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Paul Tynan & Aaron Lington: Bicoastal Collective: Chapter Six
ByFrom the first note the music of Paul & Aaron captures the listener's attention and doesn't let go. After every musical turn and thematic corner the listener discovers a new audible delight, which leaves them hungry for more harmonic stimulation until the album comes to a fulminant and gratifying musical conclusion. Bravo, maestros!
~

Chris Walden
arrangerPaul Tynan and Aaron Lington, much like

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945

Branford Marsalis
saxophoneb.1960
During that period, Tynan appeared as a soloist with brass quintets and wind ensembles. He also composed original symphonic and chamber music pieces. One was an extended piece for Bala Brass Quintet, which premiered at Tanglewood. Regarding his orchestral works, "I almost wanted them to sound like Prokofiev." said Tynan. "I love his textures... I really like that sound, and his real lush orchestrations. I try to use that as a model when I write for string orchestra."
Tynan also sang throughout grade school. A few ears later for a European tour, he was hired as a counter tenor to sing the boy soprano part in Leonard Bernstein's Chichester Psalms. By age twenty, however, it was necessary to commit to becoming a trumpeter or an opera singer. Ultimately, Tynan chose trumpet because he didn't feel at home in the opera world.
But which one: classical or jazz trumpet? He still had to choose his career path.

Tim Hagans
trumpetb.1954
As for Lington, he didn't start listening to jazz or take his saxophone to R&B gigs in his hometown of Houston, with its distinguished blues tradition, until his teens. Discounting piano while quite young, his first instrument was violin. "I played violin for almost twenty years... I was iust listening to frickin' Mahler, and Brahms, and all these great symphonic writers. In a way, as a saxophonist, there's always, at least for me, a little bit of sour grapes, of, 'Man, I want to play Brahms in a symphony on my saxophone' except you can't. There's some saxophone stuff written for symphony orchestra, but for a number of reasons there's not a lot of it. But I retain that passion of loving that music and loving things about it. So, when I get these commissions for these different pieces, I try to incorporate things that I like about classical pieces into some of the things that I've written."
Lington doesn't actively seek classical music commissions, but he's nonetheless received requests, such as reimagining Bach's Passacaglia in C Minor for a performance featuring saxophonist

Joe Lovano
drumsb.1952
Lington earned a PhD in classical saxophone, as did his mentor, Woody Witt. Yet, as you'll hear, Lington can also tear it up on the bari with the best of them. Recently, he's made a name for himself by revolutionizing altissimo playing. His four-part, overdubbed Bach Chorales, featured on YouTube, for example, showcase his extraordinary technique, in which, as smoothly as butter, he's extended the baritone's range well past its customary two-and-a-half octaves. "I continue to try to incorporate that into part of my playing," said Lington. "Not a lot of bari players do that. Even when I'm improvising, I work-in [altissimo] lines. I've never been a fan of the random high note and then back into the normal range. Because, to me, that's not really using the altissimo as another register of the horn. That's almost using it as an effect."
Apart from Tynan and Lington's impeccable credentials, and the fact that both are master jazz players, they also possess wide-ranging taste. "It's all about staying diverse, staying curious, and just doing the very best I can, trying to get a little better each day," said Lington. In their five previous Bicoastal Collective projects, they've recorded original suites for tentet and big band, a hard-grooving B3 organ date, a quintet session in which they recrafted traditional folk melodies, and a harmonically provocative sextet date with Fender Rhodes. Upcoming is a project for jazz band and symphonic orchestra.
As Tynan told me, "With all the rest of the Bicoastal projects, Aaron and I try to do something different for each one. This time, we kind of wanted to explore one of the traditional baritone and trumpet instrumentations: That's bass, drums, baritone, and trumpet... But, at the same time, we wanted to go with a 'new wine, old bottle' situation and kind of think about the music from a different perspective."
The genesis was really Paul's idea. When the two were brainstorming about BC6, Tynan said, "Let's do no guitar [or] piano, but let's not try to recreate Mulligan/Art Farmer, the pianoless quartet things where there's long strings of counterpoint. Let's not do that, but let's do something like Bitches Brew." The end result was a melange of traditional jazz instrumentation with that unique, late-sixties,

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
In addition to keeping the music harmonically open, "we played around with a lot of different textures: pedals and effects," said Tynan. There are "some tracks where Aaron, or I, or at times both, take on the role of the comping instrument, so, we'd be playing support figures behind the other soloists, which is something that you don't hear that often." Inspired by Kenny Wheeler, who employed overdubbing on his recordings, Tynan wrote four additional horn parts for one of his tunes that were later added in the studio. "It's kind of like a little big band, just the horns, providing some background figures," said Lington.
As with BC1 through BC5, Tynan and Lington split compositional duties for BC6. Lington's "Angles," "Dark Halo," and "Surrounded" is "much more harmonically rooted and melodically driven, while my submission for this particular record ["Arbitrary Rules," "By Iron and Fire," "Traveler from an Antique Land"] tended to be more rhythmic and textural," said Tynan.
"I've had people ask me this before," said Lington. "They'll say, 'Man, great record! How come you didn't record a standard on it?...' I like playing "Stella by Starlight" a lot! But I don't want to record it... I want to record my own music." Bravissimo! Considering their entrepreneurial grit and fealty to their artistic vision, you can bet that Tynan and Lington will continue to morph stylistically for as long as Bicoastal Collective stays at it.
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 Gary Carner.
Bicoastal Collective: Chapter Six can be purchased here.
Contact Gary Carner at All About Jazz.
Gary Carner is a researcher, historian and author of Reflectory: The Life and Music of Pepper Adams.
Track Listing
By Iron and Fire; Traveler from an Antique Land; Arbitrary Rules; Angles; Dark Halo; Surrounded.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Bicoastal Collective: Chapter Six | Year Released: 2023 | Record Label: OA2 Records
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