A Jazz Cat Saunters Back Home: Art Hirahara at San Jose Summer Fest
It’s easy to be dazzled by the big-name acts at San Jose Jazz’s Summer Fest, an annual event that transforms the environs around the downtown Plaza de Cesar Chavez into a three-day street party. Running Aug. 11–13, the festival features Maceo Parker, Robert Glasper Experiment, Chris Botti, Angélique Kidjo, and a quintet of post-bop patriarchs including Miles Davis drum legend Jimmy Cobb, Bill Evans Trio bass virtuoso Eddie Gomez, piano master George Cables, and powerhouse trumpeter Randy Brecker..
Look past the big names, though, and you’ll find locally sourced treasures like San Jose-reared pianist/composer Art Hirahara, a melodically inventive improviser who on Friday plays his first Bay Area set as a leader since moving to New York City in the fall of 2002. Part of a Posi-Tone Records series at Café Stritch, Hirahara plays with a trio featuring Berkeley High alum Noah Garabedian on bass and rising Richmond-raised drummer Malachi Whitson.
It’s the same format that Hirahara employed on his past two albums, though his recent release Central Line adds Santa Cruz-raised tenor sax star Donny McCaslin into the mix. Hirahara connected with McCaslin “before Bowie released Blackstar [with McCaslin’s collaboration], before Donny blew up into this big star,” Hirahara says. “I’d loved his playing for years but we only had a chance to play together once before Central Line. We had a gig at this tiny Thai restaurant in the East Village, and his playing was so strong. I was psyched he was into recording together when I called him.”
Hirahara knows all about the importance of making a powerful first impression. As an electronic and computer music major at Oberlin, he convinced a skeptical jazz and composition professor, Cleveland keyboard great Neal Creque, to take him on as a student by bringing in an impressive original tune. His interest in composition brought him to the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, where bass giant Charlie Haden became a mentor.
Selected by the U.S. Information Agency to serve as a “Jazz Ambassador” in 1996, Hirahara toured throughout the Middle East and Asia, teaching and performing with local musicians. When he returned to the Bay Area, he broke into the local scene at San Jose’s defunct Garden City Casino, a longtime jazz spot where the late pianist Smith Dobson gave him his first gig as a leader.
“I did a short stint with Marcus Shelby when I first moved to town, and had a lot of interesting experiences with veteran cats like Walter Savage and Yancie Taylor, who I used to play with at the 5th Amendment in Oakland,” Hirahara says.
He notes that it was a years-long regular gig at swanky SOMA restaurant Bacar, playing in a collective trio with bassist Todd Sickafoose and drummer Scott Amendola, that really allowed him to “develop my own sound and concept.”
He credits his formative years in the Bay Area with providing the skills to land on his feet, and to stand out. “All of those experiences helped shape me and prepared me well for New York,” he says. “I got to play in a lot of different scenes with a lot of different musicians. But it’s a tough town, especially if you don’t know a lot of people. Looking back, I can trace almost every single musician I work with now back to the first jam session I went to.”
Since, he’s attained a vaunted reputation for his improvisational imagination and finely wrought tunes recorded with first call musicians like bassist Linda Oh and drummer Rudy Royston (on Central Line). He performs regularly with tenor saxophonist Don Braden, and serves as the North American accompanist for the stylish London-based, U.S.-born jazz vocalist Stacey Kent.
With Summer Fest, Hirahara finally gets a chance to bring his music back home.
Andrew Gilbert, KDED