When Abate Berihun opened his mouth and started singing an ancient prayer with the most authentic blues articulation I have heard in my life, I was already floating an inch above my seat. Every sound in this show shoots straight into your soul...
Born in Addis Ababa, Abate Berihun's path to becoming one of Israel's most prominent jazz musicians began with a childhood fascination for the local military band he heard rehearsing near his home. He picked up the saxophone at an early age and enrolled in the Addis Ababa University Music School, where he was first exposed to the albums of Charlie Parker and John Coltrane, influences that would eventually merge with the Ethiopian scales of his heritage.
At age 16, Berihun joined the Ethiopian Military Band. Six years later, his service ended in tragedy when the band's bus was ambushed by rebel forces fighting the Marxist dictatorship. In the prolonged attack, Berihun was wounded by two bullets and lost 35 of his fellow band members. Surviving the trauma, he went on to rebuild his life through music, becoming a fixture at the Ethiopian National Theater and touring the world with Ethio-jazz giants like Mahmoud Ahmed and Mulatu Astatke. By his mid-20s, he was leading his own band and touring Europe extensively.
In 1999, Berihun immigrated to Israel with his family, a move that required him to start over from zero. Despite his celebrity status in Ethiopia, he faced the harsh realities of the immigrant experience, working for years as a dishwasher - where the industrial detergents burned his fingers and hindered his ability to practice - and later as a night security guard. Far from being bitter about this duality, Berihun developed a philosophy that connected his day job to his art, viewing both as an opportunity to share positive energy and touch lives. "Whether I am welcoming people at the factory gate or playing the saxophone," he has noted, "my goal is to touch lives and share love."
Since those early years of struggle, Berihun has established himself as a highly successful and prolific artist. He founded and led a string of acclaimed ensembles: Ras Deshen, Kuluma, Shabate, and Tezeta, recording albums and performing on stages around the world. Beyond his own groups, he became a sought-after collaborator for high-profile figures in Israeli music, including Yossi Fine, Ariel Zilber, and Ehud Banai. Today, The Addis Ken Project serves as the primary vehicle for his artistry, allowing him to bring the fullness of his journey, from the stages of Addis Ababa to the global jazz circuit, into the quartet's distinct fusion of ancient soul and modern spirit.
For more information about Abate Berihun, please visit: https://addiskenproject.com/.
Mark Taylor
Don Lanphere
Brent Jensen
David Sills
Daniel Carter
Hans Teuber
Richard Cole
Yoshiyuki Yamanaka
Kim Richmond
Tim Jensen
John Gross
Rick Mandyck
Matt Otto
Brad Wheeler
Alex Graham
Bobby Porcelli
Pete Christlieb
Scott Burns
Joshua Redman
Rob Lockart
Hadley Caliman
Mitch Paliga
Geof Bradfield
Mark Colby
Phil Dwyer
Michael Brockman
Ricky Sweum
Matt Vashlishan
Peter Epstein
Jim Gailloreto
Bruce Williamson
Tom Luer
Ed Epstein
Michael Zilber
Tim Garland
Ira Sullivan
Dudley Owens
Amit Friedman
Joel Miller
Idit Shner
Marc Bernstein
Francois Theberge
Brian Gephart
Dave Liebman
Bobby Selvaggio
Renato Caranto
Ernie Watts
Jim Norton
Lucas Pino
John Wojciechowski
Roxy Coss
Carlos Vega
Steffen Weber
Jason Hainsworth
Zem Audu
Edgar Steinitz
Benjamin Boone
Neil Welch
Aaron Lington
Xose Miguélez
Dann Zinn
Greg Yasinitsky
Alon Farber
Mark Zaleski
Jared Sims
Jordan VanHemert
Ralph Bowen
Santosh Sharma
Tim Warfield
Maddie Vogler
Vincent Herring
Donny McCaslin
Nicole Glover
Joe Manis
Jerry Bergonzi
James Moody
John Gunther
Carl Schultz