Must see, must hear: Maria Schneider big band at VPAC 2

Music
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Maria Schneider’s ascendance is a Cinderella jazz story of sorts, albeit a long one. It surprises no one when she’s on the cover of Downbeat these days. But she first appeared as Best Original Composition award winner in the magazine’s 1984 student competition.

Subsequently she’s become one of the most distinctive and evocative contemporary composers. But she’s an infrequent West Coast visitor.

When Schneider tours, she takes along A-list soloists like trumpeter Greg Gisbert, trombonist Ryan Keberle, saxophonists Steve Wilson, Donny McCaslin and Scott Robinson, pianist Frank Kimbrough and bassist Jay Anderson.

Touring with an 18-piece band is almost logistically and fiscally prohibitive; Schneider last set down in SoCal in 2007. Her Wednesday concert at the Valley Performing Arts Center combines the instrumental artillery of Schneider’s band and the exceptional acoustics of the space, making this a must-see proposition.


As one of the greatest working orchestral colorists, Schneider can conjure a myriad of emotions through her subtle gradations of tonal color and instrumental blending. Toward that end, her three years with the late Gil Evans as copyist and occasional ghostwriter was a priceless experience, as was her five years of study with another giant of jazz composition, Bob Brookmeyer.

Where Evans created harmonically rich orchestral settings for trumpeter Miles Davis, Brookmeyer’s charts challenged the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Big Band with whipsaw swing. Schneider displays more classical music awareness in her writing than Evans and doesn’t utilize much of the thunder-and-blazes end of Brookmeyer’s spectrum. Like Evans in particular, she’s a stickler for calibrations of sound.

Schneider galvanized the jazz world last year with a tremendous release, The Thompson Fields (ArtistShare)–her first issue featuring the orchestra in eight years. It’s a song cycle of instrumental compositions that tap into the emotional memory and sense of place of her family home and environs in Minnesota. As an album, it’s nothing less than an object d’art, with oversize format, gorgeous color graphics and a book of notes by Schneider.

Downbeat named Thompson Fields Best Jazz Album of 2016. Schneider’s a twelve-time Grammy nominee and the album is currently up for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album.

No one would mistake the music on the album for an ode to New York City or any other urban center. In these pieces the birds clamber among the river reeds, the dust hangs heavy in the barn, and the open sky is always changing colors.

Sure Schneider’s compositions can swing, but here she does it in a more recessed way for Thompson Fields. “Home” builds motion, intensity and grandeur not through velocity but the circling interchange between brass and reeds.

Hear a master in her prime on Wednesday.

Kirk Silsbee publishes promiscuously on rock, jazz and culture.

Maria Schneider Orchestra | Valley Performing Arts Center | Wed Feb. 22

2 thoughts on “Must see, must hear: Maria Schneider big band at VPAC

  1. Gillian Renault Feb 22,2017 2:37 pm

    Saw Maria Schneider and her big band last night and it was a magnificent experience. I didn’t know if I would enjoy it but I was spellbound for two hours. To see a woman composing, arranging and conducting a big band of 17 men and one lone female trumpet player was a great shout out for what smart, extremely talented women can-do. If there are still some seats at the VPAC tonight, by them. don’t miss this performance

  2. Dr. Margie Baker Feb 21,2017 11:48 am

    I have not heard the music nor the orchestra of Ms Maria Schneider, but the way Mr. Kirk Silsbee has described her album has placed some of her musical concepts in my ears and mind. This writer seems to be a genius in using his senses to the fullest in describing the sounds of THE THOMAS FIELDS. I love reading his writings. And, by the way, I have only recently become acquainted with ARTS MEME. I guess I am out of touch being a Northern Californian..I enjoy your articles very much.

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