Saturday, September 14, 2019

Tenor Saxophonist Noah Preminger Releases Zigsaw: Music of Steve Lampert


Zigsaw: Music of Steve Lampert, tenor saxophonist Noah Preminger’s 14th album, is easily his most ambitious one to date. Combining jazz improvisation, electronics, backbeat grooves and powerful melodic sections, it all adds up to a cohesive and highly listenable piece of music. The latest in a series of brilliant albums that have established Preminger as a leading saxophone voice and an important figure in today’s jazz scene, Zigsaw represents the apotheosis of the 33-year-old tenor man’s recording career — thus far.

Zigsaw is the product of Preminger’s enduring friendship and collaboration with composer/trumpeter Steve Lampert, an under heralded jazz figure whose heady compositions lay down a gauntlet for even the best players. “Steve is absolutely brilliant,” Preminger says of the artist whose recording resume includes five extremely innovative albums as a leader. “He’s the highest-level cat. It doesn’t get any deeper than Steve.” 

The project dates back more than two years, when Preminger asked Lampert if he would compose a piece of music for him and an ensemble. Lampert readily agreed and, as is his custom, did not enter into the endeavor lightly. Rather than deliver a collection of tunes, Lampert concocted something akin to a magnum opus — a single 49-minute piece that’s at once highly structured and consummately open. 

Zigsaw — a portmanteau of “zigzag” and “jigsaw” that Lampert says sums up the character of the piece — is divided into 12 sections. Each is divvied into four subsections — a vamp-like sequence, explosive “open blowing,” a return to a part of the central melody, and a floating “fantasy section” — that create serpentine avenues for Preminger’s ace band of improvisers to explore. 

“For all my projects, I write a kind of musical virtual reality within which instrumentalists can react to the piece and with each other,” Lampert explains. “I want them to be who they are as improvisers, to not tie their hands in any way, to put them in a strange new world and have them do their thing.”

Preminger needed musicians with the skill to not only execute the music technically, but improvise effectively within such an imposing composition. The saxophonist didn’t have to look far. Trumpeter Jason Palmer has been a regular bandmate of Preminger’s for several years. Likewise, alto saxophonist John O’Gallagher, pianist Kris Davis, bassist Kim Cass and drummer Rudy Royston have been consistent Preminger cohorts. All are absolutely monster musicians. 

“These are all people who I really admire, and it was a privilege to share the studio with them,” Preminger says. “I really felt they brought out the best in me as an improviser. And Steve’s composition opened doors for all of us and brought things out of players you don’t typically hear.” 

The ensemble’s wild card is Rob Schwimmer, a pianist/keyboardist who also is also one of the world’s leading theremin players. Here he plays the Haken Continuum, a futuristic fingerboard, creating atmospherics that course through the sections and provide one of many sonic elements that distinguish Zigsaw from shopworn jazz. Schwimmer provided a sonic foundation that took “the improvisation sections into a zone that would not have been fully realizable with only acoustic instruments,” Lampert explains. 

It wasn’t just the musicians’ improvisational acumen that was tested. “The melody that Steve wrote is literally the most difficult thing I’ve had to learn,” Preminger says. “I had to practice it exhaustively in order to perform it accurately on the session.” 

As music writer Eric Snider says: “Zigsaw is a thrill ride, like nothing I’ve heard, challenging but eminently listenable. Steve Lampert’s epic composition opens new doors of perception for player and listener alike.” 

Zigsaw: Music of Steve Lampert continues Noah Preminger’s penchant for making intriguingly themed albums. His masterful Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground (2016) puts Delta blues into a jazz quartet context. The following year, he released Meditations on Freedom on Inauguration Day, 2017, as a musical protest in response to ominous political developments in America. In 2018, the saxophonist formed the Dead Composers Club with drummer Rob Garcia and released The Chopin Project, the first in a series that explores the music of legendary deceased composers outside the jazz milieu. Also last year came Genuinity, a collection of the tenor man’s originals that earned a top pick in the Jazziz magazine annual critics survey. 

This year saw the release of Preminger Plays Preminger — where the saxophonist interpreted and wrote music associated with the films of his distant cousin, director Otto Preminger — on the French, vinyl-only label, Newvelle Records. It features pianist Jason Moran, bassist Kim Cass and drummer Marcus Gilmore. 

Born in 1986, Preminger grew up in Canton, Connecticut. His debut, Dry Bridge Road, released just after his 21st birthday, was named Debut of the Year in the Village Voice Critics Poll. In 2017, he was the winner of DownBeat magazine’s Rising Star Best Tenor Saxophonist and has been listed regularly in both the Rising Star and Tenor Saxophonist categories for almost a decade. The Boston Globe has hailed Preminger as “a master with standards and ballads, as well as an adventurous composer.” The New York Times declares: “Mr. Preminger designs a different kind of sound for each note, an individual destiny and story.”   

The saxophonist has performed on key stages, from the United States to Asia, and he has played and/or recorded with the likes of Jason Moran, Dave Holland, John Patitucci, Fred Hersch, Dave Douglas, Billy Hart, Rob Garcia, Joe Lovano, Victor Lewis, John and Bucky Pizzarelli, Cecil McBee, George Cables, and Roscoe Mitchell.


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