The quartet Things Of This Nature — Caylie Davis (trumpet), Chris Ferrari (woodwinds), Shogo Yamagishi (bass), and JJ Mazza (drums) — brings together a young generation of New York improvisers whose tight ensemble interplay, bold free jazz sensibility, and energetic collective approach draw deeply from the tradition while pushing their music toward fresh and expressive terrain.
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Sample The Album:
Caylie Davis-trumpet
Chris Ferrari-woodwinds
Shogo Yamagishi-bass
JJ Mazza-drums
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UPC: 195269391577
Label: Mahakala Music
Catalog ID: MAHA-090
Squidco Product Code: 36999
Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2025
Country: USA
Packaging: Digipack
Recorded at Park West Studios, in Brooklyn, New York, on April 4th, 2025, by Jim Clouse.
"I believe Things of This Nature is the future of this music. Which is an easy thing to say because this music is this music. Easy things to say are, however, often true. I think.
"I believe Things of This Nature is the future of this music. Which is an easy thing to say because this music is this music. Easy things to say are, however, often true. I think.There is something going on here which, I'll say it, cats are not doing these days, but also they weren't doing in any days. This stuff is grabbing everything these four can from the tradition and taking it along with them into new territory that could not have been explored before. One has to have childhood memories of the Obama administration to create some of this music. Idk why, it's just what it is.
It is the combination of this acceptance of the historical imperative to uncover and reveal the newly possible sounds of one's time, with their clear, perhaps proudly transparent, roots in the stylistic developments of so much music that has come before that gives me the grounding for my subjective & factual claim that this band is the future of this music. I won't name names but, if you don't hear the roots, this is your message that they are there, and they cross decades, and they are deep.
I have seen Things of This Nature play...multiple times. It has been said that I have been at least tied for their top fan, at least at some point. Rumor has it that I have schemed about how to join the band, or perhaps considered poaching them to be my quintet. Needless to say, I have an emotional memory of this music, these songs, this playing. And what struck me first, and still does every time I hear them to this day, is the combination of tightness and expressiveness they manage to deploy every time. It is, to me, the defining characteristic of this sound, at least in the time-space context we are in. And I believe to be able to be tight and expressive allows one to let their music be fun. And 'fun' might be one of the most universally agreed upon defining traits of Things of This Nature. They utilize it at will, when for many trying to do this music fun is an afterthought, a pleasant surprise, or even a byproduct. I am one of the many, and I am grateful this band gives methe perspective to see that.
Back to the note on 'this music'. Sometimes I feel like I'm the only one who says 'free jazz' anymore. You know what I'm saying? Hopefully people are checking out this record far enough in the future you don't. When I have to succinctly label the music I play I say free jazz. Sometimes that's more accurate than other times, but I say it because it's at least always what I want to be playing. I look at the Ornette record from 1961 under that name and I want to be making whatever would be coming from that, over half a century later. Now I have never heard any member of this band say those words out loud, and I don't want to put words in their mouth. But for me, as a proud free jazz enjoyer and aspiring practitioner, I'm grateful to have another great record in this style to check out, study, return to.
I am so grateful to be living at the same time as this band. To be in the same city as them. To work with them. To be their friend. Their coworker. Their colleague and comrade. Above all, if there's one thing this album makes me feel it's excited. Excitement! How rarely many of us feel that these days. We all who play this music have a lot to learn from these four."-Selendis Sebastian Alexander Johnson, 2025
p> There is something going on here which, I'll say it, cats are not doing these days, but also they weren't doing in any days. This stuff is grabbing everything these four can from the tradition and taking it along with them into new territory that could not have been explored before. One has to have childhood memories of the Obama administration to create some of this music. Idk why, it's just what it is.It is the combination of this acceptance of the historical imperative to uncover and reveal the newly possible sounds of one's time, with their clear, perhaps proudly transparent, roots in the stylistic developments of so much music that has come before that gives me the grounding for my subjective & factual claim that this band is the future of this music. I won't name names but, if you don't hear the roots, this is your message that they are there, and they cross decades, and they are deep.
I have seen Things of This Nature play...multiple times. It has been said that I have been at least tied for their top fan, at least at some point. Rumor has it that I have schemed about how to join the band, or perhaps considered poaching them to be my quintet. Needless to say, I have an emotional memory of this music, these songs, this playing. And what struck me first, and still does every time I hear them to this day, is the combination of tightness and expressiveness they manage to deploy every time. It is, to me, the defining characteristic of this sound, at least in the time-space context we are in. And I believe to be able to be tight and expressive allows one to let their music be fun. And 'fun' might be one of the most universally agreed upon defining traits of Things of This Nature. They utilize it at will, when for many trying to do this music fun is an afterthought, a pleasant surprise, or even a byproduct. I am one of the many, and I am grateful this band gives methe perspective to see that.
Back to the note on 'this music'. Sometimes I feel like I'm the only one who says 'free jazz' anymore. You know what I'm saying? Hopefully people are checking out this record far enough in the future you don't. When I have to succinctly label the music I play I say free jazz. Sometimes that's more accurate than other times, but I say it because it's at least always what I want to be playing. I look at the Ornette record from 1961 under that name and I want to be making whatever would be coming from that, over half a century later. Now I have never heard any member of this band say those words out loud, and I don't want to put words in their mouth. But for me, as a proud free jazz enjoyer and aspiring practitioner, I'm grateful to have another great record in this style to check out, study, return to.
I am so grateful to be living at the same time as this band. To be in the same city as them. To work with them. To be their friend. Their coworker. Their colleague and comrade. Above all, if there's one thing this album makes me feel it's excited. Excitement! How rarely many of us feel that these days. We all who play this music have a lot to learn from these four."-Selendis Sebastian Alexander Johnson, 2025
Artist Biographies
• Show Bio for Caylie Davis Caylie Davis is a trumpeter, composer, and educator from Eugene, Oregon, currently based in New York City. A student at the Manhattan School of Music, she has studied with prominent trumpet players including Ingrid Jensen, Nadje Noordhuis, and Jon Faddis. Active as both a bandleader and collaborator, Davis performs with the improvising ensemble Things of This Nature and has appeared in venues across New York's creative music scene. ^ Hide Bio for Caylie Davis • Show Bio for Chris Ferrari "Chris Ferrari was born and raised in Denver, Colorado. At a young age, Chris was exposed to music and the arts through his parents, who encouraged him to explore all creative outlets. After years of piano lessons and singing in choirs, it was listening to Coltrane and Sonny Rollins recordings that inspired Chris to pursue playing jazz music, and especially, the saxophone. At age 9, Chris began his woodwind studies on the clarinet, allowing him to naturally pick up the soprano saxophone shortly thereafter, followed by the other saxophones and the flute. Chris attended the Denver School of the Arts from 2014 to 2019, where he studied classical clarinet and jazz saxophone. Additionally, he participated in the Colorado Conservatory for the Jazz Arts for six years, a program to which he attests much of his musical growth. Through dedication and hard work, Chris received statewide and national musical acclaim early on-Colorado All State Band/Jazz Band, the Telluride Jazz All Stars, National YoungArts Awards, Downbeat Magazine Student Music Awards, the Vail Jazz Workshop, and NYO Jazz were just a few of his accomplishments in high school. In 2017, Chris began to teach music privately and through an outreach program with Ashley Elementary School in Denver, leading him to foster a love for music education. Shortly thereafter, Chris began his collegiate studies in 2019 at the New England Conservatory of Music, where he graduated in 2023 with his Bachelor of Music degree in Jazz Performance (Academic Honors, Phi Kappa Lambda Nominee, George Whitefield Chadwick Medal recipient). In May 2025, Chris graduated from the Manhattan School of Music with his Master of Music degree in Jazz Performance. Chris currently teaches clarinet, saxophone, flute, improvisation, composition, and music theory/ear training at all levels. Chris has performed alongside with many notable musicians, including Sean Jones, Dianne Reeves, Wycliffe Gordon, Shane Endsley, Greg Gisbert, Ethan Iverson, Dave Holland, Maria Schneider, Tim Hagans, Miguel Zenon, John Benitez, and Luisito Quintero; and at venues such as Carnegie Hall, the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, Dizzy's Club, The Jazz Gallery, Roulette Intermedium, Nublu, Zinc Bar, Arthur's Tavern, Terraza 7, and Dazzle. Chris is a founding member of Splifftet, a Denver-born collective that has been playing together for over seven years; and Things of This Nature, a New-York based quartet which formed at the Manhattan School of Music in 2023. At MSM, Chris studied with Mark Shim and Dayna Stephens. At the New England Conservatory of Music, Chris studied with a number of influential teachers: Frank Carlberg, Jason Moran, Joe Morris, Jerry Leake, Melissa Aldana, and Miguel Zenón, among others. Chris is passionate about composing original music and exploring creative approaches to improvisation, which is reflected in his bold musical style influenced by Ornette Coleman, Anthony Braxton, Albert Ayler, and Sam Rivers. Chris also strives to encapsulate the soulful and folklike spirit of the "Denver Jazz Sound" into his music, an aesthetic well established by Denver legends Ron Miles, Bill Frisell, Ken Walker, Rudy Royston, Hugh Ragin, Fred Hess, and the great collective, Convergence. When he is not busy with his musical career, Chris loves to spend time outside hiking, running, and skiing, and frequently participates in SGI-USA Buddhist activities." ^ Hide Bio for Chris Ferrari • Show Bio for Shogo Yamagishi Shogo Yamagishi is a bassist active in the New York creative music community, performing in contemporary jazz and improvised music settings. Known for his flexible approach to rhythm and texture, he works in ensembles that balance composed structures with open improvisation, including the quartet Things of This Nature, where his playing provides both grounding momentum and exploratory sonic depth. ^ Hide Bio for Shogo Yamagishi • Show Bio for JJ Mazza JJ Mazza is a drummer and composer working in the New York jazz and improvisation scene. As a member of the quartet Things of This Nature, he contributes compositions as well as dynamic, responsive percussion that anchors the group's blend of modern jazz structures and open improvisation. Mazza performs with fellow young improvisers in venues around New York and participates in projects that combine rhythmic intensity with exploratory ensemble interaction. ^ Hide Bio for JJ Mazza
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
3/23/2026
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
Track Listing:
1. Shortstop Right Wing Chicken Parm 06:38
2. Nettles 04:37
3. Gutted Pills 01:48
4. How Does It Sound Now 06:09
5. E-MOC 06:07
6. Waxy Yellow Buildup 05:22
7. How It Is 06:47
8. Long Dream 03:11
9. A Tough Situation 05:18
10. Tony In The Chat Room 07:58
11. Bass Solo 01:50
12. Composition 4 03:02
March 2026
Improvised Music
Jazz
Jazz & Improvisation Based on Compositions
NY Downtown & Metropolitan Jazz/Improv
Quartet Recordings
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