Artist:
Logan Richardson
Title:
Sacred Garden
Year Of Release:
2024
Label:
WAX Industry
Genre:
Jazz
Quality:
FLAC (tracks) [48kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 1:01:24
Total Size: 785 MB
WebSite:
Album Preview
Tracklist:1. Dna (01:19)
2. Twenty Twenty Four (08:29)
3. Black To the Point (feat. Toni Sauna) (04:56)
4. Moonlight (05:34)
5. The Fallen (10:53)
6. Strangling Roots (feat. Toni Sauna) (08:40)
7. The Walls Speak (10:03)
8. Warrior of Light (11:27)
Known for his adventurous, genre-bending jazz, Logan Richardson is an American-born, Paris-based alto saxophonist. He has been a professional musician since he was 16, and came to wider recognition after moving to New York and issuing his 2007 debut, the post-bop-influenced Cerebral Flow. He has performed with a variety of jazz musicians including Joe Chambers, Billy Hart, Butch Morris, Greg Osby, Stefon Harris, the World Saxophone Quartet, Arthur Blythe, and Jason Moran. He is also a member of the Next Collective. While he is well versed in the jazz tradition, he has proven to be an eclectic, forward-thinking artist whose albums like 2015's Shift (which featured guitarist Pat Metheny) and 2018's Blues People showcase his love of mixing jazz with searing rock fusion, hip-hop, electronic rhythms, and Americana.
Richardson was born in 1980 in Kansas City, Missouri. His parents were both avid music fans who collected recordings ranging from vintage soul and R&B to Motown, funk, pop, rock, and gospel. He began formal musical education on the flute at the age of 12. At 14 he added alto saxophone while at the Paseo Academy of Fine and Performing Arts. His first exposure to jazz was seeing Max Roach live at the American Jazz Museum. While in high school he studied with visiting artists including Kenny Burrell, Frank Foster, Houston Person, Max Roach, Shirley Scott, Clark Terry, and Bobby Watson. Richardson also took advantage of jazz courses such as Jazz at Aspen, where he encountered Ray Brown, Bobby Hutcherson, Christian McBride, and Renee Rosnes. At age 16 he began performing professionally -- including a gig with Jay McShann. At 19, he left Kansas City, first for the Berklee College of Music in Boston, and then for New York City's New School University. In New York he studied with Hart, Greg Tardy, and Chambers as well as privately with Gary Bartz and Vincent Herring, among others. He began leading his own group in 2005. That same year he appeared on Chambers' The Outlaw. In 2006, he was a member of Tardy's studio band on Steps of Faith.
Richardson's debut as a bandleader was with Cerebral Flow, issued in 2007 by Fresh Sound, New Talent. It was followed a year later by Ethos on Inner Circle Music. He has been a member of drummer Nasheet Waits' (who appeared on Ethos) band Equality since 2009. In 2011, Richardson played on Hart's universally acclaimed Sixty-Eight. In addition to playing music, he taught at clinics in New York. In 2013, the Next Collective issued Cover Art on Concord Jazz. The same year, Richardson contributed to Gerald Clayton's album Life Forum.
The saxophonist began to split his time between N.Y.C. and Paris, France, but made the European city his home base in 2014. He signed with Blue Note in 2015 and enlisted an all-star group to appear on his debut for the label: it included Waits on drums, bassist Harish Raghavan, Jason Moran on piano and Rhodes, and Pet Metheny on guitar. Entitled Shift, it was released in early 2016. Richardson's fourth album as a leader, the sonically expansive Blues People, arrived in 2018. © Thom Jurek