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Rob Luft

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rob Luft
Background information
Born (1993-11-27) 27 November 1993 (age 30)
OriginSidcup, London, England
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician, Composer
InstrumentGuitar
Years active2012–present
LabelsEdition
Websitewww.robluft.co.uk
Rob Luft (2023) in Aarhus, Denmark

Rob Luft (born November 1993) is an English jazz guitarist and composer from London, United Kingdom. He has released three albums, Riser, Life Is The Dancer & Dahab Days, as a solo artist on British label Edition Records. His playing has also been documented on several albums released by the legendary German jazz label ECM Records, most notably on John Surman's critically acclaimed 2024 release Words Unspoken.

Biography

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Luft was born in Sidcup, Greater London, and attended The Judd School from 2005 to 2012. While at this school, he joined the National Youth Jazz Orchestra of Great Britain (2010–2015). He then enrolled at the Royal Academy of Music where, upon graduation, he was the recipient of the Kenny Wheeler Music Prize in association with Edition Records.[1] In 2016, he was awarded the 2nd prize in the guitar competition at Montreux Jazz Festival, adjudicated by John McLaughlin.[2] His debut album as a bandleader was released in 2017 and was warmly received with four star reviews in The Guardian,[3] The Irish Times,[4] Jazzwise and Downbeat Magazine, who described it as "the most fully-realised and rewarding debut album from a guitarist-composer since Julian Lage's 2009 outing". He released his second album on Edition Records, Life Is The Dancer, in April 2020, in the midst of the global COVID-19 lockdown. This eagerly anticipated sophomore album was also received to critical acclaim, with All About Jazz describing it as "balm for the soul" as well as stating that "every aspect of the album is sublime". He has also performed as a sideman with many of the world's leading modern jazz artists & groups, including Django Bates, John Surman, Manu Katché, Arve Henriksen, Avishai Cohen (trumpeter), Ben Wendel and The Cinematic Orchestra. Luft was the recipient of the Peter Whittingham Award in 2015 as part of the co-led big band Patchwork Jazz Orchestra, and in 2018 he was nominated as the "Breakthrough Act of the Year" in the Jazz FM Awards [5] and as the "Jazz Instrumentalist of the Year" in the Parliamentary Jazz Awards.[6] He was selected as a BBC New Generation Jazz Artist 2019-2022 & in November 2023 he performed his self-penned concerto for electric guitar & symphony orchestra at the Queen Elizabeth Hall with the BBC Concert Orchestra as part of the London Jazz Festival.

Perhaps his most fruitful collaboration over the past decade has been with Swiss-Albanian singer Elina Duni, with whom he has released two albums on ECM Records, Lost Ships & A Time To Remember, the latter of which was awarded "Jazz Album Of The Month" in The Guardian newspaper upon release in June 2023.[7] Duni & Luft often appear in a pared-back duo format of guitar & voice, and the pair have performed right across the globe, touring throughout Europe, the Americas & the Far East, having given sold-out shows in New York at Le Poisson Rouge (formerly The Village Gate), Montreux Jazz Festival & Cairo Jazz Festival, Egypt.

Discography

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As leader/co-leader

Year Title Label Personnel
2015 Encuentro Self-release as Deco Ensemble; with Bartosz Głowacki (accordion), Sabina Rakcheyeva (violin), Ricardo Gosalbo (piano), Elena Marigómez (bass)
2017 Pond Life Big Bad Records as Big Bad Wolf; with Owen Dawson (trombone, synthesiser), Michael De Souza (Fender Bass VI), Jay Davis (drums)
2017 Riser Edition Records with Joe Wright (sax), Joe Webb (keyboards), Tom McCredie (bass), Corrie Dick (drums)
2019 O'Higgins & Luft Play Monk & Trane Ubuntu Music with Dave O'Higgins (tenor sax), Scott Flanigan (organ), Rod Youngs (drums)
2020 Life Is The Dancer Edition Records with Joe Wright (sax), Byron Wallen (trumpet), Luna Cohen (backing vocals), Joe Webb (keyboards), Tom McCredie (bass), Corrie Dick (drums)
2020 Lost Ships ECM Records with Elina Duni (voc), Matthieu Michel (flugelhorn), Fred Thomas (piano; drums)[8]
2023 A Time To Remember ECM Records with Elina Duni (voc), Matthieu Michel (flugelhorn), Fred Thomas (piano; drums; viola da gamba)
2023 Dahab Days Edition Records with Joe Wright (sax), Joe Webb (keyboards), Tom McCredie (bass), Corrie Dick (drums), Alice Zawadzki (vocals), Byron Wallen (trumpet), Steve Buckley (saxophone, whistle)

As sideman

Year Band/Leader Title Label
2012 National Youth Jazz Orchestra The Change Self-release
2015 Patrick Hayes Back To The Grove Self-release
2015 Enzo Zirilli ZiroBop UR Records
2015 National Youth Jazz Orchestra Fifty Whirlwind Recordings
2015 Liane Carroll Seaside Linn Records
2016 Luna Cohen November Sky Temps Record
2017 Misha Mullov-Abbado Cross-Platform Interchange Edition Records
2017 Phelan Burgoyne Trio Unquiet Quiet Pumpkin Records
2017 Tom Ridout No Excuses 33 Jazz Records
2017 Joy Ellis Life on Land F-IRE Collective
2018 Enzo Zirilli Ten To Late! UR Records
2018 Karen Lane Passarim 33 Jazz Records
2018 Scottish National Jazz Orchestra Sweet Sister Suite Spartacus Records
2019 Laura Jurd Stepping Back, Jumping In Edition Records
2020 Ellen Andrea Wang Closeness Ropeadope
2022 Corrie Dick Sun Swells Ubuntu
2024 John Surman Words Unspoken ECM Records

References

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  1. ^ Rob Luft Official Website. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  2. ^ Montreux Jazz Festival Press Release. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  3. ^ Fordham, John (27 July 2017), "Guitar virtuoso makes enticingly vivacious debut", The Guardian.
  4. ^ Larkin, Cormac (July 27, 2017), "Rob Luft - An original guitarist to be prized", Irish Times.
  5. ^ "Jazz FM Awards 2018, Nominees Announced", News, Jazz FM Awards, 27 February 2018.
  6. ^ "Parliamentary Jazz Awards 2018 Nominees Announced", Jazzwise Magazine.
  7. ^ Fordham, John (14 July 2023). "Elina Duni: A Time to Remember review – a unique voice in jazz". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 13 September 2024.
  8. ^ "Elina Duni / Rob Luft, Fred Thomas (3) / Matthieu Michel – Lost Ships". discogs.com. 13 November 2020. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
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