The moment underscored Iyer's belief that "music can help transcend differences." The performance brought together two musicians of different generations and backgrounds: the 44-year-old Iyer, the son of Indian immigrants who grew up in upstate New York, and the 74-year-old Smith, whose roots are in the Mississippi Delta.
On their recently released studio recording of the suite and in the live performance, the two displayed an uncanny telepathy. Smith covered a full range on trumpet from whispered breaths to loud bursts, with Iyer switching smoothly from acoustic to electric piano and occasionally creating electronic sounds on a laptop.
Largely self-taught on piano, he majored in physics and mathematics at Yale. At age 23, while pursuing his doctorate in physics at Berkeley, he took the risky decision to become a professional musician to his parents' bewilderment. He later received an interdisciplinary Ph.D. From Berkeley focusing on music and embodied cognition, or how the human body perceives music.
"I was a bit of a later bloomer and had a lot of catching up to do," said Iyer.
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"Vijay is a sincere, creative artist, a very generous human being who is well-attuned to human feelings and emotions," said Smith, a 2013 Pulitzer Prize finalist for his civil rights opus "Ten Freedom Summers."
Iyer played in Smith's Golden Quartet from 2005-2010 - an experience he says "stretched me in a way that I hadn't really been before." They first performed as a duet in January 2015 and decided to make a record.