As a young child, Polish-born guitarist/composer Rafal
Sarnecki suffered from an intense fear of heights and watched with envy as
other kids climbed trees. Eventually he gathered the courage to face his fears,
ascending branch by branch until he reached the top. That early triumph was the
first of several fears that Sarnecki has faced down throughout his life, some
of them directly impinging on his passion for music - stage fright, most
pointedly, but also a more nebulous trepidation about pushing his music into
ever more challenging territory. On his latest album, Climbing Trees, Sarnecki
celebrates the ability to overcome one's most deep-seated anxieties and the
exhilaration that can come from those confrontations.
"Once I challenged myself to climb to the top of one
tree I felt an urge to climb a higher tree," Sarnecki recalls. "The
satisfaction from fighting the fear was very strong and addictive. This memory
from childhood resembles many situations in my adult life."
On Climbing Trees (due out July 27, 2018 via Outside In
Music), Sarnecki takes his cue from that formative experience, crafting a set
of risk-taking original compositions that dare him and his remarkable sextet to
scale daunting heights. The stellar group - saxophonist Lucas Pino, vocalist Bogna
Kicinska, pianist Glenn Zaleski, bassist Rick Rosato, and drummer Colin
Stranhan - not only manages to deftly navigate the composition's knotty turns
but finds exhilarating inspiration in its surprising branchings. The result is
music that combines attentive focus on fine detail with the euphoria of an
adrenaline rush.
What's clear from the chemistry and complexity displayed by
the sextet is that this is a true working band, a relative rarity on the modern
jazz landscape. In its present form the band has played together for nearly
seven years, though many of the relationships stretch back even further. Pino
and Zaleski have been a part of Sarnecki's band for the better part of a
decade; Rosato and Stranahan joined the band in 2011. Since 2009 the guitarist
and Zaleski have been members of Pino's acclaimed No Net Nonet, enjoying a
monthly residency at Smalls Jazz Club for the past five years.
The sextet originally featured a trumpet as part of the
frontline, until Sarnecki acceded to a Brooklyn club owner's request to add a
singer to the band. Rather than hiring a standards-crooning chanteuse, Sarnecki
enlisted Kicinska - a fellow native of Poland who uses her versatile voice and
gift for improvisation like an instrumentalist. The addition gave the band's
sound an ethereal but urgent quality, and the line-up fell into place.
"It took me a few years to learn how to take advantage
of the potential of the musicians," Sarnecki says. "I have absolutely
incredible players in my group that do things that are very unique, so as a
composer I feel a responsibility to feature their individuality in my music.
That can be a little risky, because sometimes I can push it a little too hard,
but fortunately, we're a working band so I don't have to be afraid of that.
This allows me to come up with ideas that sound really surprising, not the same
as every other modern jazz song."
Zaleski's foreboding chords open the album on "Solar
Eclipse," which contrasts Kicinska's airy vocal line with Sarnecki's
gnarled lines. The leader's probing solo is a standout, exploring every hidden
corner and skewed angle of the tune. The title comes not from the recent
astronomical phenomenon but from the unusual way the piece was composed: it
originated with a particularly tricky bass line, which eventually was dropped
as the tune progressed, essentially eclipsing what was once the core idea of
the piece. The growling lurch of "Dadaism" doesn't immediately
suggest the subversive art movement that gives the piece its title, but it comes
from a time when Sarnecki was studying Dada while working on his PhD in Music
Composition at the Fryderyk Chopin Music University in Warsaw. Pino and
Kicinska take a tandem soar into their upper registers, launching Zaleski into
an intricately focused turn.
Sarnecki's shimmering arpeggios open the three-part
"Little Dolphin" suite, which, like the elegant,
Rachmaninoff-inspired "Zhongguo," reflects on the guitarist's travels
to China. He first visited the country in 2013 at the prompting of saxophonist
Nathaniel Gao, and has since returned annually to perform and teach. "I
just fell in love with the culture," Sarnecki says. "Jazz was banned
in China for about 30 years and in smaller towns people have no idea how to
react to this music. But in bigger cities like Beijing or Shanghai there's a
huge jazz audience and wherever you go, you feel more appreciated. In New York
there's so much music that it's hard to impress people, so when you come to a
place like China you feel like someone actually needs what you're doing." ("Little
Dolphin" is the translation of "Xi_o h_itĂșn" - the nickname
given to Sarnecki by his Chinese fans.)
The heartfelt "Write a Letter to Yourself" was
inspired by a friend's self-directed missive on Facebook, while
"Disappointing Fresh Peach" takes its title from an anecdote in Kenny
Werner's influential book Effortless Mastery. The dizzying
"Hydrodynamics" is highlighted by a taut tug-of-war between Sarnecki
and Stranahan, while closing track "Homo Sapiens" straddles the line
between meditative jazz and chamber music, with Pino and Rosato steering
through winding curves in perfect synchronicity.
Originally from Warsaw, Poland, Rafal Sarnecki is a jazz
guitarist and composer currently living in New York. As a leader of his own
projects Rafa_ has toured China, Malaysia, South Korea, Chile, Israel, the East
and West Coasts of the U.S. and many European countries. He has shared the
stage with top musicians from the U.S. jazz scene including Joel Frahm, Ben
Wendel, Ron Blake, Ingrid Jensen, Alex Sipiagin, Willie Jones III and Gary
Thomas, to name a few. Rafa_'s debut album, Song From a New Place (2008), was
nominated for the 2009 Fryderyk Award, the Polish equivalent of a Grammy. Rafa_
's second album, The Madman Rambles Again, was released in 2011 by Fresh Sound
New Talent. Dave Sumner from All About Jazz selected the album as among the 12
most interesting jazz releases of 2011. In August 2014 Rafa_ 's third CD, Cat's
Dream, was released by Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records. In 2015 a group of
jazz musicians in Kyiv, Ukraine started a sextet project dedicated to his
music, performing compositions from all of his albums. In addition to his
career as a bandleader Sarnecki is performs in a variety of New York based
groups and projects such as the Lucas Pino No-Net Nonet, Annie Chen Group and
David Bertrand Quartet.
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