Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Jazz singer Lilly Ilieva and The Minimum Quartet present their debut album No Stars At All

БНР Новини

Jazz as a sense of freedom and a form of expression – this is a feeling jazz fans will be able to share with jazz singer Lilly Ilieva and the musicians from The Minimum Quartet on 23 June at Studio 5, where they will be presenting their debut album entitled No Stars At All. The album features seven songs; the central piece that lent the album its name was written by the singer herself. Most of the pieces from the album started out as instrumental, but once Lilly Ilieva wrote lyrics to them in English, they became song.

“I graduated jazz at the Prince Claus Conservatoire in Groningen in the Netherlands,” Lilly says. “The other members of the band graduated the same school though in different years. Our training there to a great extent moulded our understanding of music and musical taste. I am thankful for having been able to be at Groningen because the educational programme is very fulfilling. I was given an opportunity to learn from people who are active as jazz musicians onstage in America. We had renowned names as lecturers, every week different musicians would come and share their own experience with us. And that was just great, we were learning from the best. Otherwise Groningen is a small university town. There is a lot of competition, and that is a good thing, but on the whole the atmosphere is friendlier than in Amsterdam, where there are more people from all over the world and there is a different kind of competition.”

Dimitar Liolev - saxophone, Alexander Logozarov – guitar, Boris Taslev – bass and Borislav Petrov – drums, and Lilly Ilieva met here, in Bulgaria, four years ago:

“What brought us together was music and the way we understand it. If there was no chemistry, I don’t think it could have worked. And the best thing about this group is that we are constantly re-discovering one another, especially when we are on stage. When we play, we are keeping up a neverending dialogue. When Alexander and I came back to Bulgaria and started meeting different jazz musicians, we really hit it off with the other members of the quartet. We all wanted to play together more often. That was how The Minimum Quartet came into being. We started out doing arrangements of jazz standards. And it was only natural to follow up with music we ourselves had composed.”


English version: Milena Daynova

Photo: rpivate library



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

The autumn edition of the 25th European Music Festival comes with unique violins and intriguing surprises

The European Music Festival held in Sofia offers several bright events for music lovers in the autumn series of its 25th edition. From mid-October to December 2, 2025 , concerts with interesting programs and outstanding performers are coming up to the..

published on 10/12/25 8:15 AM

Bulgarian and South Korean musicians to share stage in Blagoevgrad

On 11 October at 7 p.m., the Blagoevgrad Cultural Centre will host a concert titled “Melodies Without Borders”, bringing together Bulgaria’s Pirin Ensemble Choir and South Korea's crossover group SOOK. According to the organisers, this..

published on 10/11/25 11:05 AM
Emanuil Manolov (1860–1902)

Composer Emanuil Manolov and the song “Fair Are You, My Homeland”

For decades, a misguided notion has persisted in the histories of Bulgarian classical music – that the country still had catching up to do with Europe and the wider world.  Such a view is not only misleading, but it does a grave disservice to..

published on 10/10/25 8:25 AM