As of 2001, tenor saxophonist
Perelman had put out in the neighborhood of 20 albums as a leader since his recording debut in 1989. A remarkable number, considering
Perelman plays a kind of music (free jazz) that has almost no viability as a commercial product. How he managed to convince so many small, independent labels to record him with such great frequency is a mystery. It's not that
Perelman is not a fine player -- he plays well in the heavily distorted, abstract-expressionist vein first tapped in the '60s by the late
Albert Ayler -- but there's little to separate him from contemporaries like
Elliott Levin,
Ken Simon, or a host of other stylistically-similar tenor players who have received far fewer opportunities. Perhaps it's the company he keeps;
Perelman has had the good sense and abundant resources to hire top players to play on his records. His first album,
Ivo (K2B2, 1989), featured an all-star cast that included drummer
Peter Erskine, bassist
John Patitucci, percussionist Airto, and vocalist
Flora Purim, among others. As his career progressed,
Perelman recorded often with players of the avant-garde; he's made albums with the bassist
Dominic Duval, pianist
Borah Bergman, drummers
Rashied Ali and
Jay Rosen, pianists
Marilyn Crispell and
Matthew Shipp, and guitarist
Joe Morris, to name a very few.
Perelman played classical guitar, cello, clarinet, trombone, and piano while growing up in Sao Paulo. At the age of 19 he adopted the tenor saxophone as his primary instrument. After coming to the U.S., he attended the Berklee School of Music in Boston for a semester before dropping out (
Perelman is purportedly a mostly self-taught, instinctive player; it's not hard to imagine the problems he might have had in a regimented music education system).
Perelman's travels took him to Los Angeles in 1986, where he studied privately and performed. Not long after the release of his first album in 1989,
Perelman relocated to New York and began recording a series of albums on such labels as ITM,Enja, Ibeji, Homestead, CIMP, Cadence, and Leo.
Perelman is noted for combining simple Brazilian folk themes with the techniques of free jazz; in 1997 he did the same thing with Jewish music, making En Adir: Traditional Jewish Songs for the Music & Arts label. Later,
Perelman has recorded a series of duets with the aforementioned
Bergman,
Rosen, Morris (with
Perelman on cello), and
Crispell. It should be said to
Perelman's credit that, while he may not be a terribly innovative or even distinctive player, he is a passionate artist who conveys a great depth of feeling through his music.
–
Chris Kelsey, Rovi