


Alto saxophonist Steve Lehman leads his trio with bassist Matt Brewer and drummer Damion Reid, joined by tenor saxophonist Mark Turner, in a vibrant live homage to Anthony Braxton's small ensemble works, blending intricate modern jazz interplay with searing emotional expression in a bold, high-energy celebration of Braxton's enduring influence.
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Steve Lehman-alto saxophone
Mark Turner-tenor saxophone
Matt Brewer-bass
Damion Reid-drums
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UPC: 808713010626
Label: Pi Recordings
Catalog ID: Pi 106CD
Squidco Product Code: 35640
Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2025
Country: USA
Packaging: Digipack
Recorded live at ETA, in Los Angeles, California, on June 18th and 19th, 2023, by Bryce Gonzales,
"Steve Lehman — who The New York Times has hailed as a "virtuoso alto saxophonist" and a "state-of-the-art musical thinker" — returns with a highly-anticipated new release with his long-running trio featuring bassist Matt Brewer and drummer Damion Reid, this time joined by special guest tenor saxophonist Mark Turner. On the self-evidently entitled The Music of Anthony Braxton, Lehman pays homage to one of his earliest mentors, with a hard-swinging live album, commemorating the 80th anniversary of Braxton's birth.
[...]
Lehman first cut his teeth as a sideman in Braxton's main touring ensemble from 1999 to 2007, performing at international festivals and appearing on a host of recordings, including a tribute to the music of Andrew Hill (Nine Compositions (Hill) 2000). For this project, Lehman wanted to similarly plant a flag for Braxton's music: "Right off the bat, I knew I wanted to connect Anthony's music with new audiences and make a case for his small group music as a really indispensable part of the jazz canon. So, that meant being really discerning about the repertoire and making a conscious effort to work with musicians outside of Braxton's orbit who could bring new perspectives to the music." Lehman chose intricate, catchy, one-of-a-kind small-group compositions by Braxton that he originally recorded in the 1970s and 1980s with the likes of Ed Blackwell, Dave Holland, and Kenny Wheeler, among others on albums like Fall 1974, and Six Compositions: Quartet (1981).
To breathe new life into the music, Lehman enlisted the help of his long- standing trio, whose last album — The People I Love, with guest Craig Taborn on piano — was named a Best Jazz Album of 2019 by The New York Times. Pitchfork called it "a full-throttle mind-meld between two of the
best player-composers on the contemporary jazz scene." This time around, Lehman called on Mark Turner, one of the most influential jazz musicians of the past 30 years: "Mark always felt like a natural fit for this project because I knew he would find a way to make the music his own, and also because his work overlaps with Braxton's in so many meaningful ways. They're both heavily influenced by the music of Warne Marsh and the larger Tristano-inspired orbit. And they both have the ability to combine high-concept approaches with more visceral expressiveness." Lehman and Turner have been working together, off and on, since first appearing on Matt Brewer's debut recording, Mythology, in 2014. The two saxophonists share an obvious rapport — indeed, Turner's forthcoming 2025 quartet release on ECM features a composition entitled "Lehman's Lair" — that is revealed in surprising ways throughout this thrilling set of music.
The live concert was recorded in front of a boisterous crowd at ETA in Los Angeles. On "34a" and "23b" Lehman and Turner both go for broke, with their distinctive saxophone voices thrown into relief by the ever-inventive rhythm section work. The nimble precision of Brewer (SF Jazz, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Tyshawn Sorey) paired with the electrifying dexterity of Reid (Robert Glasper Trio) makes them a highpoint of any performance by Lehman's trio. "40b" features one of Braxton's one-of-a-kind melodic lines and the endless unfolding of "23c" is transformed as a result of Reid's ultramodern rhythmic approach. Lehman notes that "All of these Braxton pieces present really creative and innovative ideas about what you can do with a small ensemble of improvisers. Nothing is taken for granted: the role of the bass; how many instruments are going to be deployed at any given moment; prioritizing timbre over propulsion in the use of the drums, and compositional forms that morph and evolve over time, instead of staying static. It's really different from what we normally hear in the standard modern jazz format. But it's also inextricably connected to those roots."
The set also includes two new Lehman compositions: "LA Genes" and "Unbroken & Unspoken" that provide a fascinating glimpse into the ways in which Lehman's compositional approach is both informed by and yet distinct from Braxton's. The album ends with Thelonious Monk's "Trinkle, Tinkle," a piece that Lehman chose in an effort to highlight the connection between the melodic line of that piece and "23b." "I think the Monk piece really solidifies the idea of a kind of continuum of radical experimentation that permeates the entire jazz canon, and Braxton is a huge part of that. It's something I'm incredibly proud to be connected to. I think that joy and excitement come across in every note that Mark and Matt and Damion and I play on this album. When it's our turn to turn 80, I think that's the legacy that we hope to look back on.
Lehman, a Pi Recordings artist for two decades, has built a career creating innovative, uncompromising music that packs a visceral punch. His 2023 release Ex Machina with the Orchestre National de Jazz was awarded 5 Stars by DownBeat, who called it "astonishing, richly detailed, brilliantly colored and full of improvisational power." The album was also voted #3 album of the year in the annual Francis Davis Poll of over 150 jazz critics and hailed by The New York Times as "an electrifying new concept for a jazz big band." His signature alto sound — searing with emotional intensity and crystal-clear articulation — has been featured in high-profile partnerships with Vijay Iyer, Jason Moran, and Bennie Maupin among many others. As further evidence of the breadth of Lehman's wide-ranging artistry, his avant-rap collective, Selebeyone, recently received a Doris Duke Technology Lab grant to pursue research in Senegal this year."-Pi Recording

Artist Biographies
• Show Bio for Steve Lehman "Described as "a state-of-the-art musical thinker" and a "dazzling saxophonist," by The New York Times, Steve Lehman (b. New York City, 1978) is a composer, performer, educator, and scholar who works across a broad spectrum of experimental musical idioms. Lehman's pieces for large orchestra and chamber ensembles have been performed by the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), So Percussion, Kammerensemble Neue Musik Berlin, the JACK Quartet, the PRISM Saxophone Quartet, and the Talea Ensemble. His recent recording, Mise en Abîme (Pi, 2014) was called the #1 Jazz Album of the year by NPR Music and The Los Angeles Times. And his previous recording, Travail, Transformation & Flow (Pi, 2009), was chosen as the #1 Jazz Album of the year by The New York Times. The recipient of a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship and a 2014 Doris Duke Artist Award, Lehman is an alto saxophonist who has performed and recorded nationally and internationally with his own ensembles and with those led by Anthony Braxton, Vijay Iyer, Jason Moran, Meshell Ndegeocello, and High Priest of Anti-Pop Consortium, among many others. His recent electro-acoustic music has focused on the development of computer-driven models for improvisation, based in the Max/MSP programming environment. Lehman's work has been favorably reviewed in Artforum, Downbeat Magazine, The New York Times, Newsweek, and The Wire, and on National Public Radio, the BBC, and SWR. As a Fulbright scholar in France during the 2002-2003 academic year, Lehman began researching the reception of African-American experimental composers working in France during the 1970s. His article in the journal Critical Studies in Improvisation, "I Love You with an Asterisk: African-American Experimental Composers and the French Jazz Press, 1970-1980," is based on his Fulbright research. More recently, Lehman has published writings and presented lectures on a wide range of topics, including jazz pedagogy, rhythm cognition, and European notions of American experimentalism. His current scholarship, including a forthcoming contribution to the Oxford Handbook of Spectral Music, examines the overlapping histories of spectral composition and jazz improvisation. Lehman received his B.A. (2000) and M.A. in Composition (2002) from Wesleyan University where he studied under Anthony Braxton, Jay Hoggard, and Alvin Lucier, while concurrently working with Jackie McLean at the Hartt School of Music. He received his doctorate with distinction in Music Composition from Columbia University (2012), where his principal teachers included Tristan Murail and George Lewis. Lehman has taught undergraduate courses at Wesleyan University, the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris, New School University, and Columbia University, and has presented lectures at Amherst College, UC Berkeley, The Berklee School of Music, The Banff Centre, The Royal Academy of Music in London, and IRCAM in Paris, where he was a 2011 research fellow. Beginning in September 2016, Lehman will join the music faculty at The California Institute of the Arts." ^ Hide Bio for Steve Lehman • Show Bio for Mark Turner "[...] Born in 1965 in Ohio and raised in Southern California, Turner grew up surrounded by music of Bola Tangkas Online. There was always a lot of R&B and jazz and soul and gospel going on in the house all the time, he recalls. This was in the early 70s, when the whole integration and civil rights thing had begun to go mainstream, and my mother and stepfather were in the first wave of young black professionals and intellectuals who moved to upper-middle-class white neighborhoods. They and their friends were always going out to see live jazz. I was intrigued by that, and I was intrigued by the whole history of jazz music and African-American culture, as well as the music itself. And my father, who died when I was one and a half, had played saxophone, so maybe I was looking for a connection with him too. After starting out on clarinet in elementary school, Turner gravitated towards saxophone in high school, while also exploring his talent for the visual arts. Although he briefly studied design and illustration at Long Beach State University, his passion for jazz ultimately led him to pursue a career in music. Turners meticulous, analytical work ethic led him to study and dissect the work of such saxophone giants as John Coltrane, Joe Henderson, Dexter Gordon, Sonny Rollins, Warne Marsh and Lester Young in the pursuit his own musical voice. I really got into it and worked really hard, just trying to figure out who I am, he says, adding, Thats how I am with everything. It took a while, and it was kind of an arduous struggle, but it allowed me to figure out what I wanted from music. Even when I was spending my time sounding like other people, I felt like that was part of my path to sounding like myself. The more you spend time with the form and the language, the more your own personality comes out. After graduating from Bostons prestigious Berklee College of Music in 1990, Turner moved to New York, where his rapidly developing talents were quickly recognized. Between 1995 and 2001, he recorded five albums of his own-Yam Yam, Mark Turner, In This World, Ballad Session and Dharma Days-while keeping busy as a sought-after collaborator and sideman. It was around 1992 that I began to notice or feel that what I was doing was uniquely mine, Turner asserts. It had been two and a half years of struggle, but the summer of 1992 was the period where I was finally able to hear it. Maybe no one else would notice, but thats where I could see how things were gonna go. Despite his growing reputation and influence, Turner intentionally pulled back from working as a leader after 2001s Dharma Days, focusing much of his energy on parenthood while channeling his creativity into numerous collaborative projects. The last record I made was right when our first child was born, and that had a lot to do with me pulling back from being a leader for awhile, Turner states, explaining, Being a leader is so intense and you really have to put your whole self into it, and I just felt like I wanted to be there for my kids. When youre a leader, youre carrying a lot of weight and responsible for a lot of things that have nothing with music. Being a sideman, you basically just have to worry about being there and doing a good job. But my kids are 10 and 13 now, so its a little less demanding and Ive got more room now to do more things that I feel strongly about. Of his forthcoming album, a quartet effort with Avishai Cohen on trumpet, Joe Martin on bass and Marcus Gilmore on drums, Turner notes, I spent a lot of time on the compositions, which I usually do. The blowing is important, but I dont think about that when Im writing. I just write the tune, and then we see if we can improvise on it or not. Some of the new tunes are long and kind of involved, and some of them are kind of my version of being pyrotechnical. I just wanted to explore, and I wanted to be able to go in there with a band that would be flexible and have the craftsmanship and the foundation to play something difficult and still make it sound musical. Despite his long-awaited return to recording as a leader, Turner still values his collaborative work and has no plans to cut back on it. I would never want to solely be a leader, and if someone handed me the chance to do that, Id say no, he says. I like to interpret other peoples music. I learn from doing that, and its a big part of what Ive become as a musician. In the situations where Im the leader and writing the music, its a combination of everything Ive heard and everything Ive done,. The way that I write and the way that I play and the bands that I bring together are all a representation of all of the musical situations that Ive been in, and Id never want to give that up. With an impressive musical history already under his belt and more on the way, Mark Turner is clearly on the verge of a creative renaissance. As The New York Times noted, His best work is clearly still ahead of him." ^ Hide Bio for Mark Turner • Show Bio for Matt Brewer "Matt Brewer was born in Oklahoma City but spent most of his youth in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Born into a musical family, Matt was surrounded by music from an early age, both his father and grandfather being jazz musicians, and his mother an avid music lover and radio DJ (who, even before Matt was born, would play classic jazz albums for him). After graduating from the Interlochen Arts Academy, Matt attended the inagural class of The Juilliard Jazz Program and studied with bassists Rodney Whitaker and Ben Wolfe. After spending two years at Juilliard he decided to leave school to make time for his busy touring schedule. Since then he has worked with artists such as Greg Osby, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Lee Konitz, David Sanchez, Terence Blanchard, Antonio Sanchez, Vijay Iyer, Adam Rogers, Steve Coleman, Dave Binney, Aaron Parks, Jeff "Tain" Watts, and many others. He recently recorded his second album as a leader on the Criss Cross Jazz label. He is an adjunct faculty member at The New School, and has been a frequent guest artist/teacher at the Banff Center." ^ Hide Bio for Matt Brewer • Show Bio for Damion Reid "Damion Reid hailing from West Covina, California a city east of Los Angeles. He is the son of well-respected bassist and astute operatic singer and teacher. By the age of three, Damion was already playing in church. It was around the age of twelve that Damion began being mentored by the world-renowned drummer Billy Higgins. During these formative years Billy's spirit for life and music was deeply seeded in Damion's fertile mind. Seeing Damion's ability to grasp the music both, analytically and conceptually it wasn't long before Billy invited him to be a part of his drum collective. As he began to mature musically he found himself frequenting Billy's club "The World Stage," learning and playing with the likes of Billy Childs, George Bohanon and Oscar Brashear. As Damion continued to cultivate his love for music through his high school years, he managed school life with professional obligations. Damion graduated High School and made the move to Boston, Massachusetts New England Conservatory of Music where he spent time with Cecil McBee, Danilo Perez, Fred Buda and George Russell as well as his musical peers. It was while in Boston between the years of 1998 and 1999 that he received the prestigious Alan Dawson scholarship. He then was accepted into the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz at the University of Southern California. Soon finding himself trekking to New York City to attend The New School. He then began performing and touring alongside Greg Osby, Terence Blanchard, Robert Glasper, Steve Lehman, Rudresh Mahanthappa, Jacky Terrasson, Ravi Coltrane, Reggie Workman, Marcus Belgrave, Lauryn Hill, Robert Hurst, Bilal, Meshell Ndegeocello, Jason Moran, Mark Shim, Mark Turner, Chihiro Yamanaka, Steve Coleman, Bunky Green and many others." ^ Hide Bio for Damion Reid
4/21/2025
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4/21/2025
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4/21/2025
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
4/21/2025
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Track Listing:
1. 34a 8:28
2. L.A. Genes 4:19
3. 40b 11:30
4. 23b + 23g 8:04
5. 23c 5:45
6. Unbroken and Unspoken 6:10
7. 23e + 40a 3:44
8. Trinkle, Tinkle 8:21

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