. Your generous contributions will help cover his medical bills, daily care expenses, and essential living costs, allowing him to focus on recovery.

Richie has given us so much through his incredible talent and dedication to music. Now is our chance to give back. Every donation, no matter the size, will make a significant difference in his life.

Funds are collected by a non-profit, TGR The Green Room, but will be passed on in their entirety to Richie.

Thank you for your generosity and support.

Sincerely,

Regina Litvinova / Charlie Rees / Sidney Corbett / Gregor Huebner / Tobias Frohnhöfer / Jamie Baum /Heather O'Donnell




Richie with longterm collaborator Dave Liebman




Richie with Bill Evans, New York, 1978



Richie in TGR The Green Room, Cologne, 2023


Videos:


Richie's Biography


Richard Alan Beirach was born on 23 May 1947 in Brooklyn, New York City and started playing the piano at the age of 5.

From age 6 to age 18, Richie was given lessons by the pianist and composer James Palmieri. “James Palmieri showed me everything that I know about the piano. He made me understand the deeper meaning of music.”

At the age of 13, while staying at a friend’s place, Richie heard Red Garland’s version of “Billy Boy” from Miles Davis’ album “Milestones”: “I could hardly believe it. This was exactly what I was looking for and what I needed. Until then, I had only had a classical musical education: Mozart, Beethoven, no improvisation. Richie realized that he wanted to devote himself to improvisation and jazz.

In the middle of the 1960s, Richard Beirach entered the New York club scene, playing with, among others, Freddie Hubbard and Lee Konitz while at the same time occasionally working as a longshoreman at the docks of New York. In 1967, he went to Boston to study at the Berklee College Of Music where Keith Jarrett, Miroslav Vitous, and John Abercrombie were enrolled as well. Staying at Berklee for only one year he returned to New York in 1968 where he started a composition degree with Ludmilla Ulehla at the Manhattan School Of Music, from which he graduated in 1972 with a “Master Of Music”.

Soon afterwards, he played in the band of Stan Getz, together with bass player Dave Holland and drummer Jack deJohnette. In 1973, he joined the group “Lookout Farm” of the saxophone player Dave Liebman. “Lookout Farm” became one of the most outstanding groups of the Fusion movement and the cooperation between Beirach and Liebman lasted well beyond the group, which broke up in 1976, developing in to a lifelong musical partnership.

In 1976, the first album under Beirach’s own name was released: “Eon”, recorded with drummer Eliot Zigmund and bass player Frank Tusa. For the label ECM, Beirach worked as a leader, e.g. on the albums “Eon” in 1976, “Elm” in 1979, “Elegy for Bill Evans”, and as a sideman respectively (for John Abercrombie and George Adams) from the middle of the 1970s until the beginning of the 1980s.


"Don't tell me how fast he plays, tell me how much he moved you."

Richie’s first solo piano album “Hubris” was released by ECM in 1977. At that time, he went on tour with, among others, Chet Baker, John Scofield and John Abercrombie.

In the 1980s, Richie Beirach focused increasingly on the solo piano and, parallel to that, on the cooperation with David Liebman in their duo and in the band “Quest”, which they founded together in 1981, with drummers Billy Hart and Al Foster and George Mraz or Ron McClure on the bass, respectively. Until their break-up in 1991, the band recorded six albums: “Quest”, “Quest 2”, “Midpoint: Live at the Montmartre”, “Natural Selection”, “N.Y. Nites: Standards” and “Of one mind”, and went on tours throughout Europe, Asia and South and North America. Stylistically, the quartet did not set any limits and thus played both standards and original compositions with the same intensity and freedom. Beirach then devoted himself increasingly to playing solo. The album “Live in Tokyo” (1981) was recorded during a Japan tour.

Richie has mostly worked with two different trios; together with his musical fellows George Mraz (bass) and Billy Hart (drums), he recorded the album “The Snow Leopard” in 1996. That was followed by “Romantic Rhapsody” and “What is this thing called love”, which showed a fresh view on standards and some own compositions. “No borders” (2002) focuses on classical pieces as a basis for improvisation, and, on the other hand, also contains a completely composed original composition by Beirach: “Steel Prayers”, a piece for the victims of 9/11. To take classical pieces and open them for improvisation, without depriving them of their character, is also the basic principle in the cooperation with violinist Gregor Hübner. The trio with Beirach, Hübner and again George Mraz on the bass has released three albums with the label ACT. “Round about Bartok”, “Round about Federico Mompou” and “Round about Monteverdi” are each dedicated to the respective composer and try and approach them via improvisation.

Richie has been retired from his professorship teaching in Leipzig and since 2015 has been living in Hessheim, Germany where he has been active with a new young trio, a new solo piano release on Jazzline Records, and is involved with a group with Gregor Huebner and the Sirius String Quartet along with many other projects throughout the world.
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Donations 

  • Christoph Greminger
    • €100
    • 2 d
  • Christof Altmann
    • €50
    • 4 d
  • Ralf Püpcke
    • €50
    • 5 d
  • Tracy Wannomae
    • €50
    • 5 d
  • Arito Sasaki
    • €100
    • 8 d
Donate

Organizer

Heather O'Donnell
Organizer
Cologne, Nordrhein-Westfalen

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