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FRAMED #48 Lionel Loueke / Exhibition Merav Maroody
FRAMED #48 Lionel Loueke / Exhibition Merav Maroody

FRAMED #48 Lionel Loueke / Exhibition Merav Maroody

FRAMED #48 welcomes Lionel Loueke presenting music from his album HH (Edition Records), a deeply personal tribute to mentor Herbie Hancock. Reimagining classics like “Cantaloupe Island” and “Watermelon Man,” Loueke brings his singular voice to these iconic works. Exhibition by Merav Maroody.

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Time & Location

12 Mar 2021, 19:30

Simplonstraße 29, Simplonstraße 29, 10245 Berlin, Germany

About the event

MUSIC – Lionel Loueke: HH 


His new album, HH, released on Edition Records in Sept 2020, is a pivotal album in his already fascinating journey from humble roots to an illustrious career. Performing music from his mentor and legendary musician Herbie Hancock, this album is hugely personal for Loueke. It was in 2001 that Herbie, along with Terence Blanchard and Wayne Shorter, selected Lionel for a place at the Monk Institute, as well as later in 2005, asking him to join his band, of which he has now been a part for over 15 years. 


Taking Herbie’s most well-known compositions (including Cantaloupe Island, Watermelon Man, and Rock It) as well as lesser-known works, Loueke has stamped his own personal sound and mark on this great body of work, all rooted in the openness and richness that Lionel absorbed whilst being on the road with Herbie.


This album is as much a dedication as a personal tribute to a musician who has changed the face of this music. It’s a highly compelling and uniquely individual take on this music, some of which has been played by almost every single musician at some point in their career. With an artist like Lionel Loueke, nowhere will you hear versions this compelling and original, soaked in the inspiration of the composer. It’s simply breathtaking.



ART EXHIBITION – Merav Maroody 



In the past year, during a lockdown in Berlin, Photographer Merav Maroody has taken numerous pictures of people looking through their windows or on their balconies.


The accumulation of these images sums up to a document of the confused, isolated inhabitants and the architecture of their temporary enclosures.


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