Sunday, June 14, 2020

USA: Brad Mehldau’s Suite: April 2020 Available on Nonesuch TODAY!

Brad Mehldau’s Suite: April 2020
Available on Nonesuch TODAY!

Proceeds To Benefit
THE JAZZ FOUNDATION OF AMERICA's
COVID 19 MUSICIANS' EMERGENCY FUND
While sheltering at home with his family in the Netherlands during the COVID-19 pandemic this spring, pianist and composer Brad Mehldau wrote twelve new songs about what he was experiencing; together with interpretations of three tunes that mean a great deal to him personally.

The resulting solo album, Suite: April 2020, is available today, at 10am ET
as a limited-edition deluxe 180-gram vinyl LP. One thousand numbered and signed copies are available for $100 across the Nonesuch StoreBandcamp, and Discogs. A minimum of $90 from each sale will be donated to the Jazz Foundation of America’s COVID-19 Musician’s Emergency Fund (after distribution fees).

Suite: April 2020 is also available digitally today; CD and standard vinyl editions will be available September 18, and a portion of their sales also will benefit JFA’s Fund.

A video for the album track “remembering before all this,” with an introduction by Mehldau, is available here,Sheet music for the song is included with Nonesuch Storeorders.

As Mehldau says, “Suite: April 2020 is a musical snapshot of life the last month in the world in which we’ve all found ourselves. I’ve tried to portray on the piano some experiences and feelings that are both new and common to many of us.

In ‘Keeping Distance,’ for example, I traced the experience of two people social distancing, represented by the left and right hand—how they are unnaturally drawn apart, yet remain linked in some unexplainable, and perhaps illuminating way. As difficult as COVID-19 has been for many of us, there have been moments of revelation along the way. ‘Stopping, Listening: Hearing’ highlights that moment as well.

“I’ve pointed to some of the strong feelings that have arisen the past month or more: ‘Remembering Before All This’ expresses a bittersweet gut-pain that has hit me several times out of the blue, when I think back on how things were even just a few months ago, and how long ago and far away that seems now; ‘Uncertainty’ hits on the feeling that can follow right after that—a hollow fear of an unknown future,” he continues. 
 
“There’s also been a welcome opportunity to connect more deeply with my family than we ever have, because of the abundant time and close proximity. The last three pieces hit on that connection—the harmony we find with each other, making meals together or just horsing around. ‘Lullaby’ is for everyone who might find it hard to sleep now.” 
 
“Neil Young’s words in ‘Don’t Let It Bring You Down’ have always been counsel for me, now more than ever, when he instructs: ‘Don’t let it bring you down/It’s only castles burning/Find someone who’s turning/And you will come around.’ Billy Joel’s ‘New York State of Mind,’ a song I’ve loved since I was nine years old, is a love letter to a city that I’ve called my home for years, and that I’m far away from now. I know lots of people there and miss them terribly, and I know how much that great city hurts right now. I also know that it too will come around.”