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Noah Garabedian: The Power of Patience

Courtesy Stephen McFadden
I understood what the bass does, what its function is, and I was drawn to how it galvanizes the band and steers the ship.
Noah Garabedian

Noah Garabedian
bass, acousticGrowing up in Berkeley, a hothouse of young jazz talent, Garabedian never intended to become a working musician. "I definitely did not want to go to a conservatory," he said on a video call from Brooklyn. "Also, to be honest, I wasn't very good in high school. So, if I had gone to a conservatory, it probably would not have been a high-level one, but I knew that I really enjoyed music."
That high school, Berkeley High School, has an alumni list that reads like a roll call of poll winners: trumpeters

Ambrose Akinmusire
trumpetb.1982

Steven Bernstein
trumpetb.1961

Jonathan Finlayson
trumpet
Rodney Franklin
keyboardsb.1958

Benny Green
pianob.1963

Peter Apfelbaum
saxophoneb.1960

Joshua Redman
saxophoneb.1969

Dayna Stephens
saxophone, tenorGarabedian called that legacy, "inspiring, but also a very intimidating scene. I would say it was a supportive community, but if you weren't developing, you weren't practicing, you weren't playing as at a certain level where the rest of the band was, they kind of let you know."
A self-described "huge rock fan and huge rap fan," he picked up the electric bass in middle school, inspired by
Brick Fleagle
b.1906
Les Claypool
bassb.1963
Then his father, a music fan, took him to Yoshi's and his direction changed when he saw the upright bass. "I just thought it was a really cool-looking instrument. I really fell in love with the sound and the way it looked," he said. "I didn't really know at the time what role the bass played in a traditional 'jazz' context, but once I started playing jazz, I understood what the bass does, what its function is, and I was drawn to how it galvanizes the band and steers the ship."
Yet despite a burgeoning love for the instrument and a desire to keep music in his life, Garabedian was hesitant about pursuing a musical career.
Shunning the conservatory track, Garabedian enrolled in the ethnomusicology program at UCLA. "I was really drawn to kind of the social aspect of music, how music develops within a culture and why. Also, how the music impacts and influences a culture."
This academic track broadened Garabedian's musical horizons and perhaps unwittingly, made him a more complete musician. He played in the university's Balinese gamelan ensemble, the West African drumming ensemble and the Balkan ensemble. Yet at the same time Garabedian was gigging around LA on bass. "I started paying rent through gigs and I guess from there, I just figured I'd keep going. You know, nobody ever told me to stop playing."
In August 2008, he made the big move to New York, "I was living pretty comfortably in Los Angeles, and I just decided to change everything up," he said. "I ended up going to NYU for my master's and met a lot of great people there, but I guess I just wanted to see what else was out there."
So it has been patience, not ambition that has marked Garabedian's path to a career that has included tours with saxophonist

Ravi Coltrane
saxophone, tenorb.1965

Jeff Tain Watts
drumsb.1960

Andy Milne
pianob.1967

Kris Davis
pianob.1980

Caleb Wheeler Curtis
saxophoneb.1985
Garabedian has recorded with that band and issued two solo recordings, Big Butter and the Eggmen (BJU Records, 2014) and Consider the Stars Beneath Us (Outside In Music, 2022), the latter featuring Dayna Stephens, pianist

Carmen Staaf
pianob.1981

Jimmy McBride
drumsThe latter recording was dedicated to Garabedian's father, Peter, who died at 93 in 2020, just before the pandemic changed the world. "It isn't a tribute album," Garabedian insists. It's not a eulogy and it's not an album to mourn his loss."
Yet the music glows with a banked-fire intensity, a quiet inner flame that doesn't reach out and grab the listener as much as it draws her or him closer to its warmth. Garabedian's writing is crucial here, but so is his choice of musicians.
"Dayna was one of my very first teachers, my first summer playing bass in eighth grade at Feather River Jazz Camp in the Sierras," he said. "He also was my brother [

Raffi Garabedian
saxophoneLike the band assembled for Stars, Ember arose from deep personal connections. "[Curtis] used to work at the old Jazz Gallery. We became friends and we actually lived together for a while. He's one of my oldest and closest friends in New York," Garabedian said. "I've also known Vinnie for a long time, and we've played a lot together. We were hanging out a bunch and playing sessions, and just figured we should record."
When he has the time, pianist and composer

Orrin Evans
pianob.1975
"It's more than a band," Garabedian asserted. "It's like this place for us to talk and learn and develop, and it's a very supportive situation. Our rehearsals are usually just us talking, to be honest. Then we'll improvise for 30 minutes and then we just talk a little more."
Discourse, the back-and-forth of it, is what gives Garabedian's music its engaging intimacy. That and patience.
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