Posts Tagged ‘alto saxophone’

Steven Lugerner Releases Double Album, Plays Brooklyn & Bay Area Shows

Monday, April 4th, 2011

Lugerner Joined By Myra Melford, Darren Johnston & Matt Wilson
On These Are The Words, Based on Kabbalist Numerical System

Lugerner’s Septet With His New York Peers Featured on Narratives

A Bay Area transplant to the NYC scene, multi-reedist Steven Lugerner releases two albums that display the full spectrum of his compositional abilities. A student of such luminaries as Fred Hersch, Ralph Alessi, Jamie Baum, Jane Ira Bloom and fellow multi-instrumentalist Charles Pillow, Narratives features Lugerner’s working septet, while on These Are The Words he is joined by trumpeter Darren Johnston, pianist Myra Melford, and drummer Matt Wilson.

Heard throughout both discs on alto and soprano saxophones, flute, clarinet and double reeds, Lugerner’s musical training began in the third grade on clarinet. From there, he became involved through concert and symphonic bands throughout his school career, including the Peninsula Youth Orchestra, where he discovered and picked up the oboe. “Doubling was something I fell into; it’s the way I function in playing music,” says Lugerner. “Whenever I’m writing music or improvising, I never hear my role being exclusively on one instrument. I always hear certain portions of any given piece played by different instruments. Doubling has leaked into all other aspects of my musical life.”

Comprised of a crew of good friends and fellow New School alumni, the septet on Narratives was born out of Lugerner’s diverse musical background. “Symphonic music is a really heavy influence, and being a part of a youth orchestra at such an early age certainly rubbed off on how I hear and conceive music in my head.”

Musically maturing around San Francisco’s burgeoning hardcore/metal scene and the city’s diverse cultural environment, Narratives was conceptualized with a wide-reaching aesthetic. Each member of the band was selected for their specific sound, with trumpeter Itamar Borochov’s idiosyncratic trumpet style balancing Lucas Pino’s tenor virtuosity; pianist Glenn Zaleski’s “improvised symphonies” colored by guitarist Angelo Spagnolo’s sonic manipulations; anchored by the fat rhythm section of Ross Gallagher on bass and Michael Davis on drums. “All of these compositions have been floating around in my head for close to four years,” Lugerner says. “Each one has seen multiple rewrites and revisions, slowly blossoming into individual narratives.”

Calling the Torah “the ultimate narrative,” These are the Words is based on The Five Books of Moses and the practice of Gematria, which assigns numerical values to the Hebrew alphabet. A method favored by medieval Kabbalists, Gematria was often used to derive further insight into the mystical interrelationship between words and ideas.

Lugerner’s move to New York prompted a rediscovery of his Jewish heritage. “I began studying with a local rabbi, in addition to Judeo-Christian theology courses at the New School. During that time, I was exposed to a lot of new ideas and knowledge. Somewhere along the line, I was introduced to Gematria.” Lugerner uses multiple Gematria methods as his compositional and improvisational launching point, selecting verses from the Torah and applying their Gematria numbers. These numbers were utilized in compositional techniques: in the creation of melodies and harmony, as intervallic relationships to use in improvising, time signatures, and tempo markings. “I wanted to create Jewish music that didn’t necessarily sound overtly Jewish. I wondered if it was possible to create something undeniably Jewish, just by its association with its raw materials.”

With all this underlying structure, These are the Words is still full of spontaneity and vibrancy. The compositions allow much space for improvisation, and the full band only met in the studio to record. The ensemble was inspired by a show Lugerner saw at the Red Poppy Art House in San Francisco, featuring Melford and Johnston with clarinetist Ben Goldberg and bassist Lisa Mezzacappa. The quirky instrumentation and Melford’s intensity stuck with Lugerner. Johnston often fills the trumpet chair in Lugerner’s septet on the West Coast, and Melford’s playing history with Wilson spans many years. This pair of pairings defines the sound of These are the Words as much as its lack of bass. “Playing without bass, I felt, would free Myra and Matt’s roles, and would expose the colors in what Darren and I are playing,” says Lugerner, describing the specificity of the mute and reed combinations that shift throughout the album.

The large sound of Narratives, shaped by three horns and Spagnolo’s wash of guitar effects, jumps out from the opening “Flux Capacitor.” This is contrasted by the intimacy of These are the Words and its emphasis on the subtleties of small ensemble interplay. Lugerner’s music has often been described as cinematic, and both albums clearly reflect that adjective in different ways.

Tour Dates

May 11th – Septet @ Barbès (Brooklyn, NY)
June 30th – Septet @ Tea Lounge (Brooklyn, NY)
July 25th – Septet @ Yoshi’s (Oakland, CA)

West Coast Quartet Dates with Melford, Johnston & Wilson TBA

RELEASE DATE: March 22, 2011

www.stevenlugerner.com

For more information, contact Matt Merewitz / matt@fullyaltered.com or 347-384-2839

Since we last posted…Pete Robbins released a record!

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Since our last post, Pete Robbins record siLENT Z Live came out on the alto saxophonist’s own imprint, Hate Laugh Music. Pete had two consecutive CD release shows at The Tea Lounge in Park Slope, Brooklyn and at Cornelia Street Cafe in Manhattan which received nice preview coverage from The New York Times who called siLENT Z “a willfully progressive outfit” and Time Out New York who wrote “In saxist Pete Robbins’s siLENT Z project, highly developed harmony, complex meter and searing improv merge with a world of experimental loops, ambient soundscapes, hard beats and general abandon. The ’70s term jazz-rock doesn’t cut it, so the best description of this outfit is probably the artist’s own: Brooklyn prog-modern (post)jazz.”

A few nice things have come out so far for Pete.

- Pete was interviewed and played live in studio at WBGO by Josh Jackson for their new music program, The Checkout.

- There was a nice review by All About Jazz-New York’s Elliot Simon.

- There was a nice review by Derek Taylor on his new blog Master of a Small House.

- Phil Freeman reviewed the record for his excellent new webzine, Burning Ambulance in his 31 Days of Jazz Reviews series.

- Pete was featured in the November issue of Down Beat – as a “Players” feature by John Ephland.

- Pete was the subject of a feature interview on AllAboutJazz.com by Gordon Marshall entitled “Balance Dream.”

- Composer/blogger George Grella wrote a fantastic review of siLENT Z Live back in June.

- About.com concert review by Jacob Teichroew.

Stay tuned for more updates on Pete.  You can follow his goings-on with his new blog as well as through the regular channels: Twitter, Facebook and MySpace.

Pete Robbins’ siLENT Z Live To Be Released May 25 on Hate Laugh Music

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Pete Robbins’ “siLENT Z Live” To Be Released
May 25, 2010
On Saxophonist’s Own Hate Laugh Music


Release Shows Scheduled For
May 28 at Tea Lounge in Park Slope, Brooklyn
May 29 at Cornelia Street Cafe in East Village

Live recordings may be a cliché in rock music, but in jazz – as bandleader Pete Robbins notes – they are the very measure of the music. They reveal exactly what a group is made of, fully embracing the “first thought, best thought” Zen of improvisation and human chemistry that inspires electrifying moments on the bandstand.

“The concert is such a big part of the experience,” Robbins says. “You have great musicians who play the same songs totally different every time.” As the alto saxophonist discovered making his first live recording – siLENT Z LIVE (Hate Laugh Music) – featuring his stellar working ensemble siLENT Z, the experience opens up dimensions of sound and spontaneity that rarely exist in the studio. “My last record [Do the Hate Laugh Shimmy (Fresh Sound New Talent)] was very scripted. We spent a whole day in the studio, very tightly scheduled and the arrangements were predetermined I felt like I could keep tweaking it until I got what I wanted. But with the live record I can’t do anything.  Shimmy came out great but it lacked the intensity of our live shows. I thought the next logical thing was to record this band live.

And what a band it is. As New York audiences who have seen Robbins and his cohorts perform at venues such as The Cornelia Street Café and the Tea Lounge in Brooklyn’s Park Slope neighborhood know, the electro-acoustic quintet is one of the city’s best working outfits. “Pete has a surprising amount and type of creativity,” says Joe Morris, one of Robbins’ teachers during his formative college years and himself a brilliant, dogged composer and improviser on guitar, bass and banjo. “He’s a great and unique writer and alto player. He’s brave and his music is fun but also artistic.”

Critics also have been impressed.  “Robbins composes like a jazz musician but envisions a broader jumble informed by various indie genres,” wrote critic David Adler in Time Out New York. “Highly developed harmony, complex meter and searing improv merge with a world of experimental loops, ambient soundscapes, hard beats and general abandon. The ’70s term jazz-rock doesn’t cut it, so the best description of a project like siLENT Z is probably the artist’s own: ‘Brooklyn prog-modern (post)jazz’.”

Pete RobbinssiLENT Z features Robbins on alto, Jesse Neuman on cornet and effects, Mike Gamble on guitar and effects, Thomas Morgan on bass, Tyshawn Sorey on drums, and special guest pianist Cory Smythe. It’s a cross-section of young talents with remarkable verve, ideally suited to Robbins’ purposes as a composer.  “Even without the effects, Jesse is an incredible musician,” Robbins says. “His sense of melody is so strong he can play anything and make it sound beautiful. And he has such a great sense of what effects to use, when and how, that he never ceases to amaze me. I went to the New England Conservatory with Mike in the late ‘90s. He’s great with all the delays and effects. He lends that rock feel my tunes cry out for sometimes, but he can also play quote-unquote jazz guitar.”

Bassist Thomas Morgan is, simply, “one of the best musicians I know,” Robbins says. “He can sight-read anything and makes everyone around him better.” And Sorey, a drummer and composer who leads or participates in several celebrated ensembles, including a trio with Robbins and bassist Mario Pavone, is “a complete savant.”

Robbins offers an example: “Tyshawn can sit at the piano, and I’ll say, ‘Play the B section from the second track of my second record and he’ll just play it. He’s a genius that way. Like Mike, he can take any style and make it authentic.” Sorey’s impending “sabbatical” from regular live performance as he pursues an advanced degree in composition also was a motivation for Robbins’ to capture siLENT Z’s playfully complex mojo in a club setting. Robbins approachs each of the album’s tracks as a particular challenge. The opening number, “edit/revise,” started out simply enough.  “I really wanted to write something in 4/4. I haven’t done that in a long time,” he explains. “I guess I halfway succeeded.” But the piece shifts into a more complex second part that translates the influence of UK electronic pioneers Autechre, via Sorey’s astonishingly nimble percussion.

The touching “his life, for all its waywardness” is a prime slice of siLENT Z and its wide-open best. The piece opens with the bittersweet atmospherics of Gamble’s guitar and effects, seemingly drifting in a sublime manner before the mood shifts, crackling with a fiery dialogue between Robbins’ horn and Sorey’s fast-rattling stick-work. “Jazz these days can get so bogged down in harmony and the subtleties of chord progressions and to me, if I really want to analyze a song, then I can appreciate those things, but I feel like in my head that idea is very much tied up with the ivory tower of jazz consumption: musicians making music for other nusicians,” Robbins says. “So the idea was to make this really simple harmonically, just totally in the key of C. And all white keys pretty much. Keep it kind of droney and moody, but also substantial underneath with this guitar lick in 15/8 and also a 4/4 bass line. I can’t keep it too simple. My brain won’t let me do it. But I wanted to make it accessible and also interesting.”

As a young musician in 7th grade, Robbins tried his hand at other instruments, like the clarinet, but found his destiny one day when his father, a jazz and classical enthusiast, sat him down and played him three records. “Miles, Bird and Dexter Gordon,” he says. “Dad told me, ‘Trumpet, alto or tenor. Those are your options.’ Charlie Parker stuck out for me because he played so fast.” Later revelations came when, as a high school student, Robbins heard the late saxophonist Thomas Chapin at one of his final gigs. “It was a whole other way to play jazz, and it really turned me on.” Likewise, the discovery of the prolific altoist Tim Berne’s quartet Bloodcount proved a real turning point.

“I didn’t know what was going on the first time I heard it,” Robbins says, referencing the triple-live CD Unwound. “I knew something incredible was happening but had no idea what it was.” What it was, he now relates, was “Jim Black’s drumming and the way that he and [bassist Michael] Formanek played together. Their time together was like this giant monster brainy groove. The thing I’d been looking for forever. That and way they would go in and out of more abstract, semi-structured improv and very rock-heavy odd-meter grooves that are not really tonal. It was exactly what was appealing to me.”

Though the music Robbins invents with siLENT Z almost insists on evading easy definition, the bandleader gives it another shot. “Even now, that’s what I’m trying to accomplish, covering free stuff and odd meter like prog-rock influence jazz nerdy grooves … or something.”

Release Date: May 25, 2010

Links
Pete Robbins’ Website
Pete Robbins on MySpace
Pete Robbins on Facebook
Pete Robbins on Twitter

For more information contact:
Matt Merewitz
Fully Altered Media
215-629-6155
matt@fullyaltered.com

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