New Music Monday for September 8, 2025

Listen to this week’s playlist on YouTube and Spotify
Those who have frequented New York’s City’s staple jazz venues in recent years will have noticed a bright new name increasingly appearing consistently. From Dizzy’s and Small’s to Jazz at Lincoln Center, the 2021 BMI Future Jazz Master Caelan Cardello is a pianist whose renown is dramatically and rightly spreading. A mentee of jazz greats such as Harold Mabern, Bill Charlap and Fred Hersch, Cardello’s playing leans into the timeless elements of swing while raising melody, with depths of nuance and intentionality, to the fore. Now, taking to the studio for the first time, Cardello presents eight original compositions and three arrangements on “Chapter One.”

“Summit” is the culmination of nearly two decades of compositional exploration—a collection of pieces written across different stages of guitarist Nadav Remez’s life that ultimately coalesced into a unified artistic statement. It showcases a group of fearless, emotionally resonant musicians, with longtime collaborators Gregory Tardy and Ben Tiberio bringing deep rooted chemistry, while newer voices Guy Moskovich and David Sirkis inject fresh energy. The album blends original compositions with reimagined Israeli and Jewish melodies, creating a musical topography where the past and present converge seamlessly.

                                                              

Also this week, the Wild Iris Brass Band, a Nashville-based, New Orleans-informed brass band co-led by saxophonist Jeff Coffin and trombonist Ray Mason, are joined by special guests Bela Fleck and Steven Bernstein for their debut release, “Way Up”; the Ira B. Liss Big Band Jazz Machine pairs “Unexpected “Guests” and instruments with the classic 17-piece big band on their latest disc; and pianist and composer Art Hirahara and a stellar septet of renowned musicians provide an emotional journey through the diverse landscape of modern jazz on “Peace Unknown.”