
Eliana Glass - E
There’s no mistaking the sultry lilt of Eliana Glass alternating between an offbeat, searching quality and her poignant, awe-inspiring range. Her piano playing
also possesses this stirring push and pull between the otherworldly and painfully human, each melody its own unique, aching realm. Glass’ sparse,
meditative music often captures, in her words, the “condensation of everyday life,” an image that suits the bittersweet, ephemeral, and abstract nature of her
work. Glass’ debut album, E, arrives via Shelter Press, and not only is it a tender portrait of her lifelong relationship with the piano, it’s also a distillation of
entire lifetimes into song. The Australia-born, Seattle-bred, and New York-based singer-songwriter and pianist learned to sing and play piano by ear as a child.
Glass spent years learning jazz standards, and she also learned to sing in Portuguese after falling in love with Brazilian music. Glass studied jazz voice at The
New School. In the latter half of her studies, she started writing her own songs inspired by boundary-pushing artists like Ornette Coleman, Asha Puthli, and
Jeanne Lee. During the height of the pandemic, she lived with her brother Costa (who now records as ifiwereme) and felt drawn to the piano again, and they
wrote songs together for the first time. Then, over a 4 year span, Glass teamed up with Public Records co-founder and producer Francis Harris (Frank & Tony,
Adultnapper) and engineer Bill Skibbe (Shellac, Jack White) to record what became E. Glass’ experimental, improvisational works evoke the sensual
minimalism of Annette Peacock, the joyful mysteriousness of Carla Bley, and the wistful intimacy of Sibylle Baier. Her reverence for leftfield jazz and free
improv greats is evident, but it’s always filtered through her signature nascent, naturalistic sound. “Dreams” is a majestic take on Peacock’s spine-tingling
1971 track of the same name, “Sing Me Softly the Blues” is a minimal, arresting reimagination of Bley’s jazz standard with lyrics adapted by Norwegian vocalist
Karin Krog, and “Emahoy” is a languorous tribute to Ethiopian pianist, composer, and nun Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou and her 2006 compilation
Éthiopiques. Glass’ songs bloom with a forward-thinking spirit and ultimately function as vehicles for her heady emotions and fragmented memories and
dreams. Eliana Glass has come a long way since daydreaming beneath a towering keyboard. Glass’ peculiar vocal alchemy and vivid piano saunters are
masterful and wholly her own, and her forthcoming debut full-length is a gift of resonant beauty and rewarding ambiguity. She now performs around New York
City with bandmates Walter Stinson (bass) and Mike Gebhart (drums), in addition to solo shows perched in front of a 1979 Moog Opus organ.
1 All My Life (5:02)
2 Shrine (3:51)
3 Good Friends Call Me E (3:55)
4 Flood (3:08)
5 Human Dust (7:45)
6 Solid Stone (3:33)
7 Dreams (2:10)
8 Sing Me Softly The Blues (4:00)
9 On The Way Down (2:55)
10 Song for Emahoy (6:16)
11 Da (3:33)
12 Good Friends Call Me E (Reprise) (2:21)