Fayetteville native Noah Kellman is one of the best young pianists in the country — but you didn't hear it from him.



"The musicians who are most competitive make music that sounds competitive," says local jazz legend Noah Kellman. "I'd rather make music that sounds emotional."
Nineteen-year-old Noah Kellman speaks slowly and thoughtfully, pondering each interview question for the most honest response. He sounds nothing like I thought he would — like a stereotypical teenage prodigy with a chip on his shoulder and very little time for me.
But Kellman, a Fayetteville native and a 2009 graduate of Manlius Pebble High School, is not your stereotypical teenage prodigy. Ten years' worth of awards and performance invitations, both domestic and international, testify to his status as one of the nation's most successful young jazz musicians. In February, his original song "The Piemaker" earned a Young Jazz Composer Award from the American Society of Composers, Authors and
Lanky and dark-eyed, with a wide smile and endearing stare, Kellman resists bragging about his accomplishments. When I throw out phrases like "piano prodigy" and "big man on campus," he responds with nervous chuckles and modest affirmations. His confidence is quiet, but it's there.
"Noah has been musical since I was pregnant with him," jokes his mother, Jessie Kellman, "It was his choice
Kellman picked up the piano in kindergarten when his father taught him to recognize notes and play them back by ear. But he struggled to read music and the songs bored him, so Kellman quit the piano until he joined his school's jazz band at age ten. Today, he can't imagine living without it. "On an emotional level, I depend on music," he admits.
That dependence comes through in
Even when he plays the standards, Kellman plays with his whole body. In a video from Jazz in the Square, where Kellman and his friend Greg Chaplin performed in 2008, he dances slightly to the plucky swing beat of Erroll Garner's "Misty," bobbing and shaking his head to the music. Piano dominates the six-minute song.
But when the number ends to riotous applause, Kellman shrugs,
"Greg Chaplin on bass," he says.
Then he rearranges his music while Chaplin takes a bow.