Jenny Scheinman ‘All Species Parade’ Album Preview

Acclaimed jazz violinist Jenny Scheinman releases a long-form song cycle dedicated to the Lost Coast of California. Guest performers include Bill Frisell, Nels Cline and Julian Lage.

courtesy of Royal Potato Family

Jenny Scheinman, acclaimed violinist and composer, for many years a stalwart of the New York jazz and creative music scenes, has announced her new album, All Species Parade, will be released October 11 via Royal Potato Family. A ten-track double-album, comprising over 72 minutes of music, it’s brought to life by pianist Carmen Staaf, guitar icons Bill FrisellNels Cline and Julian Lage, and the revered rhythm team of bassist Tony Scherrand drummer Kenny Wollesen. It was recorded by Eli Crews at The Bunker in Brooklyn, NY and mixed by Grammy Award-nominated engineer Tucker Martine and mastered by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound. The first song to be released from the collection, “Ornette Goes Home,” is out today and available on all streaming platforms HERE.

The concept for All Species Parade began when Scheinman returned to her native Humboldt County, California in 2012. For years, Scheinman nursed the idea of a musical homage to Humboldt, in particular the area known as the Lost Coast, a remote, earthquake and mudslide prone region of coastal northern California, where she was raised. Scheinman considered the project from many angles. She wrote a song cycle based on the “crusty characters” from her hometown and sketched out a surrealist multimedia project based on the county’s namesake, Alexander Von Humboldt. She collaborated with filmmaker Ai Aiwane on a video installation about the Mattole River (Cojo Come Home) and immersed herself in the sounds and cultural history of the region, with hopes of conjuring, in music, the extraordinary diversity of life, past and present, in the Pacific Northwest. All Species Parade is the result of these meditations.

Several of the tracks on All Species Parade extend over 11 minutes long, and three of which: “Jaroujiji,” “The Sea Also Rises” and “All Species Parade,” comprise an Ellington-inspired suite that clocks in at 20 minutes. This long-form approach is a departure for Jenny Scheinman, whose ten previous albums tend toward a more concise, song-like aesthetic. On this album, however, she “wanted to let the band play. I encouraged the musicians to spill over the edges and be their most expansive selves. This is nature worship music, and I didn’t want it to feel domesticated.” Scheinman also deliberately orchestrated the album with multiple chordal players, which, “like the complex understory of a forest,” creates a multi-textured, ever-adapting network of sound.

Jenny Scheinman‘s playing is radiant, soulful, stamped with jazz vernacular and old-time fiddling tradition and buoyed by her superb lyrical poise and technique. Throughout we hear Bill Frisell’s exploratory wisdom and evidence of his deep connection with Scheinman (whose side-person credits include nine Frisell albums). The songs with straight quintet range from the playful “Ornette Goes Home” and the Mancini-eseque “Every Bear That Ever There Was,” to the more placid, atmospheric “With Sea Lions” and the grooving and immersive title track, which Scheinman describes as “a party to which animals of all sizes, colors and adaptations are invited.”

Julian Lage is heard on acoustic guitar over three tracks, including the processional “Jaroujiji” (dedicated to the Wiyot tribe), the Django-esque “Shutdown Stomp” and the fierce elegy “Nocturne for 2020.” The adventurous Nels Cline, longtime member of Wilco, augments Frisell on the surf-rocker “The Cape” (named for Cape Mendocino) and the flowing “House of Flowers,” which is a sister piece to “A Ride with Polly Jean,” the leadoff track from Jenny Scheinman’s 2012 release Mischief & Mayhem (also featuring Cline).

While All Species Parade does evoke a sense of pastoral calm and wonder, it also strives to capture “a charged relationship to the natural world,” Scheinman says. “A feeling of being part of something bigger than ourselves. Something powerful, fragile and constantly changing. Something alive. I want to recreate that experience of awe.”

In addition to her extensive work in jazz and improvised music with Jason MoranBrian BladeRon MilesAllison MillerVinicius Cantuaria and many more, Jenny Scheinmanhas toured and recorded with songwriting legends such as Lucinda WilliamsBruce CockburnRobbie FulksRodney CrowellLou ReedAni DiFranco and Joni Mitchell. She is featured on the original cast recording of Anais Mitchell’s hit musical Hadestown, and has written several feature length movie scores, including the forthcoming Avenue of the Giants. In March 2015 she premiered a multimedia performance at Duke University entitled Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait (the basis for her album Here on Earth), which she continues to present in theaters around the country.

Jenny Scheinman plans to tour extensively behind All Species Parade with 15 dates, including several on the West Coast announced today. 

All Species Parade releases October 11 via Royal Potato Family on 2-LP 180-Gram vinyl, CD and digital formats.

Vivascene Staff

Vivascene Staff members work with media agencies, recording companies, and artists to present music news and press releases. Email: contact@vivascene.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.