John Stetch
John Stechishin, better known as John Stetch (born 1966, Edmonton) is a Canadian jazz pianist.
Stetch's family was ethnically Ukrainian, and as a boy, Stetch played in ensembles at Ukrainian weddings and sang in community choirs. He studied reed instruments early on but concentrated on piano from his teenage years onward. After graduating from McGill University in 1991, he relocated to New York City. He most frequently performs solo or in a trio setting, often with longtime collaborators Sean Smith (bass) and Rodney Green (drums). His professional career has included performing and/or recording with Ed Jackson, Jan Jarczyk, Chris Kase, Rufus Reid, Akira Tana, Alain Trudel, Mark Turner, and Johannes Weidenmuller.
Stetch won the Du Maurier Grand Prix at the Montreal Jazz Festival in 1998, was second place in the 1993 Thelonious Monk Composer's Competition, and has been nominated for five Juno Awards in jazz.
Discography
- Rectangle Man (Terra Nova, 1992)
- Carpathian Blues (Terra Nova, 1994)
- Stetching Out (Terra Nova, 1996)
- Kolomeyka Fantasy (Global Village, 1996)
- Green Grove (Justin Time, 1999)
- Heavens Of A Hundred Days (Justin Time, 2000)
- Ukrainianism (Justin Time, 2002)
- Standards (Justin Time, 2003)
- Exponentially Monk (Justin Time, 2004)
- Bruxin' (Justin Time, 2006)
- TV Trio (2008)
- Fabled States (Addo Records, 2011)
- Off With The Cuffs (Addo Records, 2013)
- Improvisations (2015)
References
- "John Stetch". The New Grove Encyclopedia of Popular Music (accessed via Oxford Music Online).