Mark Wade Trio Moving
Day On their 2015 debut, Event Horizon, bassist and composer Mark Wade and his trio
displayed an uncanny empathy and earned a warm reception from press, radio, and
fans. Moving Day, his sophomore recording which will be released February 2 by
his label Mark Wade Music, showcases the evolution of the trio's tight,
seemingly telepathic interplay.
"We've had a chance to develop a sound and identity and
an understanding of one another as an ensemble. We had some of that with the
first CD," he explains, citing his bandmates Tim Harrison, on piano, and
drummer Scott Neumann. "But this CD, three years later, shows that we've
really formed some strong chemistry together. By the time we got to the
recording session, we had been playing some of these tunes live in front of
audiences a number of times."
Wade started writing music for Moving Day a few months after
the release of Event Horizon, and the new album includes seven harmonically and
rhythmically challenging originals as well as inventive arrangements of the
standards "Autumn Leaves" and "A Night in Tunisia"
(reinterpreted as "Another Night in Tunisia"). With the exception of
"In the Fading Rays of Sunlight," the gentle waltz that closes Moving
Day, all of the selections utilize frequent meter changes.
The meter shifts are not immediately obvious, however, due
to the way Wade, Harrison, and Neumann keep their performances flowing so
perfectly. "There aren't many tunes that don't have at least one or two
meter changes," Wade explains. "It wasn't my intention to do that. It
was just kind of the way the music worked out."
Mark Wade was born on December 29, 1974, outside Detroit in
Livonia, MI. He taught himself to play bass guitar at 14 in Long Valley, NJ.
During his senior year in high school in Morristown, NJ, he joined the Royal
Nonesuch, a rock quartet for which he began writing original songs.
He attended New York University, studying with renowned
bassist Mike Richmond, who encouraged him to take up acoustic bass for jazz and
to hone his arco technique and sight-reading abilities in order to better play
European classical music. He received a B.A. in music with a concentration in
jazz in 1997. Wade considers Richmond, whose extensive resume includes work
with Stan Getz, Jack DeJohnette, Lee Konitz, and Mingus Dynasty, a major
influence, along with Ray Brown, Paul Chambers, Scott LaFaro, Michael Moore,
and Red Mitchell.
Over the past 20 years, Wade has balanced his musical
schedule between jazz, classical, and commercial gigs. His jazz credits include
playing in the string section for the Jimmy Heath Big Band's performances of
Ernie Wilkins's Four Black Immortals; backing singer Stacey Kent on The Today
Show; playing with trumpeter Bill Warfield's New York Jazz Repertory Orchestra;
and recording with singer Elli Fordyce. Wade has performed with numerous
classical ensembles, including the Key West Symphony backing guitarist Sharon
Isbin and violinist Robert McDuffie, both of them Grammy winners. He is
presently principal bassist of the Bronx Opera Company.
Bill Warfield, who directs the jazz program at Lehigh
University (where Scott Neumann and Tim Harrison also teach), invited Wade to
join the faculty in February 2017. The bassist commutes one day a week from his
home in Queens to the university in Bethlehem, PA, to give private lessons on
both acoustic and electric basses.
The Mark Wade Trio's gigs at Club Bonafide in Manhattan,
Flushing Town Hall in Queens, and other venues have greatly increased since the
release of Event Horizon, and Wade's own raised profile resulted in his landing
a spot in the 2016 DownBeat Readers' Poll as one of the year's Top 10 bassists.
The ensemble had its first appearance in Europe in late 2017, including a
performance at the Sunside Sunset Club in Paris. Interest in the trio's music
was sparked in Europe when the Edition 46 label in Berlin reissued Event
Horizon a year after Wade released it himself in the U.S.
Wade does not take for granted the rapport he, Harrison, and
Neumann have established, which is evident in their ability to flawlessly
navigate consistently challenging original compositions and arrangements in a
flowing, unforced manner. "I'm really lucky that I have guys to work with
to put this together," Wade says. "I'm only one-third of the sound.
It takes all three of us to make it happen, and they do a really great job with
it. We've been able to develop a certain kind of language together that helps
bring out something deeper than just your average run-of-the-mill trio that you
might throw together at a session."
The Mark Wade Trio will be performing CD release shows at
the Airtrain Jazz Festival, Jamaica, NY, on 2/15, and Club Bonafide in NYC,
3/3.
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