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Meet the pianist who played solo for 27 hours

Chilly Gonzales broke a world record. He tells Rob Collins why

September 2, 2010 10:29
Gonzales: “I’m not against artists. Some of my best friends are artists”

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For a performer whose work can be so funny, Chilly Gonzales can come across as taking himself a little too seriously. Gonzales, real name Jason Beck, is the Canadian whose big breakthrough was the 2001 electro-rap hit, Take Me To Broadway.

A virtuoso pianist, his best-selling album remains 2004's all-instrumental Solo Piano. His latest album, Ivory Tower, is partnered by a forthcoming movie of the same name, which from the trailer would appear to resemble Rocky as set in the world of tournament chess. He has come a long way since launching himself as the sole Berlin-based Jewish-Canadian rapper.

"Calling myself a Jewish rapper had a nice ring to it," he explains. "It carries with it a lot of cultural weight. We can argue about whether it's appropriate, or funny or poetic, but it gets a reaction. It's not my job to argue one way or another. It's my job to start arguments."

Perhaps Gonzales's most striking argument is that what he is doing is not art, but entertainment. He is proud of playing around 150 concerts every year, but even prouder of his bold self-marketing moves, whether it is setting a world record for the longest solo performance in May 2009 or challenging American instrumentalist Andrew WK to a well-publicised piano battle later that year.

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