Avishai Cohen 2020-06 DB
Avishai Cohen 2020-06 DB
Avishai Cohen 2020-06 DB
W
hile someone else in his position might’ve
been stressing about the situation—the
loss of income and inability to share
his music with listeners—Cohen sounded remark-
ably sanguine, in-line with the conscious decisions
he’s made during the past decade to step out of the
mainstream and slow down his life.
“This is my main thing right now: Live in the
here and now, take things one day at a time,” he
said during a phone interview. “I’m stopping
everything I can, and stripping everything to
the bone. I’m spending a lot of time listening
to music, playing, going for walks, enjoying my
kids.”
To those who have known Cohen well over the years, his deci-
sion to step back from the mainstream—to move out of New York
City and disconnect from many of the social networks that musi-
cians must embrace to conduct business—is no surprise.
“I’ve known Avishai since 1997, when we went to Berklee together,”
said saxophonist Miguel Zenón, who was Cohen’s bandmate in the SFJAZZ
Collective from 2010 to 2014. “He’s always struck me as someone who has a very
laid-back attitude towards music and life in general, someone who lets things come to him. You
can hear this in his playing and music making, but he’s like that as a person as well.”
JUNE 2020 DOWNBEAT 23
should pursue there. He realized one thing was