Yoshie Fruchter Explained

Yoshie Fruchter
Birth Name:Yehoshua Fruchter
Birth Date:1982 2, df=yes
Birth Place:Silver Spring, MD
Instrument:Guitar, bass, oud, mandolin
Genre:Jazz, klezmer, world music, rock, heavy metal
Occupation:Musician
Years Active:2001–present
Label:Tzadik Records
Blue Thread Music
Associated Acts:Pitom
Schizophonia
Asefa
Willamette
Jon Madof
Deveykus
Yiddish Princess
Moshav
Shanir Blumenkranz
Soulfarm
Eitan Katz
Joey Weisenberg
Website:yoshiefruchter.com

Yoshie Fruchter (born February 1, 1982)[1] is an American experimental jazz guitarist, bassist, oud player and composer.

Early life and education

Fruchter was born and raised in Silver Spring, Maryland, in an Orthodox Jewish household,[2] singing and playing Jewish music in his youth.[3] His father is a musician, and his sister Temim is the former drummer of the indie punk band The Shondes.[1] He studied jazz in the music department at the University of Maryland,[4] and moved to Brooklyn, New York, in 2005.[5]

Music career

Pitom

Fruchter's debut solo album as composer and guitarist, Pitom, was released in 2008.[6] The Wall Street Journal called it "a dazzling debut"[6] and JazzTimes called the debut "audacious," describing it as klezmer music with a punk sensibility.[7] "Pitom" is Hebrew for "Suddenly,"[8] and the album was named after his band,[3] which, along with Fruchter on guitar, includes Jeremy Brown (violin), Shanir Blumenkranz (bass) and Kevin Zubek (drums).[7]

Pitom's second album, Blasphemy and Other Serious Crimes, was released in 2011. Fruchter again composed and played guitar, with the album further exploring Jewish music along with surf and sludge metal influences.[2] The album was chosen by The Forward as one of the newspaper's 2011 Forward Fives, an annual list honoring five of the most important Jewish music releases of the year.[9]

Fruchter's music combines elements of jazz, klezmer, rock, surf and heavy metal, while exploring themes of God, religion, repentance and redemption.[2] [3] [10] Both Pitom albums have been released on John Zorn's Tzadik Records label.[10] Fruchter has been described as a member of the "Radical Jewish Culture" scene, a term coined by Zorn.[2] [3]

Schizophonia

In December 2014, Fruchter released Cantorial Recordings Reimagined, an album with a new band called Schizophonia, in which he arranged Jewish cantorial recordings for a progressive rock quintet, with world music influences.[11] Also in the band are Shanir Blumenkranz (bass), Brian Marsella (keyboards), Yonadav Halevy (drums) and Rich Stein (percussion).[12]

Other projects

In 2006, Fruchter collaborated with his father, Chaim (Harold) Fruchter on Beyond the Book, an album of songs they co-wrote and produced that explore critical moments in the lives of various Biblical personalities.[13]

Fruchter is a member of Jon Madof's 13-piece afrobeat group Zion80, playing guitar on the group's self-titled 2013 debut. In April 2014, Zion80 released its second album, Adramelech, an interpretation of John Zorn's Masada Book 2: The Book of Angels, on which Fruchter again played guitar.[14]

Fruchter is also a frequent substitute with the instrumental rock quartet Abraxas, which also performs the music of Zorn's Masada;[15] a member of Pakistani/American collaboration Sandaraa;[16] doom metal band Deveykus;[1] and Frank London's Shekhina Big Band,[17] among other projects, many of which explore the relationship of Jewish culture, identity and music.[1]

Personal life

Fruchter resides in Brooklyn, New York,[3] with his wife, journalist Leah Koenig, and their son.[9] He is an observant Orthodox Jew.[2]

Discography

Albums

YearTitle
2006Beyond the Book
  • By: Yoshie Fruchter and Chaim Fruchter
  • Released: February 2006
  • Label: Self-released
  • Formats: CD
2008Pitom
2011Blasphemy and Other Serious Crimes
  • By: Pitom
  • Released: February 22, 2011
  • Label: Tzadik Records
  • Formats: CD, digital download
2014Cantorial Recordings Reimagined
  • By: Schizophonia
  • Released: December 15, 2014
  • Label: Blue Thread Music
  • Formats: CD, digital download

Appears on

YearAlbumArtistCredits
2004Shemspeed Alt SchuleJuezBass
2007Eitan Katz UnpluggedEitan KatzBass
2008Monkey DanceSoulfarmGuitar, bass
2009Boruch HuEitan KatzGuitar, bass
2010Holy GroundSoulfarmBass
Yiddish PrincessYiddish PrincessGuitar
Have No FearBreslov Bar BandBass
2011Eitan Katz Unplugged 2Eitan KatzBass
ResonanceAsefaGuitar, oud
Joey's Nigunim: Spontaneous Jewish ChoirJoey WeisenbergVocals
2012Joey's Nigunim Vol. II: Transformation of a NigunJoey WeisenbergMandolin, vocals
WillametteWillametteGuitar
2013ShuvuEitan KatzBass
Pillar Without MercyDeveykusGuitar
Joey's Nigunim Vol. III: Live in the Choir LoftJoey Weisenberg and the Hadar EnsembleBass, vocals
Zion80Guitar
Happy HourBreslov Bar BandBass
2014Joey's Nigunim Vol. IV: Brooklyn SpiritualsJoey Weisenberg and the Hadar EnsembleUpright bass, vocals
Zion80Guitar
2017Cat Toren's HUMAN KINDCat Toren's HUMAN KINDGuitar, Oud
2020Scintillating BeautyCat Toren's HUMAN KINDOud
Ruthless Cosmopolitans EPRuthless Cosmopolitans (Eprhyme, Jon Madof)Bass
2022Holy ChutzpahBreslov Bar BandBass

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Matthue Roth]
  2. Mordechai Shinefield, “The Secret History of Jewish Metal,” The Forward, March 18, 2011.
  3. Christopher R. Weingarten, “Yes In My Backyard,” Village Voice, September 22, 2009.
  4. Paul Wieder, “E-pitom-izing Jewish Rock,” Oy! Chicago, March 22, 2011.
  5. [Matthue Roth]
  6. Jim Fusilli, “They Don’t All Sound Familiar,” Wall Street Journal, December 26, 2008.
  7. Bill Milkowski, “Yoshie Fruchter’s Pitom,” JazzTimes, March 2009.
  8. Jason Bivins, “Dusted Reviews: Yoshie Fruchter – Pitom,” Dusted, April 15, 2009.
  9. http://blogs.forward.com/the-arty-semite/148182/forward-fives--in-music/ “Forward Fives: 2011 in Music,”
  10. Sean Murphy, “Pitom: Blasphemy and Other Serious Crimes,” PopMatters, April 13, 2011.
  11. Jake Marmer, “5 Albums To Pick Up in 2015,” The Forward, December 31, 2014.
  12. http://www.nyblueprint.com/golem-schizophonia-doppelskope-brian-marsellas-imaginarium “Golem / Schizophonia / Doppelskope / Brian Marsella’s Imaginarium,”
  13. https://web.archive.org/web/20160417183547/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-1024380571.html “Biblical characters come alive in song; Father-son team creates ‘Beyond the Book’ CD,”
  14. Sean Murphy, “Zion80: Adramelech: Book of Angels Volume 22,” PopMatters, November 14, 2014.
  15. http://www.nyblueprint.com/eyal-maoz-abraxas “Eyal Maoz’ Abraxas,”
  16. http://www.montrealjewishmusicfest.com/artist/sandaraa/en Sandaraa
  17. George Robinson, “Frank London’s Latest Project Is Really Big,” The Jewish Week, February 2, 2013.