Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Saxophonist/Composer Jason Robinson's Janus Ensemble Debuts Music from New Suite "Resonant Geographies" on Five-City Northeast Tour February 20 - 24, 2014

Saxophonist/Composer Jason Robinson's Janus Ensemble Debuts Music from New Suite "Resonant Geographies" on Five-City Northeast Tour February 20 - 24, 2014

"Tiresian Symmetry & Beyond" tour stops in Amherst, MA; Portland, ME; Montreal, QC; Marlboro, VT; and Brooklyn, NY

"Rugged and scintillating...both chaotic and in perfect order." - Nate Chinen, New York Times

Saxophonist and composer Jason Robinson's celebrated nine-piece Janus Ensemble brings its intensely grooving and powerful music to five cities in the Northeast and Canada in February 2014.  The tour, titled "Tiresian Symmetry & Beyond," will feature re-worked pieces culled from Tiresian Symmetry, the group's acclaimed 2012 album on Cuneiform Records, as well as the debut of "Resonant Geographies," a new suite of Robinson compositions for the Janus Ensemble.

Performing are some of the finest artists in jazz and improvised music, including reedists JD Parran and Marty Ehrlich, tuba players Marcus Rojas and Bill Lowe (also on bass trombone), guitarist Liberty Ellman, bassist Drew Gress, drummers George Schuller and Ches Smith, and Robinson himself. 

Thursday, February 20   Bezanson Recital Hall, UMass Amherst                            Amherst, MA
8:00 p.m.                       Tickets: $12 / $7 (Five College/GCC/STCC Students and Youth 17 & under)
Magic Triangle Concert Series at University of Massachusetts, Amherst
For more information and advanced tickets:
https://fac.umass.edu/Online/JasonRobinson

Friday, February 21            Woodfords Congregational Church, 202 Woodford Street    Portland, ME
8:00 p.m.                   Tickets: $5 students / $10 seniors / advanced seating / $15 night of show
Dimensions in Jazz Series      For more information: 207-828-1310

Saturday, February 22 Casa del Popolo, 4873 St Laurent Blvd                           Montreal, QC
9:00 p.m.                   Tickets: $12-14
For more information:   
http://www.casadelpopolo.com, 514-284-0122

Sunday, February 23   Marlboro College's Ragle Hall                                   Marlboro, VT
3:00 p.m.                   Free admission
For more information:
http://www.marlboro.edu/news/events; 802-251-7644,

Monday, February 24     Roulette, 509 Atlantic Avenue                                   Brooklyn, NY
8:00 p.m.                   Tickets: $20 (general) / $15 (members/students/seniors)
For more information:
http://roulette.org, 917-267-0363

In addition to re-worked music from Tiresian Symmetry, the Janus Ensemble will play the first three pieces from the "Resonant Geographies" suite at each concert: "Outcropping (Salt Point, 1995)," "Futures Unimagined (Quabbin Reservoir, 2012)," and "Confluence (Virgin Creek, 1996)."  Each piece acts as a meditation on the relationship between geography and personal history, structure and expression.  Drawn from personal experiences and evoking the emotional ephemera of specific places, each piece references a time and physical location in northern California or western Massachusetts.

"'Resonant Geographies' departs from the mythologies and metrical relationships that were at the core of my last two albums for the group [Tiresian Symmetry and The Two Faces of Janus, both on Cuneiform Records]," Robinson says.  "While these earlier projects drew inspiration from ancient mythology to generate visceral and grooving music, more recently I've felt drawn to the magical, ineffable connections between ourselves and the places we live: the trees, the buildings, the wildlife, the rolling hills and water, the communities." 

For Robinson, these connections prompt a celebration of life and community, and a deep reverence for his surroundings. "Resonant Geographies" presents a vivid, dynamic imagined soundscape where intense grooves meet lower-than-low contra bass clarinet gurgles; hocketed tubas become infectious, impossible-not-to-dance-to jam-outs; the two-drummer lineup explodes into a back-and-forth drum breakdown; and other-worldly harmonies and textures give way to gorgeous melodies that suggest a bygone Ellingtonian era.

It is much in line with the creative, artful tenor of Robinson's Tiresian Symmetry, which received rave reviews.

"A rugged and scintillating new album." - Nate Chinen, New York Times

"Densely orchestrated, cracklingly kinetic pieces for nonet." - Time Out New York

"4 stars. A collection of dense, multi-direction material that artfully straddles the composition-improv divide while weaving counterpoint lines, provocative harmonies and a well-grounded sense of groove [...] The introduction to 'Elbow Grease' is a stunning, unaccompanied showcase of multiphonics, circular breathing and extended techniques by the intrepid leader." - Bill Milkowski, DownBeat

"A sound of unusual depth and density [...] a silky, swaying exploration of light and dark [that] ends as a panoramic spectacle." - Lloyd Sachs, JazzTimes

While deeply rooted in the jazz tradition, saxophonist Jason Robinson_s musical interests cross the boundaries between popular and experimental, composed and improvised, acoustic and electronic.  Robinson has earned acclaim for his distinctive voice among a new generation of creative musicians.  As Ron Wynn write in JazzTimes, Robinson is one "of the most respected soloists and bandleaders in jazz's experimental wing."

Robinson's music displays a deep sense of history in the midst of creative, free-wheeling exploration. He has released seven albums as a leader, most recently Tiresian Symmetry (Fall 2012, Cuneiform Records), inspired by Greek mythology and the music of Henry Threadgill. In 2010, Robinson released three concurrent albums showcasing an enormous breadth of creative work, including The Two Faces of Janus (Cuneiform), debuting his Janus Ensemble along with special guest Rudresh Mahanthappa; Cerulean Landscape (Clean Feed), featuring the long time collaboration of Robinson and acclaimed pianist and composer Anthony Davis; and Cerberus Reigning (Accretions), the much anticipated second installment of the "Cerberus" trilogy, featuring Robinson's solo electroacoustic music. Robinson has appeared on nearly fifty recordings.

He has performed worldwide and/or recorded with Peter Kowald, George Lewis, Pauline Oliveros, Anthony Davis, Drew Gress, Rudresh Mahanthappa, Marty Ehrlich, Warren Smith, Eugene Chadbourne, Earl Howard, Matt Wilson, Bertram Turetzky, Howard Johnson, Mark Dresser, Curtis Fowkles, John Russell, Ches Smith, Roger Turner, Marcus Rojas, Gerry Hemingway, Bill Lowe, Kei Akagi, Mel Graves, Liberty Ellman, Babatunde Lea, Mel Martin, Marco Eneidi, Lisle Ellis, Raphe Malik, Mike Wofford, JD Parran, Ray Anderson, the Makanda Project, the San Francisco Mime Troupe, Toots and the Maytals, and Groundation, among others.

Also a scholar, Robinson's written work explores the relationship between improvised and popular musics, experimentalism, and cultural identity. In addition to various book chapters in edited volumes, he has published articles and reviews in Ethnomusicology, Jazz Perspectives, and Critical Studies in Improvisation/ Études critiques en improvisation. Robinson is an Assistant Professor of Music at Amherst College and holds a Ph.D. in Music from the University of California, San Diego. A Californian transplanted to New England, Robinson's artistic journey began in the San Francisco jazz scene of the 1990s, but never really fit the "west" and "east" coast dichotomy common in jazz discourse.  It's no surprise, then, that Robinson now considers New York his artistic community, where he collaborates with leading figures in creative music. He is married to Stephanie Robinson, an acclaimed performer, composer, and electronic musician.

A performer, composer, producer and educator, bass trombonist and tuba player Bill Lowe has been a major force for nearly four decades. He has worked with numerous masters of African-American creative music, including musical legends like Dizzy Gillespie, Eartha Kitt, and Clark Terry; avant-garde leaders like Muhal Richard Abrams, Henry Threadgill, and Cecil Taylor; and under-heralded masters George Russell, James "Jabbo" Ware and Bill Barron. He has co-led the Boston Jazz Repertory Orchestra and composed several major works, including his opera, Reb's Last Funeral. As an educator, Lowe teaches at top-tier universities, lectures internationally, and has mentored countless young players.

A brilliant reed player who has developed a distinctive voice on alto sax, clarinet and bass clarinet Marty Ehrlich quickly established himself as one of the most versatile and valuable players on the New York scene in the late 1970s, appearing on more than 100 recordings by an array of musicians representing a broad range of improvisational idioms, such as saxophonist Julius Hemphill, pianists George Russell and Muhal Richard Abrams and clarinetist John Carter. While he has gained widespread recognition as a player, he has also distinguished himself as a composer, with several NEA grants and commissions from the Lydian String Quartet, the Rova Saxophone Quartet and the New York String Trio.

A longtime educator, JD Parran is a highly versatile musician who has recorded with John Lennon and Lena Horne. As a vital participant in New York's cutting edge jazz scene, he's worked with many influential composers, such as Anthony Davis, Henry Threadgill, Oliver Lake and Julius Hemphill. Capable of playing with a light and pretty sound or a searing, gritty tone, Parran knows how to capture the essence of a composer's work while contributing his own sensibility.

One of jazz's most sought after bassists, Drew Gress performs extensively with artists on the cutting edge of contemporary improvised music. Also a respected composer, he has recorded a series of critically acclaimed albums under his own name. He's best known as an invaluable collaborator who has toured and recorded widely with brilliant improvisers such as John Abercrombie, Ralph Alessi, Tim Berne, Don Byron, Uri Caine, Ravi Coltrane, Marc Copland, Mark Feldman, Fred Hersch, John Hollenbeck, Tony Malaby, and John Surman.

As one of the world's most accomplished tuba players Marcus Rojas has contributed to more than 350 albums, working widely in pop, new music, Broadway and symphonic settings with the Metropolitan Opera, New York City Ballet, and American Ballet Theater. A masterly improviser, he's played an essential role in ensembles led by Lester Bowie, Charlie Haden, Gil Evans, George Russell, Jim Hall, Dave Douglas, Wayne Shorter, and David Byrne. He was a member of Henry Threadgill's Very Very Circus and is currently a member of Dave Douglas' Brass Ecstasy, Michael Blake's Hellbent, and Musette Explosion. As a founding member of SingleTree, Brass Bang, and Spanish Fly with Steven Bernstein and David Tronzo, he has written and commissioned many new works.

Percussionist Ches Smith has earned a vaunted reputation as a creative provocateur through his work with Marc Ribot, Mr. Bungle, Secret Chiefs 3, Fred Frith, Xiu Xiu, and Trevor Dunn's Trio-Convulsant. Carving out a singular niche where jazz, rock and new music converge, Smith can be heard in several galvanizing improvisational settings including his all- star project These Arches featuring Tim Berne, Tony Malaby, Mary Halvorson, and Andrea Parkins.

Hailing from a distinguished musical family, drummer George Schuller came up on the Boston scene playing with masters such as Jaki Byard, Herb Pomeroy, Ran Blake, and George Garzone. He first gained notice as a bandleader and arranger with the adventurous Boston combo Orange Then Blue, a talent-laden ensemble with a global sensibility. He's thrived since moving to Brooklyn in the mid-90s, collaborating with musicians such as Joe Lovano, Lee Konitz, Myra Melford and Dave Douglas. He has also produced several dozen albums by an equally impressive roster of artists.

Guitarist Liberty Ellman came of age musically on the San Francisco Bay Area scene in the mid 1990s, performing and recording widely with Vijay Iyer, Ledisi, Miya Masoaka, the radical hip hop crew The Coup, and altoist Steve Coleman. Since moving to New York City in 1998, he's established himself as one of the most dependably creative and idiosyncratic guitarists in jazz, a player with a funk-informed rhythmic sensibility. He's served as a for some of the most advanced and adventurous musicians in jazz, including Henry Threadgill, Wadada Leo Smith, Myra Melford, Greg Osby, Butch Morris, Rudresh Mahanthappa, and Steve Lehman.
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