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“Zenón is one of the many shining lights in jazz music
today, with fresh concepts and fluid angularity from his slightly
acidic-toned alto.” (Mark F. Turner, All About Jazz)
Dubbed “one of the strongest
saxophonists in New York” by the New York Times, Puerto Rico
native Miguel Zenón has recently toured the nation with the SF
Jazz Collective, David Sanchez, Charlie Haden, and his own quartet.
With Luis Perdomo on piano, Hans Glawischnig on bass, and Henry Cole
on drums, Zenon will be on stage at the Jazz Showcase
in Chicago, September 6-11, and at the Jazz Bakery in
Los Angeles for three nights, September 12-14.
In his native San Juan, Zenón
studied saxophone at the famed Escuela Libre de Musica. Exposed to
Charlie Parker and other jazz legends while in high school, he didn’t
begin formal jazz studies until he received a scholarship from the
Puerto Rico Heineken Jazz Festival to study at the Berklee School of
Music in Boston. At Berklee he received the Berklee Best Scholarship
Award, the Frederic Cameron Weber Award, and a grant from the
Corporation of Musical Arts. Meanwhile, he gained professional
experience with drummer Bob Moses' Mozamba and the Either/Orchestra.
After graduating from Berklee in 1998, Zenón received a
scholarship to the Manhattan School of Music, where he studied with
Danilo Perez, Dick Oatts, Dave Liebman, George Garzone, and Bill
Pierce; he earned his Masters in Saxophone Performance in 2001.
In his young career, the 28-year-old
alto sensation has performed and/or recorded with such artists and
groups as David Sanchez, Danilo Perez, William Cepeda's Afrorican
Jazz, The Village Vanguard Orchestra, The Guillermo Klein Big Band,
The Mingus Big Band, The David Murray Big Band, Charlie Haden,
Branford Marsalis, Ray Barretto, and Edward Simon, among others. In
the spring of 2004 he was selected to help form “The SFJAZZ
Collective,” a project created by the San Francisco Jazz Festival
under the leadership of Joshua Redman.
As a leader, Miguel Zenón has
released three recordings: Looking Forward (Fresh Sound/New
Talent) was selected by both The New York Times and TomaJazz
Magazine as on of the top 10 Jazz CDs of 2002. In 2004, he
released Ceremonial as one of the first artists signed to the
new Marsalis Music label. Now, with his new recording Jibaro,
the winner of the 2004 Downbeat Magazine Critics Poll for
“Alto Saxophone Deserving Wider Recognition” takes his
explorations of native Puerto Rican music to a new level, “a
perfect example of his astonishing concentration” (Andrew Gilbert,
Jazz Times).  Photo by Andrea Canter
Accompanying
Miguel Zenón on the new recording and on tour, pianist Luis
Perdomo has toured recently with the Ravi Coltrane Quartet.
Born in Caracas, Venezuela, Perdomo began his professional career at
age 12, playing on Venezuelan radio and television. He moved to New
York to study at the Manhattan School of Music, later becoming a
student of Sir Roland Hanna when he pursued graduate studies at
Queens College. In addition to leading his own group and playing with
the Miguel Zenón Quartet, Perdomo plays with John Patitucci,
Ravi Coltrane, Brian Lynch, Claudia Acuña, Ray Barretto’s
New World Spirits, and Ralph Irizarry’s Timbalaye. In his own trio,
he typically collaborates with such jazz stars as Jeff "Tain"
Watts, James Genus, Hans Glawischnig, and Jeff Ballard. Perdomo
recently released his first recording as leader, Focus Point
(RKM Records). Noted Ben Ratliffe (New York Times), “Luis
Perdomo plays serious, analytical music, wrapped in complexities of
rhythm…”
Bassist
Hans Glawischnig was born in Graz, Austria, the son of
a pianist/educator. He enrolled in the Academy
of Music in Graz as a violin student at age six, switching to
electric bass at 13 and then to the acoustic bass, which became his
primary instrument. After finishing high school, Glawischnig attended
the Berklee College of Music in Boston, and graduate studies at the
Manhattan School of Music. In 1995, he was invited join Bobby
Watson's Urban Renewal band on the recommendation of fellow student
Stefon Harris; a stint with Maynard Ferguson's Big Bop Nouveau soon
followed. The following year he joined Ray Barretto’s New World
Spirit Ensemble, and subsequently worked with Paquito D'Riviera,
Stefon Harris, Claudio Roditi, Phil Woods, Claudia Acuna, Mark
Murphy, and David Sanchez, among others. As a leader, Glawischnig has
released Common Ground on Fresh Sound/New Talent (2003).
Drummer
Henry Cole has been keeping busy playing with modern
leaders of Latin jazz, including Paquito D’Riviera, David Sanchez,
Luis Perdomo, and of course Miguel Zenón.
These four music monsters come together
for six nights in Chicago followed by three hot nights in LA for
three hot nights in LA. From there it’s a night at the Detroit
Museum of Art (September 16) and back west for an appearance at the
Monterey Jazz Festival (September 17). Find out why all the buzz that
followed the SF Jazz Collective’s tour was about Miguel Zenón!
“…he has established himself as
an invaluable new voice on the scene, a player bristling with ideas
and blessed with committed collaborators capable of exploring his
difficult compositions. He stands out not just for the quality of his
sound--lithe and quicksilver, vulnerable yet poised. It's the
capacious nature of his music, with each original piece revealing new
dimensions of a seemingly infinite sonic universe governed by
invisible but inexorably logical rules.” –Andrew Gilbert,
Jazz Times
Miguel Zenón and his quartet
will be at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago (59 W. Grand), weeknights at
8 and 10 pm, weekends at 9 and 11 pm, Sunday matinee at 4:30 pm;
www.jazzshowcase.com.The
quartet will be at the Jazz Bakery in Los Angeles (3233 Helms
Blvd), September 12-14; sets at 8 and 9:30 pm, $20 cover.
Visit www.jazzbakery.com.
From LA, the quartet will do a one-night performance at the Detroit
Museum of Art on September 16th, then head back to the
west coast to perform at the Monterey Jazz Festival on the 17th.
Learn more about Miguel Zenón at the artist’s website,
www.miguelzenon.com |