The exotic rhythms of Bulgarian music are combined with the improvisations of jazz through the piano and keyboard playing of
Milcho Leviev. A member of
Don Ellis' band in the 1970s and a well-traveled sideman for
Billy Cobham,
Art Pepper and
Al Jarreau and leader of jazz-rock band,
Free Flight, in the 1980s,
Leviev has continued with his cross-cultural musical experiments.. In addition to leading his own trio, featuring bassist Jamie Faust and drummer
Dick Weller,
Leviev has performed with the
Leviev-Slon Quartet, featuring drummer
Claudio Slon, bassist
Mark Simon and percussionist
Cassio Duarte, and, the Jamie Faust Trio.
A graduate of the Bulgarian State Music Academy,
Leviev worked as pianist and director of the Bulgarian Radio and Television Big Band in the mid-1960s. Temporarily relocating to Germany, he worked with
Albert Mangelsdorff.
At the urging of trumpet player and bandleader
Don Ellis,
Leviev emigrated to the United States in 1971. For the next years, he was a seminal member of
Ellis' large orchestra. Leaving
Ellis in 1977,
Leviev played with a wide range of jazz and fusion musicians. Forming
Free Flight in 1980, he spent three years exploring the possibilities of fusing jazz and rock influences.
–
Craig Harris, Rovi