Golden City Miguel Zenón
Album info
Album-Release:
2024
HRA-Release:
30.08.2024
Album including Album cover
- 1 Sacred Land 08:30
- 2 Rush 03:33
- 3 Acts of Exclusion 06:08
- 4 9066 07:32
- 5 Displacement and Erasure 07:34
- 6 SRO 06:39
- 7 Wave of Change 04:08
- 8 Sanctuary City 06:37
- 9 Cultural Corridor 06:42
- 10 The Power of Community 04:49
- 11 Golden 06:29
Info for Golden City
Over the course of his brilliant and groundbreaking quarter-century career, Grammy Award-winning alto saxophonist and composer Miguel Zenón has reveled in doing the hard work, whether he was transforming Puerto Rican plena into a vehicle for improvisation or writing a body of tunes inspired by the history of the American continent. But no project he’s tackled has involved the kind of intensive, granular research required by Golden City, a sweeping suite inspired by the demographic and political evolution of San Francisco, from the pre-colonial period to the contemporary tech-dominated era. His 17th album as a leader, Golden City is slated for release August 30, 2024 via Zenón’s Miel Music label.
Commissioned by SFJAZZ and the Hewlett Foundation, “Golden City Suite” premiered at the SFJAZZ Center in 2022 with a production designed for an unusual all-star trombone-centric nonet. The inveterately curious Zenón embraced the assignment by delving into California’s history, “all the way back to the beginning with Native communities,” he says. “All the way back to when it was Mexico, and the Gold Rush, and the waves of Asian migration. I talked to about 50 individuals and came out the other side with a lot more information to feed the creative process.”
While Golden City isn’t programmatic, it’s a body of music deeply informed by the places and people Zenón visited. More than a musical presentation, the work became a multimedia production in collaboration with Opera Parallèle set designer Brian Staufenbiel and projection designer David Murakami, who created a visual environment for the evening-length work, which features 10 interconnected but independent movements.
While he went into the research without a sense of the kind of ensemble he’d be writing for, Zenón came to hear a brass and rhythm section nonet pivoting on the captivating guitar of Miles Okazaki. The group is built on the oft-paired tandem of pianist Matt Mitchell and drummer Dan Weiss, with whom he’s often worked, and bassist Chris Tordini, who has sometimes expanded that trio to a quartet. The wild card is percussionist Daniel Díaz, “who I know from Puerto Rico,” Zenón says. “I’m always trying to find ways to collaborate with him. He’s a special musician who can play all the percussion, all the street stuff, and read anything.”
The formidable horn section features trombonist Alan Ferber, Diego Urcola on trumpet and valve trombone, and Jacob Garchik on trombone and tuba. The instrumentation reflects Zenón’s formative experience soaking up the sounds of Latin music innovators like Willie Colon, Los Van Van, and Rubén Blades. “There’s something about the darker brass timbre of that configuration I really like, something that’s punchy and dark and not too brassy,” he says. “But really, it’s about these musicians. I love all those guys and how they play.”
The album opens an elegiac solo saxophone passage that evolves into “Sacred Land,” an incantatory invocation. The intricately interlocking themes woven through “Rush” evoke that epochal impact of gold’s discovery at Sutter’s Mill in 1848, “a before and after” that Zenón evokes with “this idea of layering space within space where it feels like a rhythmic puzzle,” he says. “It subdivides space into something that’s meant to symbolize lots of movement and people going in different directions.”
His deep research into the history of the Bay Area’s Chinese-American community informed “Acts Of Exclusion,” a punchy piece built on a long row of pitches that Zenón rearranged, restoring tonality to an atonal sequence inspired by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. He explores a very different atonal mood on the piano-and-bass driven “9066,” a title that refers to FDR’s notorious Executive Order that interned people of Japanese descent after Pearl Harbor. Mostly through composed, it’s a forbidding piece that uses the four numerals as the basis for rows, tones and rhythms. The whole form is played three times, with different layers added on each repetition.
“Displacement and Erasure” refers to the waves of gentrification that have swept through San Francisco’s working-class neighborhoods, a force Zenón witnessed firsthand during his 14-year stint as a founding member of the SFJAZZ Collective. The piece sounds like a theme from a gritty urban neo-noir film, with a misplaced pulse that shifts throughout the tune. The pulse is also what drives “SRO,” which starts with due deliberation and gradually gains momentum. Zenón explores a different kind of swagger with “Wave Of Change,” a Mingusy blues lament that lands with the inexorable power of tsunami.
Sinuous and inviting, “Sanctuary City” is a contrafact of “Sanctuary,” drawing on the melody, form and chord changes of Wayne Shorter’s classic piece introduced on Bitches Brew. It’s a respite that invites a celebration, which arrives with Caribbean flair on “Cultural Corridor,” a plena-powered piece celebrating San Francisco’s so-called “Cultural Districts,” such as Japantown, Calle 24, and SOMA Pilipinas. With “Power of Community,” Zenón concludes Golden City with a deep, calming breath, paying tribute to the culture workers and community activists “holding everything together,” he says. As a postscript, years after he completed the suite, Zenón added “Golden,” an epilogue track that reflects back on the journey and seems to offer a tenuously optimistic take on the region’s future.
The future couldn’t look much brighter when it comes to Zenón’s creative output. Born in San Juan, Puerto Rico on Dec. 30, 1976, he’s one of the most celebrated jazz artists of his generation. Recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship at the age of 31, he’s also a Guggenheim Fellow and was recently named a 2024 Doris Duke Artist. His previous album, 2023’s gorgeous ballad session with Venezuelan pianist Luis Perdomo El Arte Del Bolero Vol. 2, won the 2024 Grammy for Best Latin Jazz Album.
It’s been a fascinating journey as his musical move away from home ended up bringing him back to the island. Already a standout musician steeped in European classical music when he became fascinated by jazz in his mid-teens, Zenón spent the next decade immersing himself in jazz’s harmonic and rhythmic intricacies at Berklee and the Manhattan School of Music. But Zenón’s distance from home gradually brought Puerto Rican music into his keen focus.
He’s released a series of revelatory albums delving into various Puerto Rican traditions and the Latin American songbook. But his purview encompasses a far-flung constellation of musical idioms and situations, driven by his interest in history, people, and the forces that shape society. What sets Golden City apart is the way the music was informed by his interactions with the communities that have shaped the Bay Area. Leading by example, Zenón followed his own curiosity, delving into the history of one of the world’s iconic cities. More often than not the stories aren’t pretty, but the music finds the beauty and resilience that give San Francisco its soul.
Miguel Zenón, alto saxophone
Matt Mitchell, piano
Chris Tordini, bass
Dan Weiss, drums
Miles Okazaki, guitar
Daniel Díaz, congas, tripandero and percussion
Diego Urcola, trumpet and valve trombone (solo on Sacred Land)
Alan Ferber, trombone (solo on Displacement and Erasure)
Jacob Garchik, tuba and trombone (solo on Sanctuary City)
Recorded November 27th & 28th, 2023 at Oktaven Audio Mount Vernon, NY by Ryan Streber
Mixed and Edited by Brian Montgomery and Miguel Zenón
Mastered by Mark Wilder
Produced by Miguel Zenón
Miguel Zenón
Multiple Grammy Nominee and Guggenheim and MacArthur Fellow Miguel Zenón represents a select group of musicians who have masterfully balanced and blended the often-contradictory poles of innovation and tradition. Widely considered as one of the most groundbreaking and influential saxophonists of his generation, he has also developed a unique voice as a composer and as a conceptualist, concentrating his efforts on perfecting a fine mix between Latin American Folkloric Music and Jazz.
Born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Zenón has built a distinguished career as a leader, releasing twelve albums under his own name. In addition, he has crafted his artistic identity by dividing his time equally between working with older jazz masters and the music’s younger innovators –irrespective of styles and genres. The list of musicians Zenón has toured and/or recorded with includes: The SFJAZZ Collective, Charlie Haden, Fred Hersch, Kenny Werner, David Sánchez, Danilo Pérez, The Village Vanguard Orchestra, Guillermo Klein & Los Guachos, The Jeff Ballard Trio, Antonio Sánchez, David Gilmore, Paoli Mejías, Brian Lynch, Jason Lindner, Dan Tepfer, Miles Okazaki, Dan Weiss, Ray Barreto, Andy Montañez, Jerry Gonzalez & The Fort Apache Band, The Mingus Big Band, Bobby Hutcherson and Steve Coleman.
As a composer he has been commissioned by SFJAZZ, The New York State Council for the Arts, Chamber Music America, NYO JAZZ , The Logan Center for The Arts, The Hyde Park Jazz Festival, The John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, MIT, Jazz Reach, Peak Performances, PRISM Quartet and many of his peers.
Zenón has been featured in articles on publications such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune, Bloomberg Pursuits, Jazz Times, Jazziz, Boston Globe, Billboard, Jazz Inside, Newsday and Details. In addition he topped both the Jazz Artist of the Year and Alto Saxophonist of the Year categories on the 2014 Jazz Times Critics Poll and was selected as the Alto Saxophonist of the Year by the Jazz Journalist Association in 2015, 2018 and 2019.
His biography would not be complete without discussing his role as an educator. In 2003, he was chosen by the Kennedy Center to teach and perform in West Africa as part of their Jazz Ambassador program. Since then, he has given hundreds of lectures and master classes and has taught all over the world at institutions which include: The Banff Centre, Berklee College of Music, Siena Jazz, Universidad Veracruzana, Conservatorium Van Amsterdam, Musik Akademie Basel, Conservatoire de Paris, University of Manitoba, Conservatorio de Música de Puerto Rico, Manhattan School of Music, San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Columbia University, Princeton University, The Kimmel Center, UMass-Amherst and the Brubeck Institute. He is also a permanent faculty member at New England Conservatory of Music. But perhaps what best reflects his commitment to education and cements his growing reputation as a “cultural ambassador”, is a program that he founded in 2011, called Caravana Cultural.
The main purpose of Caravana Cultural is to present free-of-charge Jazz concerts in rural areas of Puerto Rico. The program makes a “cultural investment” in the Island by giving these communities a chance to listen to jazz of the highest caliber (Zenón invites some of the best musicians in the New York jazz scene to perform as guests), while at the same time getting young Puerto Rican musicians actively involved in the concert activities. Since February 2011, Zenón has presented a concert every four to six months. Each concert focuses on the music of a specific jazz legend (Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, among others) and is preceded by a pre-concert presentation which touches on the basic elements of jazz and improvisation. Since 2005 Zenón has also personally organized “Jazz Jam Sessions” in the area of San Juan, as a way of creating a platform for younger jazz musicians to grow and interact with one another.
In 2008 he was selected as one of 25 distinguished individuals to receive the prestigious and coveted MacArthur Fellowship, more commonly known as the “Genius Grant”.
Zenón lives in New York City with his wife Elga and their daughter.
This album contains no booklet.