9 Horses
9 Horses in 2016
9 Horses in 2016
Background information
OriginNew York City
GenresJazz, avant-garde jazz, experimental, chamber jazz
Years active2013–present
LabelsSunnyside, Adhyâropa Records
MembersJoseph Brent, Sara Caswell, Andrew Ryan
Past membersShawn Conley, Ben Wittman, Emily Hope Price, Ike Sturm, Nathan Koci, Justin Goldner, Brett Parnell, Taylor Haskins
Websitewww.josephbrent.com/9horses

9 Horses is a chamber jazz group from the United States consisting of composer and mandolinist Joseph Brent, violinist Sara Caswell, and bassist Andrew Ryan, originating from New York City.[1]

History

Brent and bassist Shawn Conley first played together in 2010 in Brent's short-lived project The Joe Brent Quartet, which also featured clarinetist Hideaki Aomori and guitarist Nadav Lev. However, when Brent's commitments to Regina Spektor's touring band and his teaching responsibilities at Mannes College spread his time too thin, he put the quartet project on hold.[2] In 2012, he started performing as a duo with Caswell,[3] and after releasing Joe Brent & Sara Caswell EP together in 2013, they decided to add a bass player and Brent called on Conley once again, renaming the new ensemble after the Billy Collins poem of the same name. After making the finals of the 2014 Concert Artists Guild Victor Elmaleh Competition,[4] they were signed to Sunnyside Records and released their debut album, Perfectest Herald in October, 2015.[5] The recording includes percussionist Ben Wittman, but live performances generally feature either the trio alone, or guest musicians such as Emily Hope Price or Ike Sturm. In 2016, after adding Ryan, they were the 1st Prize winners of the inaugural 21CM Launch: Emerging Artists competition.[6]

9 Horses (l-r Sara Caswell, Joseph Brent, Andrew Ryan)

Brent is originally from Queens, New York, but spent much of his childhood in Tampa, Florida.[7] Caswell is from Bloomington, Indiana,[8] while Ryan hails from Denver, Colorado.[9]

Brent was formerly a member of Regina Spektor's band,[10] is an active classical soloist,[11] and with Caswell he occasionally performs with Kishi Bashi. Caswell is also a member of Esperanza Spalding's Chamber Music Society[12] and David Krakauer's The Big Picture.[13] Ryan performs with newgrass ensemble The Freewheel Trio,[14] Canadian folk musician Kaia Kater, and has been a member of OneBeat.[15][16]

The trio's music, all of which is composed or arranged by Brent, combines elements of improvised musical forms with classical chamber music and Brent's own indie rock influences. The four movement piece entitled Perfectest Herald which gives the album its name and acts as its centerpiece contains elements of rock, new music, Middle Eastern music, jazz, rhythm and blues, and traditional classical music, most notably in the 2nd movement, listening to the Elliott Smith discography in reverse order, in which a single musical subject passes through all of the aforementioned genres and a fugue before recapitulating.[17] The music for the 'Perfectest Herald' suite has been called, "...among the most life affirming one will ever hear... Regardless of which emotional depths Brent drew on to compose these pieces, this highly emotive music touches and communicates the essence of what it means to be an alive, feeling human being."[18]

2019 saw the release of a 4-song EP called Blood From A Stone, featuring their experiments with electronic music, collective improvisation, and influences from rock, jazz, and hip hop, Blood From A Stone was called, "extraordinary," and, "a sound world that crashes together acoustic and electric textures with composed and improvised performances,"[19] and allowed 9 Horses to experiment in preparation for their 2021 double LP, Omegah.

Omegah was named one of the Best Recordings of the Year by numerous publications.[20] Strings Magazine called it, "A restless shapeshifting amalgam of jazz, rock, pop, improvisation, melody, and variegated acoustic and electronic textures… Only 9 Horses can make such a complex and experimental mix of timbres, colors, and themes sound so effortless and free,"[21] and Textura added, "Rather than get sidetracked by futile attempts at categorizing, one's best advised to go where the music leads and simply enjoy a seventy-seven-minute ride that's ever scenic and always stimulating… If (Caswell) hadn't already distinguished herself in so many ways before it, her playing on Omegah would qualify as a star-making turn. The genre-transcending character of the material is matched by her versatility and virtuosity."[22]

Discography

As Joe Brent & Sara Caswell

  • Joe Brent & Sara Caswell EP (2013)

As 9 Horses

Studio albums

  • Perfectest Herald (2015)
  • Blood From a Stone (EP) (2019)
  • Omegah (2021)

Other contributions

Year Artist Album Description
2013 Kishi Bashi 7" Box Set Brent and Caswell play violin
2014 Lauren Kinhan Circle in the Square Brent and Caswell play violin
2015 Kishi Bashi String Quartet Live! Brent plays mandolin and violin; Caswell plays violin
2018 The Mountain Goats and Welcome to Night Vale I Only Listen to the Mountain Goats: All Hail West Texas Brent plays electric mandolin and Ryan plays bass with Erin McKeown on Brent's arrangement of 'Jenny'[23]
Adhyâropa Records
Founded2021 (2021)
FounderJoe Brent and Andrew Ryan
GenreJazz, Nu jazz, World music, Americana
Country of originU.S.
LocationNew York City
Official websitewww.adhyaroparecords.com

Adhyâropa Records

Adhyâropa Records is an American record company and label established by Joe Brent and Andrew Ryan in 2021 initially to release their own music and that of musicians affiliated with 9 Horses, but has branched out to release music by others across several genres. Albums by artists such as Sam Sadigursky,[24] Joe K. Walsh,[25] Matt Aronoff,[26] and Jacob Jolliff[27] followed, and Adhyâropa continues to release a cross-genre selection of jazz, Americana, Classical, and World music.[28][29]

Their coiled snake logo was designed by Emily Hope Price of folk-pop band Pearl and the Beard, a frequent 9 Horses collaborator. "Adhyâropa," in Hinduism, is the superimposition of the imaginary upon the real. The famous example of this was given by Śaṅkara, the pre-eminent philosopher[30] and proponent of Advaita Vedānta, in which a rope on a path is believed to be a snake.[31]

Discography

Year Catalog No.[32] Album Artist
2021 ÂR00001 Omegah 9 Horses
2013 ÂR00002 Joe Brent & Sara Caswell EP Joe Brent & Sara Caswell
2008 ÂR00003 Point of Departure Joe Brent
2011 ÂR00004 solo. EP Joe Brent
2022 ÂR00005 The Solomon Diaries Vol. I Sam Sadigursky
2022 ÂR00006 The Solomon Diaries Vol. II Sam Sadigursky
2022 ÂR00007 The Solomon Diaries Vol. III Sam Sadigursky
2022 ÂR00008 Watch Me Learn Dallas Ugly
2022 ÂR00009 Morning Song Matt Aronoff
2022 ÂR00010 The Jacob Jolliff Band Jacob Jolliff
2022 ÂR00011 Figures/Broken Pieces Sam Sadigursky
2023 ÂR00012 Gambit Ethan Setiawan
2022 ÂR00013 This Entity Makes Music Nick Rousseau
2022 ÂR00014 soma schema Joshua Stamper
2022 ÂR00015 Perfectest Herald 9 Horses
2022 ÂR00016 Emily & Sue Dana Kaufman
2023 ÂR00017 If Not Now, Who? Joe Walsh
2022 ÂR00018 LCO Live Vol. 1: Mozart Symphony No. 41 "Jupiter" Lowell Chamber Orchestra
2022 ÂR00019 LCO Live Vol. 2: Arnold Friedman Postlude Lowell Chamber Orchestra
2023 ÂR00020 Alive Nick Rousseau
2023 ÂR00021 Sauntering Towards Light Sean Hannon
2023 ÂR00022 Open the Doors Hilary Hawke and Claude & Ola
2023 ÂR00023 5 Movements for Solo Clarinet Sam Sadigursky
2023 ÂR00024 Time Took Care of It Danny Fox Trio
2023 ÂR00026 Empathy Nick Rousseau
2023 ÂR00027 Dream Song Jared Saltiel
2023 ÂR00028 LCO Live Vol. 3: Émile Bernard Divertissement pour instruments à vent, Op. 36 Lowell Chamber Orchestra
2023 ÂR00029 Hidden Animals Ben Krakauer
2023 ÂR00030 LCO Live Vol. 4: Béla Bartók Romanian Folk Dances, Sz. 68, BB 76 Lowell Chamber Orchestra
2023 ÂR00031 Imitation M. Alex Ramírez
2023 ÂR00032 noonmoon noonmoon
2023 ÂR00033 Darts Arnie Sainz
2023 ÂR00034 Lyric Pieces Sarah M. Silverman
2023 ÂR00035 Intimations Andrew Ryan
2023 ÂR00036 36 Clarinet Duets Sam Sadigursky
2023 ÂR00037 With the Changes Carlin Lee
2023 ÂR00038 George Jackson's Local Trio George Jackson
2023 ÂR00039 Olivia Olivia Perez Collellmir
2023 ÂR00040 Stars and Constellations Quinsin Nachoff
2018 ÂR00041 Instrumentals, Vol. 1 Jacob Jolliff
2023 ÂR00042 The Great Beyond Nick Rousseau
2023 ÂR00043 Mr. Sun Plays Duke Ellington's Nutcracker Suite Mr Sun
2023 ÂR00045 LCO Live Vol. 5: Samuel Barber Adagio for Strings Lowell Chamber Orchestra
2023 ÂR00046 Sule Skerry Hildaland
2023 ÂR00047 Barberia's Delight Tima Volozh and Marshal Herridge
2023 ÂR00048 Standards on Snare, Mandolin, and Bass Clarinet Jason Burger, Jacob Jolliff, and Alec Spiegelman
2024 ÂR00049 Cricket Cipher Air Space
2024 ÂR00050 ECOLOGIES How to See Know and Fall
2023 ÂR00051 Toy Conscious Toy Conscious
2023 ÂR00052 It's Not Not A Christmas Album Bobby Hawk & Rooster Holmes

References

  1. "9 Horses — Joe Brent". JosephBrent.com. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  2. Kioulaphides, Victor (20 November 2011). "Joseph Brent Interview". MandolinCafe.com. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  3. "Joe Brent & Sara Caswell". Allmusic.
  4. "2014 CAG Victor Elmaleh Competition — 98.7WFMT". WFMT.com. Archived from the original on 4 October 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  5. "9 Horses Perfectest Herald". Muzoic. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  6. "LAUNCH: A 1CM Emerging Artists Competition". WFMT.com. Archived from the original on 2016-08-31. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  7. McGee, David. "Joe Brent, Part 2: Have Mandolin, Will Travel". TheBluegrassSpecial.com. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  8. Bhatia, Rafiq (23 October 2012). "Sara Caswell: 'A Universal Ambassador'". JazzSpeaks.org. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  9. "Andrew Ryan". savannahmusicfestival.org. Savannah Music Festival. Archived from the original on 21 September 2016. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
  10. McGee, David. "Joe Brent, Part 1: The Classical Mandolinist". The Bluegrass Special. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  11. "Beethoven Project: MTT explores early Beethoven". SFSymphony.org. San Francisco Symphony. 2013. Archived from the original on 2015-10-03. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  12. "Esperanza Spalding". SFJazz. Archived from the original on 2015-09-25. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  13. Chinen, Nate (30 January 2014). "A Clarinet Does Scenes — 'The Big Picture,' Movie Music at the Museum of Jewish Heritage". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  14. "About - The Freewheel Trio". The Freewheel Trio. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
  15. "NPR Tiny Desk Concerts". NPR. 13 March 2019. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
  16. "OneBeat". OneBeat. 1 July 2022. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  17. "Perfectest Herald - 9 Horses". Allmusic. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  18. Kopman, Budd. "9 Horses Perfectest Herald". All About Jazz.
  19. "9 Horses - Blood From A Stone". HD Music.
  20. Astarita, Glenn. "Glenn Astarita's Best Recordings of 2021". All About Jazz.
  21. Moran, Patt. "9 Horses Expands Its Stylistic Horizons on New Album 'Omegah'". Strings Magazine.
  22. "9 Horses: Omegah". Textura.
  23. "I Only Listen to the Mountain Goats: All Hail West Texas". Merge Records. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  24. Brooklyn Jazz Underground Sam Sadigursky's Solomon Diaries, accessed July 21, 2022.
  25. Red Line Roots If Not Now, Who?, accessed November 3, 2023.
  26. The Ear Morning Song, accessed July 21, 2022.
  27. The Bluegrass Situation LISTEN: JACOB JOLLIFF, “COLUMBUS STOCKADE BLUES”, accessed July 21, 2022.
  28. Strings Magazine 9 Horses Expands Its Stylistic Horizons on New Album Omegah, accessed January 23, 2022
  29. Musicweb-International SADIGURSKY The Solomon Diaries - ADHYÂROPA RECORDS, accessed July 21, 2022
  30. Amma The Life of Adi Shankaracharya, accessed January 23, 2022
  31. Sivananda Online Adhyaropa or Superimposition, accessed January 23, 2022
  32. Adhyâropa Records, accessed January 23, 2022
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