TROMBONIST AND BIG BAND COMPOSER/ARRANGER MARIEL AUSTIN
RELEASES DEBUT EP RUNNER IN THE RAIN
NEW VOICE IN BIG BAND WRITING EMERGES IN AWARD-WINNING RISING JAZZ STAR
Trombonist, composer, and arranger MARIEL AUSTIN is an exciting, young talent on the jazz scene. Although still in the early stages of her career, she’s already drawing attention. She’s the recipient of the ASCAP Foundation Phoebe Jacobs Prize, part of the 2018 Herb Alpert Young Jazz Awards, and she was selected by the New York Youth Symphony to compose a First Music Commission piece for the 2015-2016 Jazz Band. Austin is now releasing her first recording project, RUNNER IN THE RAIN, an EP comprising five of her arrangements for a big band.
Born and raised in Berkeley, CA, Austin enjoyed music from a very young age, playing flute, piano, clarinet, and alto sax in public school. However, none of those instruments held her interest for very long. Things changed when her parents took her to a concert by the Berkeley High Jazz Ensemble when she was just 13 years old. “I loved music ever since I was in elementary school, and I always looked up to the Berkeley High Jazz Ensemble.
I actually had a secret goal to make it into the Ensemble once I reached high school." relates Austin. “One day, my parents took me to a concert by the Ensemble, and half way through the performance, they played Charlie Mingus’ “Fables of Faubus.” It was, of course, a big band arrangement.
They began the tune with the famous opening line featuring a bari sax and a particularly zealous bass trombone player. The moment I heard that sound, I was struck. It just clicked with me, and I knew right then that I wanted to be a trombone player.”
She eventually went to Berkeley High and joined the jazz ensemble, touring with the group to several international festivals, including the Montreux Jazz Festival, the Umbria Jazz Festival in Italy, and the Kurashiki Music Festival in Japan.
Austin gathered her compatriots from the NEC and the Berklee College of Music to record RUNNER IN THE RAIN. The high quality of musicianship on this CD belies the relative youth of these players. These musicians are ready to share the bandstand with more experienced professionals.
Austin’s compositions are complex and satisfying. She has a strong visual imagination (the CD cover is one of her paintings) which she translates into musical imagery. She opens the CD with an original tune she calls “A Rough, Unsorted Compiling of Ways Not to Exist.” Inspired by the big band writing of George Russell, who is one of the first to formulate a theory of harmony based on jazz rather than European music, Austin takes you on a trip across distinctive musical landscapes, with each representing a different state of mind. The first section represents frustration and uncertainty. The second section represents brooding. The third section suggests liberating anger. The fourth section is a recapitulation of the first section, modulated a step above, representing reflection and movement forward.
“Night Dreamer” is a Wayne Shorter composition that Austin arranged for a school competition. She added a vibraphone to give the music a dreamy quality and populated the background horn section with musical quotes from Shorter.
“One Way Journey Home” is a funk ballad that Austin wrote for the Jazz Composers Ensemble in grad school when she was feeling homesick. Austin relates, “When I was giving direction to the horn section, I told them to think about someone they really missed. Someone they really longed for.”
Austin lends her lovely voice to “Runner in the Rain,” the title tune. She originally wrote it as an experiment with electronic music, but when she found out that a friend had died, she re-arranged the tune as a touching big band chart. "The tune is an elegy in a way, and not just for my deceased friend, “ says Austin. “I was also thinking of everyone I never got a chance to say good-bye to, especially my mentors and inspirations who helped me become the person I am today.” She was also reading “Watership Down” at the time and included in her CD package a quote from the book which reads, “My heart has joined the Thousand, for my friend stopped running today.”
RUNNER IN THE RAIN is a stellar introduction to a burgeoning musical talent. This first recording by Mariel Austin is only the opening salvo by a composer, arranger, and performer whose career trajectory is surely aimed at the jazz firmament.