| Pianist Kris Bowers is one of the newest and brightest lights on the jazz landscape. Schooled in jazz and classical  music, raised amid the rap and hip-hop of the 1990s, inspired by the cinematic power of the great film composers of recent decades, Bowers’ sound – though rooted in traditional styles – is open to numerous external influences that  keep the music fresh and vibrant for a new century. This rich and eclectic sensibility is evident from the very first notes of Heroes + Misfits, his  debut recording on Concord Jazz.    Bowers musical sensibilities were taking shape before he even saw the light of day. The story has it that his parents  positioned headphones on his mother’s belly and piped soft jazz directly into  his evolving consciousness in the months before he was born. And it was just  the beginning.   Born in 1989 in Los Angeles, Bowers was  raised by parents whose tastes ran to Stevie Wonder, Earth, Wind and Fire,  Tower of Power, Marvin Gaye and other purveyors of old-school R&B and funk.  He was learning the rudiments of piano via the Suzuki method by the time he was  four, and taking private lessons at age nine. By the time he reached middle  school, he had developed his ear to the point where he could learn the pop  music of the day just by turning on a radio, picking up melodies and harmonies,  and developing improvisational lines.
 Despite his parents’ retro sensibilities,  Bowers’ tastes leaned more toward the rap and hip-hop of the 1990s. In  addition, he was drawn to the music of Howard Shore,  Michael Giacchino, John Williams, Danny Elfman, John Powell and other  high-profile film composers. Inspired by the diversity of music in the world  around him and frustrated by the restrictions of his classical training, he  threatened to give up the piano, so his parents countered by enrolling him in  jazz lessons.
   “When I started taking the jazz lessons, I  felt like I was doing something different enough that I was appeased for a  while,” says Bowers. “I liked the freedom of jazz. The truth is, a lot of popular  music – including the music I was listening to as a teenager – came from jazz  and the blues.”   High school was a dual musical track for  Bowers, who attended the Los    Angeles County High School for the Arts while also  taking classical and jazz classes at the Colburn School  for Performing Arts. Guided by some of the older students at Colburn, he  discovered the solo recordings of Oscar Peterson, while at the same time  performing at numerous jazz festivals as part of his LACHSA curriculum.   “We did a lot of festivals in high school,  and a lot of touring, in places like Boston,   Minnesota and upstate California,” says  Bowers. “I had been gigging around since middle school, so by high school I had  a clear sense that music in general – and jazz in particular – was the career  track I wanted to be on.”   After high school, Bowers began his  undergraduate studies at Juilliard in 2006. Once he arrived in New York, he realized he  could earn a living as a jazz musician while attending school at the same time.  He studied privately with Eric Reed, Fred Hersch, Frank Kimbrough and Kenny  Barron.   “I think my high school experience helped  prepare me for all that,” he says. “It wasn’t as overwhelming as it might have  been otherwise. It wasn’t some crazy leap forward from what I was already used  to.”   Bowers finished his undergraduate degree at  Juilliard and stayed on to earn a masters degree in jazz performance with a  concentration in film composition. In September 2011, he won the coveted  Thelonious Monk International Jazz Piano Competition at the Kennedy Center  in Washington, DC. Co-chairs of the program included  Madeleine Albright, Quincy Jones, Debra Lee and Colin Powell, and the  competition was judged by Herbie Hancock, Ellis Marsalis, Jason Moran, Danilo  Perez and Renee Rosnes. A year later, he was hand selected to  perform at the 2012 NEA Jazz Masters Awards Ceremony at Lincoln Center.  His performance included guesting on a rendition of Frank Wess’s “Magic” with  jazz masters Benny Golson, Wynton Marsalis, Wess, and the Jazz at Lincoln  Center Orchestra.   Although considered primarily a jazz  artist, Bowers has never been afraid to step outside of the genre’s traditional  boundaries and dabble in other forms of music. He performed on Watch the Throne, the 2011 collaborative  album by hip-hop artists Jay-Z and Kanye West. In addition, he recently  composed the score for Seeds of Time, a 2013 documentary by Sandy McCloud about the preservation of naturally  occurring seed in an era of genetic engineering in agriculture.   Heroes + Misfits, scheduled for release on Concord Jazz in March 2014, is an ambitious debut  album that position Bowers at the forefront of a talented sextet and showcases  a musical and compositional style that – while clearly rooted in the jazz  tradition – is also reflective of an eclectic musical age.
 “It’s important to me that this record  touches people in some way,” says Bowers. “I want people to have some kind of  immediate response to it – whether it makes them feel good, or makes them feel  sad, or just makes them think about things. I want this music to help people –  especially people of my generation – realize the potential and the power that  is inside of them. I want it to be an optimistic look at their unlimited  possibilities.”
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