Trumpeter and composer
Michael Sarian is an artist who paints images of humanity through sound. One
who possesses a sound that is at once powerful and fragile, beckoning you, the
listener, to take a glimpse, or often a full-on view, of Sarian’s truths as a
human being, his worry, pain and lamentation, and his joys, hopes and
exaltations. On Michael Sarian’s New Aurora, his fourth album as a leader, we
find him on trumpet and flugelhorn as the sole melodic voice in this acoustic
quartet, a clear departure from his previous releases which feature extensive
four-horn arrangements, electronics and hard-hitting grooves (Sarian has
released three albums as a bandleader with his septet, Michael Sarian & The
Chabones, and also leads Michael Sarian & The Big Chabones, a 16-piece big
band). Litening closely through flesh, metal, breath and spit we can hear his
family’s heritage, his musical heroes and his declaration as a jazz artist who
has something compelling and beautiful to add to the conversation.
Born in
Toronto and raised in Buenos Aires from the age of one, Sarian has been calling
New York City home for the past eight years. New Aurora has been in gestation
since Sarian’s first release in 2014, and the album comes to us as a result of
engineer/producer Luis Bacque’s downright insistence that the trumpeter venture
into a freer, more acoustic setting that would feature his own playing,
particularly on the flugelhorn, at the forefront of the ensemble’s sound
(Sarian plays flugelhorn on all tracks save the first).
Inspired by
the music of trumpet greats Kenny Wheeler, Tomasz Stańko, Enrico Rava, and
legendary Armenian/American drummer Paul Motian, Sarian ventured into Bacque’s
studio to test the waters of this new musical direction. After an afternoon
spent at the New Jersey recording studio with Santiago Leibson (piano), Matt
Pavolka (bass) and Dayeon Seok (drums), the session yielded the first two
tracks of what would become Michael Sarian’s New Aurora.
Sarian began
writing the first of the compositions, This Is Only The Beginning, in a hotel
room in Florida during the first days of 2019, while reading Japanese writer
Haruki Murakami’s “Killing Commendatore.” The novel tells the story of a
thirty-something artist facing an early onset mid-life crisis, who, after a
devastating separation, decides to quit his lucrative career as a portrait
painter, retreat into the mountains and pursue a more fulfilling path of
abstract self-expression, proclaiming ‘this is only the beginning’.
Scottie(33), in honor of the great 1990s Chicago Bulls player Scottie Pippen,
followed soon after. The opening theme is in 9 (the result of multiplying both
3s of his jersey number) and presents a subdued atmosphere. Originally meant to
be a more up-beat composition, Sarian discovered that the only nickname Pippen
had during his playing days was No tippin’ Pippen, because he was a notoriously
poor tipper, probably as a result of the terrible contracts Pippen had with the
Bulls organization and having to support his family, so Sarian decided to
convey that sense of sorrow and disappointment in the music. The choppy,
hip-hop groove in 7, then 15, gives the track a big finish because, after all,
Scottie did win six championships.
The album
derives its name from the track Aurora, which Sarian began writing on February
15, 2019. Although the word literally means dawn, which is the meaning Sarian
hopes to convey behind the project, the composition came after hearing of a
mass shooting that day in Aurora, Illinois. The composition bears a somber
mood, a hopelessness which Sarian felt assuming #Aurora was trending because of
the 2012 mass shooting there, only to find out that yet another senseless act
of violence had taken place.
Dedicated to
his cousin Nick, Primo (cousin in Spanish), is arguably the most
‘straight-ahead’ track of the album. The idea for the composition came after
getting a copy of Nicolas Slonimsky’s book Thesaurus of Scales and Melodic
Patterns. Sarian based the composition on a scale found on the second page. The
marking at the top of the chart is “fast + gritty swing”, with no chords to be
found, just the scale the tune is based on.
Paying
homage to his Armenian heritage, Sarian arranged two pieces by Komitas, the
celebrated Armenian monk, composer, musicologist, and founder of the Armenian
national school of music (who last year celebrated his 150th birthday).
Originally a love song, Dle Yaman became a song of loss and longing after the
Armenian genocide, and is considered to be one of the folk songs that best
represents the soul of Armenia. The theme is first presented on its own by
Sarian’s trumpet, and then restated with the rhythm section playing roots and
fifths. The piece is used as an introduction for Sarian’s original piece
Portrait of a Postman, inspired by the music of the Paul Motian Trio, and named
after the Vincent Van Gogh painting.
The second
piece by Komitas on the album, Chinar Es, translates quite literally to “You
Are A Tree”. Sarian says “The title refers to the poplar tree, and back in the
day this was apparently something men told women when trying to flirt, as in
‘You’re as tall and slender as a tree’.” He says that much to his dismay, this
pick-up line does not hold water any longer in Yerevan. Sarian arranged this
piece using the traditional Armenian rhythm curcuna in 10/8, with the melody
played loosely over pedal tones.
Drawing on
his own family’s heritage in Armenia and Eastern Europe, Mountains deals with
the landscapes his ancestors had to navigate, from historical Armenia in
Eastern Turkey, to Istanbul, to Romania during and after the genocide, all the
way to Argentina, Canada, and back to Argentina, for him to finally find his
current home in New York City. A nod to his family name (sar means mountain in
Armenian, and sarian translates to son of the mountain), the track has three
layers working together: a drum groove in 5 based loosely on Armenian rhythms,
the bass and piano playing a static two beat back and forth, and a floating melody
on the flugelhorn.
Sarian
introduced a new piece the evening before the first December session, titled
The Morning After. It starts out with a Beatles-esque piano motif, and conveys
the frantic despair one might have after a big night out, which as fun as it
might be, many times comes with self-doubt the next morning, giving in to the
briefest of existential crisis. The shortest track in the album, the tune
breaks down into a completely free improvisation between the four musicians,
only to be brought back into the melody before an abrupt finish.
Colorado
Yeta is the only ‘recycled’ tune of the album, which Sarian recorded with his
septet and released on his previous recording. Literally translated into
Spanish (or Argentine slang), it means ‘Bad Luck Ginger’, and expresses the
sorrows of growing up as a redhead in Argentina.
The last
track on the album is, Monk’s Ask Me Now, presented here as a lovely duet with
Sarian and pianist Leibson, serving as a sort of palate cleanser after almost
an hour of original compositions and arrangements.
Michael
Sarian is a trumpeter and composer whose work has been described as "a
steady study in dichotomy. With a wordless elegance, the New York City based
musician is flexibly firm, loosely tight, and brightly dark. The innovations
within his compositions are deceptively dramatic with varying degrees of a
melodic sensibility." – Frank De Blasé, The rochester City Newspaper.
Michael
relocated to New York City in 2012 to pursue a master’s degree in Jazz Studies
at New York University, where he studied with great musicians such as Laurie
Frink, Alan Ferber, Brad Shepik, Ralph Alessi and Mike Rodriguez. He has since
performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival, BRIC JazzFest, Getxo Blues Festival,
Canary Island International Jazz Festival, Blue Note Jazz Club, Jazz at Lincoln
Center, The Beacon Theater, Central Park SummerStage, Teatro Colón, Thelonious
Club, has appeared on WNYC's Soundcheck with John Schaefer, NPR's World Cafe,
and many more.
Michael has
released three albums as a bandleader with his septet, Michael Sarian & The
Chabones, most recently LEÓN in 2018 with Zoho Music, and has appeared on
countless more as a sideman. He also leads Michael Sarian & The Big
Chabones, a 16-piece big band alternative, in addition to his most recent
quartet New Aurora, with a debut album set for September 4, 2020. Since the
fall of 2015, Michael has been making yearly pilgrimages back home to Buenos
Aires to perform his music with local musicians, including some of his old
mentors. Sarian is a faculty member at TrumpetLand.com and a Remic Microphones
endorser.
Besides
performing regularly with his own projects and as a sideman throughout New York
City, Sarian teaches trumpet, theory & composition, works at a non-profit,
cooks noodles, enjoys bourbon & wine, goes to the gym, and tries to make
the most of his fifteen minute walk to the nearest subway station.