picture of Ron Oswanski
 

 
Ron Oswanski
Though Ron is one of the most prodigious Hammond B-3 players on a jazz scene rife with rising organ talent, he’s just starting to introduce himself as a force in his own right. Also an accomplished accordion player, Ron has forged a lithe, lyrical and rhythmically charged contemporary sound steeped in the B3’s earthy roots but informed by post-bop developments. With his finely calibrated sense of dynamics and expansive harmonic palette, he can burn with the best of them, and then slow things down for an exquisitely crafted ballad.
 
"I’m not a traditional Jimmy Smith style organ player," Ron says. "I do play that style, but I’m a big ECM fan who’s listened to a lot of Keith Jarrett and Jan Garbarek. I like open harmonies, and being able to stretch harmonies here and there. In my music subtlety and beautiful melodies are as important as aggressiveness."
 
Ron has been keeping company with formidable musicians for more than two decades. Since entering the jazz big leagues in the early 1990s as a teenager recruited by Maynard Ferguson’s Big Bop Nouveau Band, he’s collaborated with some of jazz’s most creative figures, performing with the Maria Schneider Orchestra, Tim Ries and The Rolling Stones Project, Jack Wilkins and Mike Clark, Milt Hinton, Myron Walden’s Countryfied, Dave Berger and the Sultans of Swing, as well as popular music icons The Temptations, Aretha Franklin and Blood, Sweat and Tears. Vibraphone master Dave Samuels, the driving force behind the Grammy Award-winning Caribbean Jazz Project, launched the Organik Vibe Trio several years ago as a vehicle for collaborating with Ron, leading to the enthralling 2010 session Moscow. He also plays widely with Israeli guitarist Oz Noy’s trio with drummer Nate Smith, the Dan Willis Band with percussionist John Hollenbeck, guitarist Sheryl Bailey’s Trio, and Carl Fischer’s (Billy Joel) Groove Project.
 
Born in Toledo in 1974, Ron started serious piano studies as a child with Mark Kieswetter, an Ohio jazz legend whose credits include gigs with Zoot Sims, Jack Sheldon, James Moody, and a three-year stint as musical director for Jon Hendricks. At the same time, Ron got intimately familiar with the accordion, often performing with his father’s polka band. He started gigging widely as a precocious high school pianist, receiving invaluable experience with numerous Cincinnati tri-state jazz veterans, including Jimmy Cook, Paul Keller, Pete Siers, Ernie Krivda and Brad Sharp, who all generously mentored him. As an electric bassist, he gigged widely with Toledo jazz piano stalwart Eddie Abrams. It was Ron's love of bass lines that drew him to the mighty B-3, an instrument introduced to him by Bill Heid, a well-traveled organist who has earned a cult reputation among B-3 fans. "I used to hear Bill playing at Rusty’s all the time," Ron says, referring to a Toledo music spot. "I bought my first organ from him, and he was my main organ influence."
 
After winning numerous awards from the International Association of Jazz Educators, DownBeat magazine and an array of festivals, Ron earned a full scholarship to the Manhattan School of Music, where he studied with noted pianists Harold Danko and Garry Dial. Within months of moving to New York City in 1992, he got a call from Maynard Ferguson at the recommendation of Tim Ries, a friend since the older saxophonist took the junior high jazzhead under his wing. He spent five years with Ferguson playing piano, keyboards and B-3, and managed to finish his undergraduate degree between international tours. Ferguson also featured Ron on two Concord Jazz albums, 1995’s These Cats Can Swing and 1998’s Brass Attitude, which includes two Oswanski originals (on the new album he revisits one piece, the gorgeous ballad "Milk of the Moon" that Ferguson hailed for "subtlety, colors, and beauty" hinting at "the writing of Gil Evans").
 
By the time he came off the road with Ferguson, Ron was looking to focus on the B-3. At the time there were only a handful of organ players extending the instrument’s post-Larry Young vocabulary. In demand as an accomplished accordionist endorsed by Victoria Accordion Company, he works in a wide array of musical settings. Ron’'s busy calendar as a session player and sideman is one reason that he’s making a relatively late debut as a leader. Another is that for more than a decade he’s helped run drummer Martin Paglione’s Applied Microphone Technology, a company devoted to making mics designed for specific instruments. He got involved with AMT because he helped them design an accordion microphone system out of his quest for accurate, high quality sound. Now the jazz world is getting a chance to hear just what sound Ron has to offer.
contact:
homepage: www.ronoswanski.com
on tour Click on the logo to see Ron's tour dates.

 

Discography
Moscow
no label
Ron Oswansky, organ, accordion
Dave Samuels, vibes, marimba
Marko Marcinko, drums, percussion
Saucy
Planet Arts 301318
recorded in Union City, NJ/USA
Tom Dempsey, guitar
Ron Oswanski, Hammond B-3 organ
Alvin Atkinson, drums
Things We Did Last Summer
Cellar Live CL110115
recorded February 2015 in Saylorsburg, PA/USA
Joel Frahm, tenor sax
Vic Juris, guitar
Ron Oswanski, Hammond B-3 organ
Dave Samuels, vibes
Marko Marchinko, drums
Move On!
Consolidated Artists Productions CAP 1068
recorded May 2019 in Little Falls, NJ/USA
Bernard Purdie, drums
Ron Oswanski, Hammond B-3 organ
Christian Fabian, bass

 
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