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Lineage, Lift-Off: Sarah Hanahan’s Alto Speaks in the Present Tense

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People ask what I do to warm up. I’m always warmed up—I’m always on my horn, whether it’s gigs or practicing.
Sarah Hanahan
Sarah Hanahan
saxophone, alto"I've always been sure of my connection to the instrument," she says. "Anyone who knows me knows my dad is a drummer and a great musician. He really got me hip to the music when I was a young kid... we'd watch his DVDs of

Buddy Rich
drums1917 - 1987
The journey from that living room spark to a national profile involves serious study and mentorship. "From third grade all the way till now, I've been playing alto," Hanahan continues. "It wasn't until my sophomore year in high school that I started getting very serious about jazzstudying and thinking, 'This is what I want to do.'" She pursued that goal at the Jackie McLean Institute at the Hartt School, then at Juilliard, and performed on bandstands with the Mingus Big Band, Ulysses Owens Jr.'s Generation Y, the Diva Orchestra, and drummer

Joe Farnsworth
drumsb.1968

Marc Cary
piano
Nat Reeves
bass
Jeff Tain Watts
drumsb.1960
For Hanahan, achievement is tied to routine. "People ask what I do to warm up," she says, laughing. "I'm always kind of warmed upI'm always on my horn, whether it's gigs or practicing. As musicians, we live this. Being with Joe Farnsworth the last three years really built my endurance because we play fast and for a long time. It's like being a marathon runneryou build it over time, but you must run every day to keep it up. For me, I get on the horn every day."
A historian's ear anchors that ethic. "The tradition of this music is so vast and so beautiful," she says. "It's been passed down from generation to generation not by books or anything online, but by being up on the bandstand and learning right there. In one way or another, you're still being taught by

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971

Eddie Henderson
trumpetb.1940
Among Giants bears that perspective in its personnel and design. "When I thought about doing my first record as a leader, I thought about the first records I love," Hanahan explains. "

Kenny Garrett
saxophone, altob.1960
Composition for her is a way to show respect and move the conversation forward. "My concept was to honor the tradition and the lineage, but also put my spin on thingsmy touch in the compositions," she says. "I love mixing the old and the new." On "Resonance," that blend takes the form of a wide emotional arc. "I wanted to create an arc from start to finishplay with a lot of love and fire," she says. "Of course, it's inspired by the great

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Her approach to standards is equally deliberate. "Choosing 'Stardust' was an easy yet difficult choice because it's a warhorse," Hanahan admits. "My teacher,

Abraham Burton
saxophone, altob.1971

Nat King Cole
piano and vocals1919 - 1965
What you hear in her playing is the tension she describesreverence and risk held in balance. "I'm always going back to Bird and Dizzy and even before, to

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971

Sidney Bechet
saxophone, soprano1897 - 1959
Even in intimate venueslike SFJAZZ's Joe Henderson LabHanahan's sound remains rich and direct. "I love an intimate room," she says. "I love being able to connect with the crowd right up front. We're still going to play really hard and give it our all and play our hearts out." That focus on connection reflects how she first learned the music: up close, on the stand, with mentors and heroes just feet away. It is not nostalgia; it is a method.
Her comments about practice and lineage might suggest a strict traditionalist, but the evidence points elsewhere. She builds her vocabulary from the canon and then pushes toward heat and lift. The tone is bright and singing, the lines are crisp, and the phrasing reflects the lyric study she absorbs from singers. The rhythm section choicesReeves's grounded walk, Cary's elastic time, Watts's combustible swingsurround the alto in motion rather than caution, and Hanahan steps into that energy with authority. She doesn't treat the past as a museum; she treats it as stagecraft.
That stance also influences her sense of community. "It's been passed down... by being on the bandstand and learning right there," she says again, returning to the idea to emphasize it. Hanahan belongs to a group where apprenticeship is not just a buzzword but a daily realityyoung players taking long solos, accepting feedback, and coming back the next night to try again. She frequently uses the word "love" when talking about mentors and peers, and it feels less like a cliché than a genuine statement of values: respect for those who teach her and a responsibility to be that kind of presence for the next player. For listeners experiencing her music for the first time, that ethos serves as the entry point. The repertoire includes originals, bebop, and the American songbook; the attitude prioritizes commitment over cool. "We're still going to play really hard," she says. "We're going to give it our all and play our hearts out." It is a promise as much as a description, and she consistently upholds it.
The next chapter is already underwayfresh tunes on the stand, deeper dives into the lineage, and more opportunities to make the case face-to-face. Hanahan puts it this way: "We're going to play really hard," she promises, "and I'm really looking forward to seeing everybody."
Tags
Inside The Interview
Sarah Hanahan
Steven Roby
United States
California
san francisco
Buddy Rich
Joe Farnsworth
Marc Cary
Nat Reeves
Eddie Henderson
Kenny Garrett
John Coltrane
Abraham Burton
Louis Armstrong
Sidney Bechet
SFJAZZ
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Sarah Hanahan Concerts
Sep
21
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Sarah Hanahan Quartet
Bach Dancing & Dynamite SocietyHalf Moon Bay, CA
Oct
3
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Sarah Hanahan Quartet
SUNY Schenectady County Community CollegeSchenectady, NY
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