
Have you ever
dreamed about stepping back in time and down the steps of a 1930s European
cabaret? Who knows what you might find there - perhaps a sultry French
chanteuse, or Neapolitan street musicians, or a band playing provocative
tango from Germany, France and Argentina. Perhaps you’ll even get a taste of
“Le Jazz Hot”! Let Ensemble Bizou take you there. From Weill to Piaf -
Gardel to Piazzolla, the musicians of Ensemble Bizou show you the cabaret of
life, from its deepest secrets to its greatest ecstasy.
Like
the cabaret performers of Europe in the 1930s, the members of Ensemble Bizou
come from widely varied directions. Take a moment and meet these extraordinary
musicians.
Paul
Binkley (guitar, banjo, mandolin) is an astonishingly versatile musician.
Besides tango and Continental styles, he plays jazz guitar and a full spectrum
of classical music, from pre-Baroque to post-modern. He is also a noted
mandolinist who has toured worldwide and recorded five CDs with the Modern
Mandolin Quartet. Locally he has performed with the San Francisco Opera (on the
lute), the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra and the San Francisco Symphony. He
played mandolin on the Symphony’s 1996 Grammy award-winning recording of
Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet. Recently he played in the pit for Theodore
Bikel’s touring production of Fiddler on the Roof. Paul’s sense of rhythm is
astounding, which makes him a rock-solid asset to any group. His creative and
often playful approach to music makes him a constant delight to perform with.
His wry sense of humor keeps all his colleagues sounding fresh and lively.
Su
Buchignani (violin, piano), by her mid-teens, was already a working violist
with the San Jose Symphony and playing piano for local productions. Unlike other
music students her age, she would spend hours in the music library, pouring over
music popular in America from the late 1800s to the 1930s. As a young teen, a
chance conversation with Louis Armstrong guided her toward her multi-faceted
career. He imparted wisdom that she lives and plays by to this day, teaching
her, “It doesn’t matter what kind of music you play, as long as it’s
alive!” She has continued to play classical music on viola, violin and piano,
but has added genres like klezmer, jazz, flamenco, blues, country, and tango.
Her repertoire as a strolling violinist is staggering, and she is considered by
many to be the best in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her voracious appetite for
popular music has led to thousands of appearances as a strolling musician, as
well as lengthy stints in pit orchestras, and in the orchestras of headliners
from Bob Hope to Bjork. She was also musical director for mimes Shields and
Yarnell. Su has her own music booking organization, works as an arranger
and coaches non-classical vocal style.
Steve
Hanson (bass) has played his bass, tuba and trombone all over the world. In
1973, while part of the US Navy Band, he was out in the Pacific for Skylab
III’s return to earth. Two years later his brass ensemble performed at the
Vatican for the canonization of the first American saint. He also appeared all
over Europe and Japan. Closer to home, he spent several years in New York,
playing with Puerto Rican salsa groups, Italian festivals and other ethnic
events. One of his groups, a Chinese funeral band, appeared in the film, The
Year of the Dragon. He also played tuba in Woody Allen’s Dixieland group.
After moving to the Bay Area, Steve spent years playing steady engagements at
the Fairmont and Mark Hopkins Hotels on Nob Hill. He also worked frequently with
Don Neely’s Royal Society Six, a well-known local jazz group. Steve is one of
the busiest bass players in the Bay Area. It’s easy to see why. We are
delighted that he has donned the fedora, spats and cravat of Ensemble Bizou.
Mia
(vocals) has already embarked on an active singing career at the age of
twenty-four. In high school she was a scholarship student of SummerSong Vocal
Arts Institute, and in college she played leading roles in operas. She went
oversees to continue her musical education, with private and conservatory study
in Brussels. She was the winner of several awards, including the Bay Area Talent
2000 Cabaret Competition for foreign language performance. She has written and
performed three one-woman shows, featuring the music of Kurt Weill. Mia is
equally at home singing selections from musical theatre, jazz, opera, tango, and
European cabaret. She is a featured soloist with the Golden Gate Ensembles and
is known throughout the tango community for her exceptional work with Strictly
Tango. Mia recently starred in a French cabaret show for Hewlett-Packard which
featured the music of Edith Piaf. Her performances with Ensemble Bizou send
audiences to their feet, shouting “Encore!”
Dave
Miotke (accordion, vocals) is always surprising us. Just when we think we
know all about his musical career, we uncover something new. This Chicago native
clearly showed extraordinary talent at an early age when he studied classical
music on the accordion. He even had a specially-designed instrument to allow him
to play a more extensive (and more difficult) repertoire. Dave continued his
musical education, receiving two degrees in performance at Northwestern
University. But clearly, classical music was just a part of Dave’s musical
experience. He was well known throughout Chicago and beyond, performing and
recording a wide range of styles. Dave was a lead singer in the 1960s rock
group, H. P. Lovecraft. This diversity continues. Dave spent several years as
pianist/vocalist at Max’s Opera Cafe in San Francisco. He recently recorded a
CD, “In Dust I Sing”, where he sings and plays original compositions to the
Ghazal lyrics of Francis Brabason and Bhau Kalchuri.
John
Tenney (violin, mandolin) has performed over three thousand performances of
Broadway musicals and two thousand-odd chamber music appearances, including more
than fifteen years with the Nob Hill Ensembles. He is founder and leader of the
Golden Gate Ensembles. John has been concertmaster for Joel Grey, Liberace,
Dionne Warwick and Tony Bennett and has played in orchestras for Marlene
Dietrich, Lena Horne, Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Barry Manilow, the
Temptations, Smokey Robinson, Boz Scaggs, Bjork, and countless others. He toured
nationally with the Van Morrison Band. There is no counting the numerous society
parties with the local big bands or the hundreds of recordings he’s made,
playing everything from religious music to rock and roll to film soundtracks.
John is equally fluent in classical performances, having played with the San
Francisco, Oakland and San Jose Symphonies, the San Francisco Ballet, the
Bolshoi Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, the San Francisco Opera and one of
Western Opera Theatre’s national tours.