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'''Otmaro Ruíz''' (born June 27, 1964, in [[Caracas]], [[Venezuela]]) is a Venezuelan [[pianist]], [[keyboardist]], [[composer]] and [[arranger]].
'''Otmaro Ruíz''' (born June 27, 1964 in [[Caracas]], [[Venezuela]]) is a Venezuelan [[pianist]], [[keyboardist]], [[composer]] and [[arranger]].


==Career==
==Career==

Revision as of 07:22, 14 February 2015

Otmaro Ruíz (born June 27, 1964 in Caracas, Venezuela) is a Venezuelan pianist, keyboardist, composer and arranger.

Career

Ruíz began his formal musical studies at the age of eight on piano, classical guitar, harmony, history and aesthetics. He also was exposed to other artistic activities such as drawing and acting. At the same time, he studied organ and pursued a scientific career as a biologist at the Simón Bolívar University, but kept playing keyboards on the side, landing his first professional work in a pop group in 1980.[1]

Decided to focus entirely on music, Ruíz dropped out of school in 1983, playing in his native Venezuela. He toured and recorded with local and visiting musicians, and also became a busy studio musician as a jingles composer and arranger.

In 1989 Ruíz moved to Los Angeles, California, where he finished his academic training at CalArts, obtaining a master's degree in jazz performance in 1993. He was also playing with percussionist Alex Acuña, appearing in two albums during the early 1990s.[1] He later recorded with Arturo Sandoval, which was followed in 1996 by a world tour supporting Gino Vanelli. The rest of the decade, he worked with Jon Anderson, Robbie Robertson, Herb Alpert and John McLaughlin. In the new millennium, he has recorded and toured with Dianne Reeves.

Ruíz remains active up to the present day, generally recording and touring with L.A.-based groups and vocalists, and commanding his own projects.

He also participated in an international jazz-project "JB Project" with American bassist Brian Bromberg and Japanese drummer Akira Jimbo. They released two studio albums: Brombo (2003) and Brombo II (2004).

In 2012, Shepherd University (Cornel School of Contemporary Music) awarded Otmaro Ruiz with an “Honorary Doctorate in Music Arts”.

Selected discography

As a leader

  • Otmaro Ruiz plays Ryuichi Sakamoto (MIDI Inc., 1991)
  • Nothing to Hide (MMP Records, 1996)
  • Distant Friends (MLP Records, 1997)
  • Sojourn (Minina Music / Moondo Records, 2008)

Other credits

References

  1. ^ a b Huey, Steve. "Otmaro Ruíz: Biography". Allmusic. Retrieved 2010-10-30.

External links

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