Home » Jazz Musicians » Sean Imboden Discography
Communal Heart
Sean Imboden
Label: Self Released
Released: 2025
Duration: 37:44
Views: 495
Tracks
Fire Spirit; Dance of Inquiry; Certified Organic; Someone To Watch Over Us; Portal Passage.
Personnel
Sean Imboden
saxophoneMatt Pivec
saxophoneLaMont Webb
saxophone, altoMark O'Connor
saxophoneCecily Terhune
saxophone, tenorEvan Drybread
saxophoneClark Hunt
trumpetJohn Raymond
trumpetScott Belk
trumpetKent Hickey
trumpetTucker Woerner
tromboneAndrew Danforth
tromboneChaz Rhodes
tromboneRich Dole
trombone, bassJoel Tucker
guitarChristopher Pitts
pianoNick Tucker
bassCassius Goens
drumsAlbum Description
All compositions by Sean Imboden; Produced by Steve Allee and Rich Dole; Recorded at Primary Sound
Studios in Bloomington, IN, May 10-11, 2024; Released April 18, 2025; Engineered, mixed and mastered
by Jake Belser; Assistant engineering by Bri Cobbey; Artwork by Kara Tucker; Video documentation by
Pearce Vaughn; Session photography by Mark Sheldon.
Liner notes:
My story is one of discovering my own path, and staying true to myself. I grew up with two musician
parents, and became involved with the touring Broadway show circuit after college. I played these shows
for 8 years, including two tours of Japan as the featured soloist with Blast II. These were great
experiences, however, I felt less and less artistically fulfilled as I continued to play musicals. I lived in NYC
for a couple of years after being on the road, but still mostly only played commercial music. Throughout
this time, I continued to have the persistent feeling I wanted to return to creative music, which was always
my first love. I felt an intense desire to improvise, write music, and create my own sounds. I decided to
stop playing musicals and commercial gigs, and focus solely on fulfilling my potential as a creative artist.
The opening track "Fire Spirit" is the musical personification of this feeling - a drive so strong it becomes
impossible to ignore. "Dance of Inquiry" is the naturally optimistic and inquisitive viewpoint I bring to every
situation. This positive and curious perspective was necessary when I made the transition from being a
commercial musician to pursuing creative work. I left a more reliable, predictable path, to one with more
uncertainty. Thankfully, the decision to follow my creative instinct allowed me the opportunity to realize
projects such as this one, and for this I feel incredibly grateful. "Certified Organic" is in a way the theme
song for how I develop my music and band. Everything we create is grown from the ground up - no
pesticides are used haha, just the grit and persistence of myself and bandmates. We're proud to be one of
the few modern jazz big bands in the midwest, and we can go toe to toe with our coastal brethren!
"Someone To Watch Over Us" was "inspired" by a particularly dark news cycle, at a time when it felt like
the world was especially chaotic, and the public desperately needed leaders who truly cared about us. My
wish is that this piece exudes hopefulness - a feeling we must hold on to. I've felt this way even more
lately, so I suppose "Someone" part II is on the horizon. The last track on the album, "Portal Passage",
symbolizes the transformative experience we go through when we open ourselves up to new scenarios
and possibilities in life. I chose to title the album Communal Heart because of the strong sense of
community I feel whenever the band gets together for a rehearsal or gig, as well as the overwhelming
support we received with our Kickstarter.
_______________________
Here is the inspiration behind our album cover art, from artist Kara Tucker, in her own words:
“You shared your story about rediscovering yourself as an artist. It seemed, based on your story you
decided to leave a more familiar life path in order to pursue your art, though that meant taking a risk. I
originally thought a phoenix would be perfect, but after I listened to the album that imagery just didn't fit. I
kept imagining mother of pearl as I was listening because of the lush, pearlescent harmonies you create
with your writing and arrangements. So I started looking up how shells are formed, as I couldn't shake the
image. Apparently oysters secrete calcium which builds up in a lifetime of beautiful and unique layers.
Both the shell and the pearl are how oysters defend themselves from dangers. They are both also
extraordinarily, and undeniably beautiful. And I thought that's a perfect metaphor! So I began studying
oysters, shells, and pearls and attempted to recreate them both realistically and abstractly (an
improvisation).”
_______________________
Here is the press release for Communal Heart, written by Shaun Brady:
While he cites the possibilities for “compositional power” and “orchestrational ideas” inherent to the big
band, the main reason that Indianapolis-based saxophonist/composer Sean Imboden formed his own 17-
piece orchestra is captured in the title of the ensemble’s brilliant debut album. Communal Heart vibrantly
captures the community spirit that Imboden has fostered not only within the ranks of his Sean Imboden
Large Ensemble, but between the band and its fervent, ever-growing audience of loyal fans.
“There's an old adage among musicians,” Imboden explains. “It says, ‘To make it a great gig, you have to
have two out of three elements: you want the money to be good, you want the music to be good, and you
want the hang to be good.’ I realized maybe there's a fourth: if the audience is amazing, that raises up the
experience for everyone.”
Due out April 18, 2025, Communal Heart is not only the result of Imboden’s journey towards gathering
and nurturing both his band and his audience, but in a way tells that personal story in musical form.
Though unintentional, Imboden’s multi-hued compositions are autobiographical in giving voice to the
ambitious drive and imagination that led the saxophonist from a comfortable career as a journeyman
musician to take a leap of faith into the daunting big band arena.
The example of success as a professional musician was set for Imboden from an early age. Both of his
parents are musicians. His father, still active on the Indianapolis scene at 77, is a woodwind player who
played on recording sessions and for traveling Broadway musicals, and contracted orchestral musicians to
accompany touring artists. His mother was a freelance violinist who took on a middle school teaching job
to be at home with her young children; now semi-retired, she continues to perform in church.
“Most kids are rebelling against their parents when they choose to go to music school,” Imboden laughs.
“But mine always encouraged me to take that path, so it just felt natural.”
After finishing his studies, Imboden launched directly into a thriving career touring with Broadway
productions and as a featured soloist with the Tony-winning brass- and percussion-focused production
Blast! II. He also found opportunities to perform and record with Grammy-winning artists and jazz
luminaries, including Slide Hampton, Taylor Eigsti, Mike Rodriguez, Sean Jones, Emmet Cohen, Steve
Allee, Kenny Phelps, John Raymond, and Valery Ponomarev. At the same time, he began to forge
relationships on the local jazz scene that would come to fruition in the Large Ensemble, including
recording four albums with the Tucker Brothers quartet.
Eight years along this road, Imboden discovered that he felt unfulfilled, and looked back wistfully on his
days playing in school big bands. “The things that excited me about jazz at a younger age were
improvising, creating and trying to express myself. When those options are taken out of the equation,
even though it’s nice to have job security and a steady income you start to wonder if it’s really worth it. I
really wanted to make something happen for myself, and to do something in the community where I live
and get more people involved.”
The Sean Imboden Large Ensemble was born in 2017, and gradually accumulated a loyal fanbase
through the bandleader’s dogged work ethic and spirited compositions, and the inspired and fiery playing
of his selected bandmates. Imboden cites the modern impressionism and lively improvising of the Maria
Schneider Orchestra as a primary influence, though his touchstones span the history of big band music,
from Sammy Nestico’s arrangements for the Count Basie Orchestra, through Charles Mingus’ large
ensemble compositions and Gil Evans’ lush orchestrations for Miles Davis, to the contemporary
reinventions of Darcy James Argue.
Communal Heart was funded in part through a successful Kickstarter campaign, strong evidence of the
supportive community that has aggregated around the band. The album explodes out of the gates with
the powerhouse “Fire Spirit,” which the composer describes as the musical embodiment of his impetus to
devote himself to his own creative impulse – “a drive so strong it becomes impossible to ignore.” The
inquisitive nature and irrepressible curiosity that fueled this impulse are illustrated with the buoyant and
graceful “Dance of Inquiry.
“Certified Organic” is a playful, funky nod to the self-motivated aesthetic of Imboden and his bandmates,
while also hinting at a sense of Midwest pride, a gentle assertion that you don’t have to leave flyover
country to make a bold artistic statement. “We do have a lot of farms here,” he allows. “You learn that if
you put in the hard work, this thing will grow, whether it's a flower or a giant oak tree or a farm of
soybeans – or a big band.”
Expanding the intimate yearning of the classic “Someone To Watch Over Me,” Imboden once again added
a communal spin to write “Someone To Watch Over Us,” a determinedly optimistic (or at the very least
hopeful) response to our tumultuous political arena. The album concludes with the forward-looking
“Portal Passage,” a questing piece about the search to “be transported into the ideal world that you
envision – or an attempt to create one for yourself.”
Imboden has vividly realized his own ideal world on Communal Heart, one that invites listeners to become
part of an inviting and rewarding musical community.
Review
- Communal Heart by Dean Nardi
Album uploaded by Sean Imboden