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Stephan Crump: Rosetta Trio

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Liberty Ellman, Stephan Crump, Jamie Fox photo Nathan James Leatherman.

Saturday, March 2, 8pm
Chapel Performance Space


Starting off their spring concert series, Earshot Jazz is pleased to present Brooklyn bassist Stephan Crump and his Rosetta Trio on Saturday, March 2.

Many astute jazz listeners will recognize Crump from his long-standing collaboration with pianist Vijay Iyer. More recent, notable collaborators include alto saxophonist Steve Lehman, pianist James Carney, guitarist Mary Halvorson, drummer Tyshawn Sorey, and trumpeter Adam O’Farrill.

Crump was born in Memphis, Tennessee and received early training in
classical piano and alto saxophone before discovering the bass guitar at age 13. He spent his formative high school years playing rock and funk throughout the Memphis scene. His appreciation for funk, groove, and folk (nurtured by his working relationship with his wife, folk singer Jen Chapin), continue to influence his music in surprising ways. Crump went on to receive a Bachelor of Music from Amherst College, studying under Lewis Spratlin and working with luminaries Max Roach, Frank Foster, and Ray Drummond.

Led by Crump on acoustic bass, the Rosetta trio is a “string ensemble for the new century” (Donald Elfman, All About Jazz), with Liberty Ellman on acoustic guitar and Jamie Fox on electric guitar. The lack of drums is unexpected, and the ensemble embraces the rhythmic flexibility and challenges it presents. The result is a sound that sits within the liminal space of jazz, avantgarde, and contemporary folk.

The Trio’s eponymous 2006 release, Rosetta, was one of Crump’s earliest projects as a leader. The project began as an outlet for Crump to process the loss of loved ones in the wake of 9/11, to acknowledge the fragility of life by weaving intricate fragments into something beautiful, much like a rosetta. In short, to make sense from the senseless.

Crump, Ellman, and Fox have a palpable synergy that lives beyond their first, sublime collection. The trio’s follow-up album, Reclamation (Sunnyside Records, 2010), reaches further still into deeply personal themes of home (“Memphis”), government power (“Overreach”), land abuse (“Pernambuco”), and relationships with technology (“Here not here”).

The Rosetta Trio’s most recent album, Thwirl (Sunnyside Records, 2013), marks an arrival of the group coming into their most realized form. As Crump states, the album signals “a special period of breakthrough on our journey. Although the group’s chemistry was immediate upon our first gatherings, there are subtleties and depth now to the way the band functions, the way we feel the music together, that could come only from years of work.”

The trio’s relationship continues to develop, and with it comes the celebration of their latest album, Outliers (Papillon Sounds, 2019). Seattle audiences are lucky to reap the reward of this ongoing work.
–Editor


Tickets are $15 adults, $13 Earshot Jazz members and seniors, $10 students and military and are available at earshot.org.

Skills

Posted on

March 1, 2019