Saxophonist Kyle Nasser was a student of Economics and
Political Philosophy at Harvard University when his life was changed by an
encounter with Hank Jones. The legendary pianist, then in his late 80s, visited
Cambridge to teach and play a concert with the Harvard Jazz Band, making a
profound impact on the young saxophonist. "Seeing him in peak form and
expressing joy through music at such an advanced age was really deep,"
Nasser recalls. "We took him out to dinner, ended up playing a three-hour
session, and then he asked us to take him home so that he could get in some
practicing before bed. That left a huge impression and reinforced that I should
do this. I didn't have any old investment banker friends that seemed very
happy."
Nasser graduated from Harvard and switched paths, leading
him to another revered institution: Berklee College of Music. He's now reaching
another landmark along that path with his striking debut, Restive Soul, out
March 24, 2015. A trace of the
saxophonist's former pursuit remains in the title, which was drawn from a quote
by French political philosopher Alexis de Tocqueville ascribing his pursuit of
politics to his own "restive and insatiable soul." The album displays
the keen intellect that landed Nasser at one of America's most hallowed
schools, along with the passion that steered him away from a potentially
lucrative career in business to pursue his lifelong love of music.
The compositions that comprise Restive Soul combine fervent
jazz playing by Nasser's quintet - Jeff Miles (guitar), Dov Manski (piano),
Chris Van Voorst (bass), and Devin Drobka (drums) - with elements from Nasser's
intensive study of western classical music. But this is no Third Stream hybrid,
wearing its "classical" inspirations on its sleeve; instead, Nasser
seamlessly assimilates counterpoint and long-form harmonic development into
electrifying modern jazz pieces. Those concepts were then workshopped on the
bandstand over the course of several years during the band's regular Tuesday-night
gigs at Brooklyn bar The Fifth Estate.
"I became obsessed with counterpoint at Berklee,"
Nasser says. "You have to take traditional counterpoint courses, and it
hit me that this is what I had been looking for and missing in a lot of the
jazz that I'd been listening to and playing. I got the impression that a lot of
people were writing tunes because they wanted to blow over them as opposed to
having a conscious compositional direction to the piece. I wanted to make a
quintet sound like an orchestra."
The album opens with "For Rick B.," a
theme-and-variations tribute to Nasser's most important teacher, New
Bedford-area saxophonist and pianist Rick Britto, who passed away while Nasser
was in the midst of writing the piece. No mournful elegy, the piece instead
builds from a piquant sax-and-guitar melody over a surging rhythm. It's
followed by the floating, dream-like "Angelique," a shimmering
showcase for the rhythm section.
The title track illustrates that restlessness of spirit that
drives an artist like Nasser with its persistent rock groove, driven by Miles'
serrated guitar. The dark-tinged cinematic feeling of "Shadow Army"
is captured in its evocative title, while "Gyorgi Goose" refers to
both avant-garde classical composer György Ligeti and a stuffed animal that
Nasser received from his mother - twin inspirations evoked by the tune's
simultaneous dissonance and playfulness. The melody of "Radiator
Lady" hints at the song hauntingly crooned by one of the memorable
oddities in David Lynch's Eraserhead,
"Trip To Lester's" is an homage to Harvard
professor emeritus and marijuana activist Lester Grinspoon, who would hold
court for graduates at his home. Nasser's piece conjures the atmosphere of
those sessions and their crisscrossing, disjointed but stimulating
conversations. "Whitestone" and "Ecstatic Repose" are
impressionistic pieces, the former an attempt to capture the sunset vista of
New York City as seen from the Whitestone Bridge, the latter a depiction of how
the mind can be frenetic while the body is at rest. The album draws to a
hopeful close with the folk-like melody of "Rise."
While it wasn't until the end of his tenure at Harvard that
Nasser determined to pursue jazz as a career, his love for it began at the age
of six. Kyle's parents frequented a local restaurant in his native New Bedford,
Massachusetts, that featured a live jazz band. He was immediately enthralled by
the saxophone player, who ended up
becoming his first teacher. Too small at the time to hold the saxophone, he
started out on the clarinet, leading initially to a more classical education
before he joined his junior high jazz band.
After graduating from Harvard and Berklee, Nasser moved to
New York City in 2010. He has shared the stage with jazz luminaries such as Jim
Hall, Hank Jones, Joe Lovano, Dave Douglas and Ben Monder, among others. He's
also toured the U.S. and South America with his own music and with the
collective quartet Beekman, which recently released its own debut album.
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