
"Thereupon is the long-anticipated return of the all-star collaborative trio Fieldwork, which has been described by NPR as a "power trio for the new century." This long-standing collective comprises three internationally revered innovato...
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Steve Lehman-alto saxophone
Vijay Iyer-piano, Rhodes
Tyshawn Sorey-drums
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UPC: 808713010923
Label: Pi Recordings
Catalog ID: PI109
Squidco Product Code: 36744
Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2025
Country: USA
Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold
Recorded at Oktaven Audio, in Mount Vernon, New York, on May 13th, 2024, by Ryan Streber.
"Thereupon is the long-anticipated return of the all-star collaborative trio Fieldwork, which has been described by NPR as a "power trio for the new century." This long-standing collective comprises three internationally revered innovators of contemporary music: alto saxophonist-composer Steve Lehman, pianist-composer Vijay Iyer, and drummer-composer Tyshawn Sorey. In the seventeen years since their last recording, Door (Pi), all three musicians have climbed to the pinnacle of the creative music scene and received universal acclaim for their work, each one significantly reshaping the language of creative music in his own way. Remarkably, as Fieldwork, the whole is even greater than the sum of its parts, as the group continues to redefine the possibilities for ensemble music-making.
The individual accomplishments of these three musicians are truly impressive. There is perhaps no other collective of musicians with such significant, longstanding ties to so many musical communities, including modern jazz, contemporary classical music, underground hip-hop and electronica, and musics from outside the west. Steve Lehman is a Guggenheim Fellow and a Doris Duke Performing Artist, whose last three releases demonstrate the expansive range of his artistry: Xaybu: The Unseen, features his international avant-rap group Selebeyone; Ex Machina is a major work for jazz orchestra and interactive electronics, commissioned by IRCAM and the Orchestre National de Jazz in France, and his most recent release The Music of Anthony Braxton features his long-standing trio with guest saxophonist Mark Turner. Vijay Iyer is a MacArthur Fellow, a United States Artist Fellow, and a three-time GRAMMY nominee. His most recent releases include Defiant Life, a suite of duets with trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith; Compassion, the second album from his celebrated trio with Sorey and bassist Linda May Han Oh; Love In Exile, a collaboration with vocalist Arooj Aftab and bassist Shahzad Ismaily; and the composer portrait album Vijay Iyer: Trouble, by the Boston Modern Orchestra Project. Tyshawn Sorey received the 2024 Pulitzer Prize in Music for his composition "Adagio (for Wadada Leo Smith)" after being recognized in 2023 as a Finalist for his "Monochromatic Light (Afterlife)." He was named a 2017 MacArthur Fellow and a 2018 United States Artists Fellow, and his works have been commissioned, premiered, and recorded by preeminent ensembles and soloists worldwide. His four most recent releases - including his latest, The Susceptible Now - feature his acclaimed trio with pianist Aaron Diehl. Simply put, these are three state-of-the-art musicians of staggering breadth and depth.
As Fieldwork, Lehman, Iyer, and Sorey take their music to an electrifying new level, setting the bar ever higher with rigor, daring, wisdom, and a unique aesthetic palette. There is an unmistakable debt to the exploratory, all- embracing nature of the celebrated AACM collective: all three members of
Fieldwork have enjoyed long relationships performing in bands led by Muhal Richard Abrams, Anthony Braxton, Henry Threadgill, Roscoe Mitchell, Wadada Leo Smith, and George Lewis. Reflecting on Fieldwork's incredible reach, Iyer notes that "long ago we settled on an approach that simply makes the most of the creativity of each player. I think that with this group, the broad scope of each of our individual studies and interests means that the collective musical imagination can range pretty far."
After a period of shifting personnel that included drummer Elliot Humberto Kavee and saxophonist Aaron Stewart, Fieldwork truly hit its stride in 2005 when the current iteration came together. Reflecting on their profound musical bond, Lehman notes that "there is an overwhelming feeling of joy every time we reunite. We've developed a musical language together over the years so that we never need to explain anything to each other or contextualize any of it, or to have to water it down so we can all play it. We just immediately build off of our history together and start to move things forward." The band employs a communal rehearsal process in which extended group improvisations are used to develop and transform intricate compositions into elaborate ensemble performances. This new recording features compositions by Iyer and Lehman, all collectively arranged by the band. Regardless of the composer, each piece is marked by Fieldwork's signature sound: dense, visceral, tightly unified and high-impact, with a mysterious inner logic.
The performances on Thereupon capture the band's unparalleled interplay. The group functions as a single entity without hierarchy; they listen deeply and respond to one another with a rare focus, intensity, and creativity, highlighting a network of musical bonds forged over decades. Lehman's serpentine lines explore the extreme registers of his instrument and make frequent use of extended technique and microtonal fingerings. Iyer's playing on piano and Rhodes is elemental, rhythmically propulsive, and kaleidoscopic in its harmonic and timbral variety. Sorey is in a quintessential virtuosic mode, supplying endlessly inventive thrust and orchestrating the music at all times with subtlety and nuance. On tracks like "Propaganda" and "Embracing Difference," the rhythmic tension of their high wire act is palpable. Every time it feels like each instrument is going off on its own teetering tangent and the structure can't hold, the group is still somehow able to miraculously snap back to form. The rhythms and forms are complex at times, but the groove remains irrepressible. Iyer explains that the title piece draws inspiration from "a moment near the beginning of the Vimalakirti Sutra, when the world is shown to be much more than it appears: 'Thereupon the Buddha touched the ground of this billion-world-galactic universe with his big toe, and suddenly it was transformed into a huge mass of precious jewels, a magnificent array of many hundreds of thousands of clusters of precious gems....' I used a telescoping form that reveals more detail as you zoom in." Pieces like "Astral" and "The Night Before" are more gestural, moments of calm in the maelstrom. With the band's unique sonic template expertly shaped by renowned mixing engineer Scotty Hard, the album shimmers with color and packs a strong punch.
With this new chapter, Fieldwork reaffirms its status as one of the era's most transformative and influential experimental units. Thereupon is a bold new statement that captures the band at its best: challenging, expansive, and vital."-Pi Recordings
Artist Biographies
• Show Bio for Steve Lehman "Described as "a state-of-the-art musical thinker" and a "dazzling saxophonist," by The New York Times, Steve Lehman (b. New York City, 1978) is a composer, performer, educator, and scholar who works across a broad spectrum of experimental musical idioms. Lehman's pieces for large orchestra and chamber ensembles have been performed by the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), So Percussion, Kammerensemble Neue Musik Berlin, the JACK Quartet, the PRISM Saxophone Quartet, and the Talea Ensemble. His recent recording, Mise en Abîme (Pi, 2014) was called the #1 Jazz Album of the year by NPR Music and The Los Angeles Times. And his previous recording, Travail, Transformation & Flow (Pi, 2009), was chosen as the #1 Jazz Album of the year by The New York Times. The recipient of a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship and a 2014 Doris Duke Artist Award, Lehman is an alto saxophonist who has performed and recorded nationally and internationally with his own ensembles and with those led by Anthony Braxton, Vijay Iyer, Jason Moran, Meshell Ndegeocello, and High Priest of Anti-Pop Consortium, among many others. His recent electro-acoustic music has focused on the development of computer-driven models for improvisation, based in the Max/MSP programming environment. Lehman's work has been favorably reviewed in Artforum, Downbeat Magazine, The New York Times, Newsweek, and The Wire, and on National Public Radio, the BBC, and SWR. As a Fulbright scholar in France during the 2002-2003 academic year, Lehman began researching the reception of African-American experimental composers working in France during the 1970s. His article in the journal Critical Studies in Improvisation, "I Love You with an Asterisk: African-American Experimental Composers and the French Jazz Press, 1970-1980," is based on his Fulbright research. More recently, Lehman has published writings and presented lectures on a wide range of topics, including jazz pedagogy, rhythm cognition, and European notions of American experimentalism. His current scholarship, including a forthcoming contribution to the Oxford Handbook of Spectral Music, examines the overlapping histories of spectral composition and jazz improvisation. Lehman received his B.A. (2000) and M.A. in Composition (2002) from Wesleyan University where he studied under Anthony Braxton, Jay Hoggard, and Alvin Lucier, while concurrently working with Jackie McLean at the Hartt School of Music. He received his doctorate with distinction in Music Composition from Columbia University (2012), where his principal teachers included Tristan Murail and George Lewis. Lehman has taught undergraduate courses at Wesleyan University, the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris, New School University, and Columbia University, and has presented lectures at Amherst College, UC Berkeley, The Berklee School of Music, The Banff Centre, The Royal Academy of Music in London, and IRCAM in Paris, where he was a 2011 research fellow. Beginning in September 2016, Lehman will join the music faculty at The California Institute of the Arts." ^ Hide Bio for Steve Lehman • Show Bio for Vijay Iyer "Described by The New York Times as a "social conscience, multimedia collaborator, system builder, rhapsodist, historical thinker and multicultural gateway," VIJAY IYER has carved out a unique path as an influential, prolific, shape-shifting presence in twenty-first-century music. A composer and pianist active across multiple musical communities, Iyer has created a consistently innovative, emotionally resonant body of work over the last twenty-five years, earning him a place as one of the leading music-makers of his generation. He received a MacArthur Fellowship, a Doris Duke Performing Artist Award, a United States Artist Fellowship, a Grammy nomination, the Alpert Award in the Arts, and two German "Echo" awards, and was voted Downbeat Magazine's Jazz Artist of the Year four times in the last decade. He has been praised by Pitchfork as "one of the best in the world at what he does," by the Los Angeles Weekly as "a boundless and deeply important young star," and by Minnesota Public Radio as "an American treasure." Iyer's musical language is grounded in the rhythmic traditions of South Asia and West Africa, the African American creative music movement of the 60s and 70s, and the lineage of composer-pianists from Duke Ellington and Thelonious Monk to Alice Coltrane and Geri Allen. He has released twenty-four albums of his music, most recently UnEasy (ECM Records, 2021), a trio session with drummer Tyshawn Sorey and bassist Linda May Han Oh; The Transitory Poems (ECM, 2019), a live duo recording with pianist Craig Taborn; Far From Over (ECM, 2017) with the award-winning Vijay Iyer Sextet; and A Cosmic Rhythm with Each Stroke (ECM, 2016) a suite of duets with visionary composer-trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith. Iyer is also an active composer for classical ensembles and soloists. His works have been commissioned and premiered by Brentano Quartet, Imani Winds, Bang on a Can All-Stars, The Silk Road Ensemble, International Contemporary Ensemble, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, LA Philharmonic, American Composers Orchestra, and virtuosi Matt Haimowitz, Claire Chase, Shai Wosner, and Jennifer Koh, among others. He recently served as composer-in-residence at London's Wigmore Hall, music director of the Ojai Music Festival, and artist-in-residence at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. A tireless collaborator, he has written big-band music for Arturo O'Farrill and Darcy James Argue, remixed classic recordings of Talvin Singh and Meredith Monk, joined forces with legendary musicians Henry Threadgill, Reggie Workman, Zakir Hussain, and L. Subramanian, and developed interdisciplinary work with Teju Cole, Carrie Mae Weems, Mike Ladd, Prashant Bhargava, and Karole Armitage. A longtime New Yorker, Iyer lives in central Harlem with his wife and daughter. He teaches at Harvard University in the Department of Music and the Department of African and African American Studies. He is a Steinway artist." ^ Hide Bio for Vijay Iyer • Show Bio for Tyshawn Sorey "Tyshawn Sorey (born July 8, 1980 in Newark, New Jersey) is an American musician and composer who plays drum set, percussion, trombone and piano. Since graduating from William Paterson University, Sorey has been a sought-after musician in many different musical idioms. He is both a performer and composer, and has had works reviewed in The Wire, The New York Times, The Village Voice, Modern Drummer and Down Beat. In August 2009, Sorey was given the opportunity to curate a month of performances at the Stone, a New York performance space owned by John Zorn. He was selected as an Other Minds 17 (2012). Sorey recently completed a Master of Arts in composition at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. In the fall of 2011, he began pursuing doctoral work in composition at Columbia University. To date, Sorey has released four albums as a leader: That/Not (2007, Firehouse 12 Records), Koan (2009, 482 Music), Oblique (2011, Pi Recordings) and Alloy (2014, Pi Recordings). He has recorded or performed with musicians including Wadada Leo Smith, Steve Coleman, Anthony Braxton, John Zorn, Steve Lehman, Joey Baron, Muhal Richard Abrams, Pete Robbins, Vijay Iyer, Dave Douglas, Butch Morris and Sylvie Courvoisier, among many others." ^ Hide Bio for Tyshawn Sorey
9/24/2025
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9/24/2025
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
9/24/2025
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
Track Listing:
1. Propaganda 2:08
2. Embracing Difference 5:13
3. Evening Rite 5:13
4. Fire City 3:59
5. Domain 3:29
6. Fantome 4:19
7. Astral 4:10
8. Thereupon 3:27
9. The Night Before 8:25
In Stock, Not Yet Cataloged
Improvised Music
Jazz
Jazz & Improvisation Based on Compositions
Free Improvisation
NY Downtown & Metropolitan Jazz/Improv
Trio Recordings
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Pi Recordings.