Convening
three of modern jazz’s most in-demand rising stars, the trio Stranahan /
Zaleski / Rosato returns with its long-awaited third album
Stranahan,
Zaleski, and Rosato were all at a formative stage in their respective careers
when they met more than a decade ago. While their trio, known simply as
Stranahan / Zaleski / Rosato in acknowledgment of their equal and personal
contributions to a distinctive group sound, has remained a key priority for all
three, their collaboration has become something of a victim of their own
individual successes. Six years after their last album, the trio has managed to
shake off the demands of rising jazz stardom and reconvened for their
long-awaited follow-up, Live at Jazz Standard.
Despite the
intervening years, this exhilarating set finds the trio’s chemistry not only
intact but flourishing with the passage of time. In part that’s due to the
members’ shared commitment to continuing to maintain their collaboration as a
going concern. But it also reflects the individual successes and experiences
that each of them has enjoyed apart from the others as in-demand bandleaders
and sidemen. All of those elements converge in electrifying and captivating
fashion throughout the six tracks on Live at Jazz Standard, due out September
20, 2019 via Capri Records.
“There was a
lot of time between our second and third records when we all got busier as
sidemen,” Zaleski explains. “But our chemistry only deepened in that time. As
we grew we were gathering professional experience, and I think that has
definitely seasoned our chemistry together.”
That
experience has been estimable for all three. Stranahan has traveled to India
with Herbie Hancock to commemorate the 50thanniversary of Dr. Martin Luther
King’s visit to the country, and toured the world as part of guitarist Kurt
Rosenwinkel’s trio and quartet. Zaleski has made a name for himself playing
with the likes of Ravi Coltrane, Lage Lund, and Ari Hoenig, and was a
semi-finalist in the 2011 Thelonious Monk International Jazz Piano Competition.
Rosato is an in-demand bassist who has toured and recorded with artists like
Gilad Hekselman, Joel Ross, Melissa Aldana, David Kikoski and Will Vinson.
While their
previous two releases, Anticipation (2010) and Limitless (2013) were studio
dates, the trio was intent on capturing the thrill and intensity of their live
shows this time out. For the occasion they chose one of New York City’s most
revered jazz rooms, the Jazz Standard, to capture four sets of music. “The
Standard has always been very supportive of this trio,” Zaleski says. “It feels
like a home for us, and we’re very lucky to have that relationship with one of
our favorite clubs. We were really able to open up playing live in a great room
with great sound and an enthusiastic audience.”
Though all
three members contribute compositions to the trio, Live at Jazz Standard is
largely dominated by Zaleski’s tunes. Reprised from Limitless, “Forecast” opens
the album with a simmering and malleable sense of swing, its 9-minute length exemplifying
the way that these renditions stretch the material much further than the studio
originals. Zaleski and Stranahan both take compelling solos, but it’s the
intricate interaction and instantaneous conversation between the three that is
most striking.
Zaleski also
contributed “Sullivan Place,” a new composition that reflects the view from the
pianist’s Brooklyn window with a gentle but bustling hum of activity. The
angular, Monk-inspired “On the Road” is taken from Anticipation and highlighted
by Rosato’s elastic bass solo and the charged, playful back and forth between
Zaleski and Stranahan. The crystalline beauty of “Chorale (for Fred Hersch)” is
an apt dedication to the legendary pianist, who has been an avid supporter of
the trio. The depth of emotion that shines forth from the piece could only have
been intensified by the fact that Hersch was in the audience during its
performance.
In addition
to Zaleski’s pieces, Rosato contributed the elegantly powerful “Waltz for MD.”
Given those initials’ prominence in the jazz pantheon, the composer remains mum
about whom “MD” actually refers to – even his bandmates are unsure, and the
guessing game has evolved into a running joke in the trio. The set is rounded
out by a gorgeous exploration of the standard “All the Things You Are,” more
than doubled in length from the version that opens Anticipation.
Stranahan
and Zaleski initially met in 2005, when both were students at the Brubeck
Institute at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California. Two years
later Zaleski matriculated at the New School in New York City, where his
assigned roommate in the dorms was bassist Rick Rosato. The three first crossed
paths when Stranahan paid a visit while on break from his own studies at the
Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz in New Orleans, though they didn’t play as a
trio until 2010, when Rosato was curating a series at the club Upstairs in his
native Montreal and wanted to “bring a taste of the rich musical experience I
had in NYC to my hometown.”
“From the
first note we realized there was something there,” Stranahan recalls. “It was
almost instantaneous; we just sensed that connection and playing together felt
so effortless. The music was just flowing out of us. Since then I’ve felt that
way every time we’ve played together. The friendships and the music have only
gotten stronger, and that’s a unique situation.”
“This trio
really feels like home for me,” Rosato adds. “We've been playing together as a
band for almost a decade now, and so we've gotten to know each other on a very
deep level both musically and personally during that time.”
At
Stranahan’s urging the trio quickly entered the studio to document their
newfound connection, recording Anticipation in the drummer’s hometown of
Denver. The session was among the earliest recording experiences for all three
of them. For Zaleski, the fact that each of the bandmates was at a similar
point in their fledgling music careers played a vital role in their burgeoning
relationship.
“There’s
something special about the connections that you forge when you’re that young,”
Zaleski says, pointing out that all three were under 20 years old when they
met. “As you grow into an adult and a professional, you don't really get to
have that kind of quality time together. I think that comes out in the music.
We have a personal history: we came up together, we were figuring out how to
have a career in music and learning how to play at the same time. One of the
reasons it’s so important for us to keep this band going is because
relationships like that can’t ever really be forged again.”
Stranahan /
Zaleski / Rosato is an acclaimed trio bringing together three of modern jazz’s
most exciting young players. Drummer Colin Stranahanhas had a passion for music
since he was a child, making music his life’s focus and passion from the first
time he sat down at a drum set at age eight. He studied with Ari Hoenig and
Nasheet Waits at the New School before attending the prestigious Monk Institute
in New Orleans, where Terence Blanchard, Herbie Hancock, and Wayne Shorter were
his main educators.
Colin
currently performs and tours with a wide array of artists including Maria
Neckam, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Fred Hersch, Niia, Dan Tepfer, Ron Miles, Glenn Zaleski,
and Rick Rosato. Glenn Zaleskiis a Brooklyn-based pianist who originally hails
from Worcester, Massachusetts. He maintains an active performance career in New
York City and abroad, including a duo with his brother Mark. In 2011 Glenn was
a finalist for the APA Cole Porter Fellowship in Jazz as well as the Thelonious
Monk Institute’s International Piano Competition. A 2010 graduate from the New
School, Montreal-born bassist Rick Rosatowas a precocious young talent, gigging
around Montreal by the time he was 18 years old. He has since performed at
notable locations including Smalls Jazz Club, the Jazz Gallery, the Bern
International Jazz Festival, the Bimhuis in Amsterdam, and many more. The
versatile and virtuosic bassist is in demand, lending his skills and sound to
such leading names in jazz as Ari Hoenig, Tigran Hamasyan, Dan Weiss, and Aaron
Parks, among many others.
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