Label: Orenda Records, 2025
Personnel - Dan Rosenboom: trumpet, piccolo, flugelhorn; Jake Vossler: guitar; Jerry Watts Jr.: electric bass; Caleb Dolister: drums; Katisse Buckingham: flutes (# 5); Gavin Templeton: alto and baritone saxophone (#2,6,7); Nicole McCabe: alto saxophone (#3); Brian Walsh: contralto clarinet (#3,8); Jon Stehney: bassoon (#4, 8); Laura Brenes: horn (#5,9) Katie Faraudo: horn (#5,9) Ryan Dragon: trombone (#3,5,9) Steve Suminski: trombone (#5,9) Steve Trapani: bass trombone (#5,9) Doug Tornquist: tuba (#5,9); Wade Culbreath: vibraphone, marimba (#3,5,7,9); Gloria Cheng: piano; Jeff Babko: Fender Rhodes (#2); Joshua White: piano (#7); Petri Korpela: percussion; Jacquline Kerrod: harp (#4); Lauren Elizabeth Baba: viola (#6); Miguel Atwood-Ferguson: 5-string electric violin (#7); Michael Valerio: contrabass (#4) + The Lyris Quartet; strings (#4,9).
Following the quintet album Polarity, a contemporary masterpiece released in 2023, Coordinates marks another remarkable outing from trumpeter and composer Dan Rosenboom whose commitment to breaking boundaries in jazz expands here through a powerful and cohesive aggregation of 28 players drawn from the LA jazz scene and Hollywood film recording studios. Taking four years to write and produce, the album—shaped by numerology—ventures across multiple genres and meter signatures.
Over the course of “Coordinate 1: Many Worlds, Many Dances”, the ensemble dives into funk territory, allowing an enthralling groove to unfold orgamnically. Horn consonance gives way to a trumpet solo that feels both conversational and expansive, framed by coordinated passages and buoyed by incisive drumming. “Coordinate 2: Apophis” opens with Brian Walsh’s resonant contralto clarinet and Jake Vossler’s protean guitar, building toward rhythmic agitation against a defiant metal backdrop that shifts with each soloist.
“Coordinate 3: Syzygy” highlights Katisse Buckingham’s flute in the foreground. It’s a rock-driven piece delivered with muscular punch, epic scope, and fierce resolve. Rosenboom responds with an obliquely thoughtful solo over a dense, hard-bitten texture. The band’s carefully coded sound turns darker on “Coordinate 5: Hyperion”, a moody chamber spell whose structural dynamism is etched with strings courtesy of The Lyris Quartet.
Alongside the five ‘coordinate’ works, four additional compositions broaden the palette. Standouts include “Josephine’s Dream”, a delicate waltz featuring gracefully arpeggiated harp and strings, and “Oracles”, a funk-rock excursion powered by pianist Joshua White’s outside playing over an odd-metered prog-rock foundation.
Rosenboom’s return brims with fresh-start urgency, charting a course through environments alive with rhythmic jabs and stabs. Through open platforms—sharply informed by funk, rock, jazz, and metal—he unveils a host of new tricks up his sleeve.
Favorite Tracks:
02 - Coordinate 1: Many Worlds, Many Dances ► 03 - Coordinate 2: Apophis ► 07 - Oracles