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Tivon Pennicott: The Tiller


Tivon Pennicott
saxophone, tenorb.1985
With roots in St. Elizabeth, Jamaica, Pennicott grew up in a music-brimmed household in Marietta, Georgia. As he says by phone from New York, which he first moved to as both an eager and gifted young musician over ten years ago, "Ska and rocksteady kind of originated from Jamaica and my parents would always go around the house singing with that kind of feel, which is a bit different than the typical American coming from the more rock, hip-hop and gospel-oriented household. So that was in my ear, and I think it shaped part of the direction of how I think about creating music." Alongside his parents and sister, Pennicott started playing the drums at age ten in the family band but gravitated towards the saxophone after getting what he calls the "melody bug," ideas for songs playing in his head while yearning to express himself on the golden horn.
Although he plays within the genre of jazz, the term itself doesn't quite suffice for Pennicott as the name of what he and his fellow artists create. "I have a lot of mixed feelings about just the word, 'jazz' because some of the greats, particularly

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Beyond music, past discovering a guiding light in such contemporary jazz masters as saxophonist,

Joshua Redman
saxophoneb.1969

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Kenny Burrell
guitar, electricb.1931

Gregory Porter
vocalsb.1971

Esperanza Spalding
bassb.1984
Lover of Nature (New Phrase Records, 2014) is Pennicott's auspicious, funk-inflected debut with what he terms his "Sound Quartet" consisting of " data-original-title="" title="">Mike Battaglia on piano,

Spencer Murphy
bass, electricb.1988

Kenneth Salters
drumsb.1981
The city is a special place for the artist, particularly the act of playing live here. As he explains, "As musicians, as artists, we're trying to get to that state where we catch a wave. It's like being a surfer; we're just seeing if we can catch one. If we catch one of those waves, we just ride it and, if we catch it and start riding it, that's that autohypnosis where we're just going and basking in the utopia." Pennicott has, in fact, played at lush venues around the world such as London's Royal Albert Hall and the city's own The Village Vanguard and, as he continues, "It's amazing. It's almost like a weird type of high because once you experience it or you start to build up to that state, you're just always trying, trying, trying to get it back. So a lot of times, you'll have shows or performances and you don't quite get there but the audience feels like you did-the audience is happy but you're just like, 'Ah, let's try it again, try it again.' But when you do get there, it's like your fingers are moving by themselves, you're not even thinking, you stop, you look around, and you're like, 'What just happened?'" Such wondrous disbelief, such otherworldliness, is magically realized on Pennicott's Spirit Garden.
Recorded in June 2019 both in New York City and at Dreamland Studios upstate and released this past October, the musician's latest offering is almost a concept album in which he is a tiller of the titular soil who tries to ascend to Heaven. Aided by the chord-less quartet of

Philip Dizack
trumpet
Yasushi Nakamura
bass
Joe Saylor
drums
Nat King Cole
piano and vocals1919 - 1965

Kamasi Washington
saxophoneb.1981

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Spirit Garden, which Pennicott composed, arranged and produced entirely himself, is, in fact, a record of great vision and intent. It is the result, as he says, of "putting more and more plants, fruits and vegetables" into his diet so that there was "a lot of healing physically but also mentally and spiritually." The acutely intuitive musician then realized, "What a benefit this is. I can't just keep this to myself. Simultaneously, all of these sounds are coming into my head, and it's all rushing into one centered piece of taking the chord-less quartet and putting the sounds of my head on top of it because that is the trigger for healing."
The past year, with its infernal stew of global unrest and the deathly coronavirus, was, after all, like no other in the modern era yet Pennicott wanted to put something positive out into the world. Mentioning album highlight, "Galatians Five Twenty Two," for instance, which is a verse in the New Testament, he explains, "It's what's called the fruit of the spirit. It's kind of the connection between my physical wellness of eating more fruits and vegetables and leaving out a lot of the processed stuff and meat and all that, so it's concentrating on fruit physically but also concentrating on the fruit of the spirit. Galatians Five Twenty Two is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. So those are the fruit of the spirit but it's also me ingesting actual fruit for my wellness." The album does indeed radiate all of those qualities as evidenced on such songs as the bopping "Jump for Joy," which may very well be the sound of love at first glance, as well as on Pennicott's rendition of

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993
As winter turns to spring, bare branches blooming with gold leaves and church bells tolling in a wisteria of dutiful sons praying for their diseased mothers, ineffable beauty stands. Young mothers give birth to baby boys on sunlit mornings, strangers strike up a friendship on opposite ends of a park bench, and saxophonists of bottomless compassion shoot a sonic firework into thin air. ..."But the fruit of the spirit is love," starts Galatians Five Twenty Two and that is what remains of us: the room for love, the chance at connection, the glimmer of redemption.
It is a life that can go as quick as a thunder strike, in which a decade ago can feel like yesterday and the other way around, where phone calls go unanswered and others never come, but there is still light. ..."Joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness...," continues the verse from Galatians and Pennicott, on his radiant album, offers up these slippery qualities. It's a toast, a glass raised to the workers, doers and soul miners but also to those who feel too weak to do at all. It brings everyone in, levels all eyes, compels everybody to ask of each other and of themselves: who are you? What do you stand for? Can you forgive? Can you move forward through this life? ..."Faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control," ends Galatians Five Twenty Two and, halfway through Spirit Garden, on the edenic song of the same name, Pennicott, standing in for everyone, lands in Paradise, blasting his horn, smiling at the brilliant sun before him, finally home.
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