With her sophomore album Feed The Fire, bassist, composer, and educator Hannah Marks takes a decisive and electrifying leap forward, solidifying her place within New York City’s ever-evolving jazz landscape. Backed by her fearless acoustic quartet—Nathan Reising on alto saxophone, Lex Korten on piano, and Steven Crammer on drums—and guided by visionary producer Jason Moran, Marks delivers a recording that thrives on risk, interplay, and the spirit of exploration.
Blending modern, straight-ahead, and avant-garde jazz, Feed The Fire is as much a statement of artistic identity as it is a celebration of the journey that brought her here. Since relocating to New York City in 2019 at Moran’s encouragement, Marks has immersed herself in the city’s vibrant creative energy. That pulse is embedded in every corner of the album, from groove-heavy passages shaped by odd meters and raucous swing to more spacious, introspective moments that evoke rare instances of stillness amid the urban rush.
For Marks, the album represents both culmination and catalyst. “Feed the Fire is a culmination of many meaningful musical experiences I’ve had over the past decade,” she explains, “and a representation of pushing and dedicating myself as an artist to find new musical colors, shades and directions within this music that I love and revere.” That sense of forward motion—of constantly seeking new expressive ground—animates the entire project.
The title track, “Feed The Fire,” composed by the late Geri Allen, carries profound personal significance. Marks recalls a transformative experience hearing Jason Moran’s trio perform the piece at the Village Vanguard shortly after her move to New York. The performance reshaped her understanding of swing, opening her ears to a freer, more uninhibited approach. Since then, the phrase “Feed the Fire” has become both mantra and mission—an ethos that fuels her creative output and defines the album’s core.
Throughout the record, Marks channels her influences while asserting a distinct compositional voice. “Aggro” reflects the adventurous programming ethos of venues like The Jazz Gallery, weaving in complex structures and a Moran-inspired coda. “When Day Becomes Night,” written during a residency at MacDowell, captures a moment of calm while showcasing drummer Steven Crammer’s ability to navigate dramatic rhythmic shifts with precision and sensitivity.
“Room 157” highlights the quartet’s collective intensity, with Reising and Korten pushing into raw, expressive territory. Its shifting meters and unexpected phrasing draw from Marks’ studies with Walter Smith III at Indiana University, underscoring her deep engagement with contemporary compositional language. In contrast, “Unconditional Love,” another piece by Geri Allen, offers a poignant interlude—an intimate duet between Marks and Korten that provides a moment of emotional clarity and reflection.
The album closes with “Fan Club,” a composition inspired by seeing Korten perform alongside saxophonist Melissa Aldana. Structured loosely around the archetype of the hero’s journey, the piece unfolds from an inviting opening into a turbulent, free-form abyss before returning triumphantly to its central theme. Sonically, it nods to the fusion era—particularly Cannonball Adderley’s Phenix—while remaining firmly rooted in a contemporary, exploratory aesthetic.
Feed The Fire arrives just a few years after Marks’ debut album Outsider, Outlier (2023), a project that introduced her as a bold voice unafraid to draw from punk, noise, and free improvisation. With this new release, she expands that vision, delivering a recording that feels both deeply grounded in tradition and unmistakably current. It’s a work that doesn’t just reflect the state of modern jazz in New York—it actively shapes it.
Ultimately, Feed The Fire is about commitment: to craft, to collaboration, and to the ever-burning curiosity that drives artistic growth. Hannah Marks doesn’t just embrace the fire—she invites listeners into it, creating a space where intensity, freedom, and expression collide in thrilling, unpredictable ways.