Anne Sajdera New Year
Anne Sajdera's remarkable acumen as both a pianist and a composer finds
rejuvenation on New Year, set for November 2 release on her own Bijuri Records.
The album hits close to home for Sajdera -- her ancestral home, that is, of the
Czech Republic and its storied capital, Prague. A 2014 trip to Europe's
"Golden City" was the catalyst for the album's creation.
Sajdera's journey wasn't planned as a musical one. While in
Prague, however, she encountered trumpeter/flugelhornist Miroslav Hloucal and
alto saxophonist Jan Fečo, who became her chief collaborators on New Year. In
addition to supplementing her working San Francisco trio (bassist Gary Brown
and drummer Deszon Claiborne) and other special guests with their sparkling
instrumental work, Hloucal and Fečo brought in four of the album's nine tracks.
"What electrified me was the tremendous skill
level," explains Sajdera (pronounced sazh-dair-uh). "I don't think
there are many Czech jazz musicians who want to say, 'This is Czech jazz' the
way Brazilian musicians would refer to 'Brazilian jazz.' They're influenced by
the same players as we are." Indeed, New Year's music is firmly in the
vein of acoustic post-bop: sophisticated, straight- ahead, and thoroughly
swinging.
Even "It Depends on That," Fečo's stellar
arrangement of a Roma folk song, feels perfectly at home in the 21st-century
jazz repertoire with its deceptively jagged rhythms and sumptuous harmony.
Likewise, Hloucal's trio of melodic delights -- "Pictures,"
"Butterfly Effect," and "Changeling" -- positively simmer
in straight-ahead seasoning. In the case of the urgent, album-opening
"Pictures," tenor sax luminary Bob Mintzer's vital, muscular work
adds an extra ingredient to that seasoning.
Sajdera's five original compositions naturally provide the
backbone of the album, and rival Hloucal and Fečo's contributions in their
freshness and craftsmanship. Her haunting romantic ballad "Treasure"
also highlights Sajdera's ambition: It doesn't include the Czech musicians, but
does expand her trio to include flugelhornist Erik Jekabson, alto saxophonist
Lyle Link, flutist Rita Thies, and violinist/cellist Joyce Lee. Link and
Jekabson also appear on "Bright Lights," a bare-bones platform for
improvisation that's both taut and joyful. The album also includes a live
rendition of "Azul," the dreamy samba reggae title track to Sajdera's
2012 debut album, here balancing sensitivity with astonishing rhythmic
assurance.
Born in Portsmouth, Virginia in 1965 to a military family,
Anne Sajdera grew up in San Diego. Piano lessons as a child led her to form a
tight circle of musical friends who often gathered to play together. She
maintained a steady diet of Chopin waltzes, Bach inventions, and Beethoven
sonatas in her piano studies, but at the age of 13 became intrigued by Chick
Corea's My Spanish Heart. After relocating to the Bay Area in 1985, she
auditioned at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and was accepted as a
piano performance major, switching to a composition major at the end of her sophomore
year.
Sajdera's investigation of jazz took off when she began a
relationship with an accomplished jazz guitarist, with whom she was soon
playing casuals. A class at Berkeley's Jazzschool with the great Brazilian
pianist/composer Marcos Silva sparked her enduring passion for Brazilian music.
Before long she was gigging around the Bay Area with her own band Pelo Mar, and
as an original member of Bat Makumba.
Her debut album, 2012's Azul, also reflects this deep and
abiding passion, mixing her ravishing original pieces with classic tunes by the
Brazilian masters. It received a place on one of Jazziz magazine's 2012 Critics
Polls and was named one of Latin Jazz Corner's Great Latin Jazz Albums that
same year.
The six-year gap between Azul and New Year reflects Sajdera's
ongoing evolution as an artist looking for new expressive avenues. "I was
writing new music all along and I could see it was rapidly changing," she
says. "By 2015, the Prague musicians' influence was coming in."
Shortly thereafter, the musicians themselves came in, too, to join the music
making. (Sajdera's next recording featuring this same ensemble has been awarded
grant funding from Intermusic SF.)
Miroslav Hloucal It was in 2015, in the spirit of
International Jazz Day, the project launched by Herbie Hancock in his role as
UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador, that Jan Feco Sajdera began to connect the Czech
jazz scene to the Bay Area scene. After she produced a pair of pilot concerts
featuring sax virtuoso Karel Ruzička and organ maestro Ondre J, two Brooklyn-based
musicians who originally hailed from the Czech Republic, the plan to
collaborate in the studio with Jan and Miroslav began to take shape.
Anne Sajdera will be performing a series of CD release
shows, all featuring Miroslav Hloucal (above left) and Jan Fečo (at right), in
November: Fri. 11/2 Savanna Jazz, San Carlos (8pm); Sat. 11/3 Piedmont Piano
Company, Oakland (8pm); Mon. 11/5 Luna's Café, Sacramento (7:30pm); Fri. 11/9
Café Pink House, Saratoga (7:30pm); Sat. 11/10 Hotel Healdsburg, Healdsburg
(6:30pm).
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