"Interview Music" Premiering September 20 in Berkeley
Hi folks, I'm very excited to announce the premiere of a new piece for my Quintet+1 which I've been working on for the past year. The piece, titled Interview Music: A Suite for Quintet+1, and made possible by a grant from the San Francisco Friends of Chamber Music's Musical Grant Program, will be presented Saturday, September 20 at the California Jazz Conservatory (formerly known as the Jazzschool) in Berkeley. It will feature the talents of Adam Shulman, piano, Fred Randolph, bass, Jon Arkin, drums, Kasey Knudsen, alto saxophone, Sheldon Brown, bass clarinet, and myself on trumpet.Below is a press release about the piece, including what that name means, my own background as a composer, and the history of the band. I hope to see you at the premiere!
"The first thing you need to know about 'Interview Music,'" says Bay Area trumpeter and composer Ian Carey about his new jazz suite, "is that it's not about trying to get more interviews." (Though he's not averse to the idea, he adds.)The piece, which will be premiered at the California Jazz Conservatory (formerly the Jazzschool) in Berkeley on Saturday, September 20, at 8:00 pm, is a 45-minute, four-movement adventure and Carey's longest composition to date. It is a vehicle both for his intricate writing and the improvisational chops of his group, the Ian Carey Quintet+1, last heard on 2013's acclaimed album Roads & Codes (Kabocha Records), which received praise from DownBeat and NPR, and appeared on many critics' best of 2013 lists.The title of "Interview Music" refers to a recent discussion in the jazz world over the increasing percentage of new music being funded through nonprofit commissions and grants, and whether that system favors what the late pianist Mulgrew Miller called "interview music"—high-concept, programmatic works, often with subject matter like visual artists, literary figures, or social movements. "Everyone started to get the feeling," says Carey, "that they'd never get a second look if their music wasn't about Pablo Neruda or the grape boycott or the Fibonacci sequence or whatever."
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