After Wandering, a Trumpeter Hones His Sound at Home

“To get here, it hasn’t been a yellow brick road. Even now, it’s not no damn yellow brick road,” the trumpeter and composer Brandon Woody said on a video call from a Fort Myers, Fla., hotel room. It was mid-March and Woody, 26, was in between tour stops supporting Luther S. Allison. In the weeks leading up to the release of his first album as a bandleader, his eyes glimmered with vigor.

The road he spoke of was both metaphorical and literal. Woody has earned a fortunate position among 20-something peers like Allison and the Toronto electro-jazz group BadBadNotGood (with whom he toured this spring). To get there he traveled a serpentine, sometimes-rocky path through institutionalized jazz education that has, for others, been a prerequisite for obtaining a record deal with a grande dame of jazz labels. It took him from Boston to Stockton, Calif. to New York, in search of a breakthrough that he eventually got — in his hometown, Baltimore.

“I’m always going to be a little bit jagged around the edges,” he said of his music. “You’re going to hear my struggles, but you’re also going to hear my celebrations and my successes. This is a homegrown thing, and it’s going to stay that.”

“I’m always going to be a little bit jagged around the edges,” Woody said.Credit…Kyle Myles for The New York Times

On Friday, Blue Note Records will release “For the Love of It All,” an album he and his Baltimore-based band Upendo (Swahili that translates roughly to “love”) honed not in the studio, but in front of audiences, primarily in his hometown. At club performances over the past half decade, fans would find ways to request songs that had never been recorded and weren’t yet titled. “People would remember the songs and be like, ‘Yo, when are you going to do,’ — and just sing it because they know the melody,” Woody recalled.

The multidisciplinary artist and fellow-Baltimore native Nia June helped title some of the tracks that appear on his album. After “telling her about the story line and what the songs meant to me,” he explained, she worked to synthesize the ideas as titles. June, a filmmaker, poet and writer who has worked with Woody extensively since 2020, described the common thread of artists in the city: They are “brave, real and radically vulnerable.” She added, “The people here possess an unnatural resiliency — an unashamed, relentless will to survive. And with style.”

You cannot copy content of this page

Betturkey Giriş Beinwon - Beinwon - Beinwon - Smoke Detector - Oil Changed - Key Fob Battery - Jeep Remote Start - C4 Transmission - Blink Batteries - Firma Rehberi - Firma Rehberi - Firma Rehberi - Firma Rehberi - Firma Rehberi - Firma Rehberi - Firma Rehberi - Tipobet - Tipobet - Xslot giriş - Betsat giriş - Klasbahis giriş - Tokyobet giriş - Ngbahis giriş - Onwin giriş - Atlasbet giriş - Betra giriş - Betkanyon giriş - Romabet giriş - Betewin giriş - Ligobet giriş - istanbulbahistr giriş - Betmatiktr giriş - Trbet giriş - Sahabet giriş - Atlantisbahis giriş - Betpublic giriş - Winxbet giriş - ibizabet giriş - Gobahis giriş - Deneme bonusu veren siteler 2025 - Deneme bonusu veren siteler 2025 - Bonus veren bahis siteler 2025 -
Acibadem Hospitals - İzmir Haber - Antalya Haber -