Updated: March 7, 2024
Born: June 23, 1949
His music has been described as “unapologetically beautiful” (All About Jazz) and his creativity “both startling and inspiring” (Just Jazz Guitar). A passionate improviser and prolific composer, Canadian jazz guitarist Roddy Ellias is an artist whose work defies simple definition. His musical journey has taken him from his early roots in pop and R&B bands and classical music, to the improvised world of jazz, through African and other world beats all the way to writing an opera, and everything in between. Along the way he’s performed with some of the great names in jazz, from Lee Konitz and David Liebman to Joel Frahm and Dr. Lonny Johnston.
From his early days of improvising at his grandmother’s piano at the age of five, to the present day, Ellias has sought to express things in music that could not be expressed any other way, and music continues to be a vital channel for his restless creativity. The only Canadian to win the prestigious Jazz Hero Award from the Jazz Journalists of America in 2013, as well as the Ottawa International Jazz Festival Award in 2009, he has consistently created recordings of such quality they continue to be played long after their release. His first recording of original compositions, A Night for Stars, was the first Canadian recording to be released on the Inner City label (Downbeat jazz label of the year), and can still be heard on radio around the world, more than forty years later. This kind of staying power can be traced to Ellias’ refusal to musically stand still.
From the haunting Whale Spirit Rising, recorded on the Chandos label along with works by Keith Jarrett, to Monday’s Dream, which garnered a four-star review in Downbeat, to Sticks and Stones, with legendary New York pianist Marc Copland, Ellias has demonstrated again and again his willingness to stand apart. He further surprised and delighted his fans by writing Sleeping Rough, a full-length puppet opera about a homeless man, which was performed to sold-out crowds at the Music and Beyond Festival in Ottawa in the summer of 2018. There was such a demand for those who couldn’t get tickets it was performed again in 2019. Festival director Julian Armour noted that “Ellias writes from the heart and soul, and from the great mosaic of music he’s been involved with.”
Today, Ellias especially loves working with the poetry of award-winning writer Sandra Nicholls, and spinning out melodies and harmonies that unleash the power of those words in a way that reaches and moves people.
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ECV: Sticks and Stones
by John Kelman
While a somewhat common secondary instrument for primarily electric guitarists including Vic Juris, Pat Metheny and Adam Rogers, there are but a handful of jazz six-stringers alive today who make the nylon-string acoustic guitar their main axe. Despite being known to pick up a warm-toned hollow body electric guitar when the need arises, jny: Ottawa, Canada-based Roddy Ellias is, like the better-known Ralph Towner, a guitarist who has made its gentler acoustic cousin, played with fingers rather than plectrum, his ...
Continue ReadingRoddy Ellias Trio: Monday's Dream
by John Kelman
Since returning home to Ottawa after spending much of his adult life as an associate music professor at Concordia University in Montréal, Roddy Ellias may have retired but he's far from slowing down. Retirement's just a word, but for this extraordinary guitarist it's clearly been a liberating one; based on Monday's Dream, his first recording since returning to Ottawa, it's suiting him very, very well, indeed. While he still plays a hollow body electric guitar on occasion, Ellias' ...
Continue Reading“Monday's Dream is an unapologetically beautiful record, one of subtle delicacy and elegance, and alluring grace and finesse.” -John Kelman, All About Jazz
“Composer of extraordinary talent ... His creativity is so obvious, that it is at once both startling and inspiring” - Dr. Steve Kinigstein, Just Jazz Guitar, 2015
“Five stars ... Pieces like Ellias’s Folksong resonate with the attention to detail and level of feeling common on the best ECM recordings ... Sticks and Stones is an album that richly rewards close listening, and continues to reveal itself.” - James Hale, SoundStageXperience, December, 2017