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Collin Sherman

Collin was born in 1979 in Lexington, Kentucky. Growing up in Louisville, he began playing saxophone in 4th grade at age 9. He attended Oberlin College (in Oberlin, Ohio) and Tulane Law School (in New Orleans, Louisiana). Collin moved to New York City in 2004, and played with a traditional jazz group on and off while practicing law. He began releasing his own recording in 2012. His early recording were in the ambient electronic vein, partly because the project was entirely self- produced and Collin did not have access to standard recording equipment. As he grew more comfortable recording and producing on his own, he gradually began incorporating his wind instruments (alto and soprano saxophone, Bb soprano and bass clarinet) into his recordings. By his 2017 release, "Biologic Obligations", Collin was recording material which was more explicitly jazz-oriented, while retaining some of the droning, ambient qualities that defined his earliest releases.


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9
Album Review

Collin Sherman: Life Eats Life

Read "Life Eats Life" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Collin Sherman, a multiple reedman, has a day job in Manhattan. But on nights and weekends, he sheds the work clothes and switches into his idiosyncratic original voice in the creation of music. Life Eats Life is a solo effort. He plays and records all the instruments in his living room for his albums. Then he overdubs it all together--an audio cut-and-paste affair. He is responsible for the crafting of the spooky, 1940-ish Noir and the exotic saxophone-over-drones outing String ...

22
Catching Up With

Collin Sherman: A Solitary Visionary in Jazz

Read "Collin Sherman: A Solitary Visionary in Jazz" reviewed by Robert Middleton


Collin Sherman is an outlier in the jazz world. He creates all his own music, plays every instrument, records everything himself, and rarely performs live. His approach is unconventional but deeply compelling, allowing him to produce music that defies easy categorization. In a conversation via Zoom, Sherman opened up about his journey, his creative process and the unique challenges of being a one-man jazz ensemble. I began by asking Sherman how he got started in music. “I started playing jazz ...

18
Album Review

Collin Sherman: Noir

Read "Noir" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Making music is most often a collaborative affair. Big bands, duos, trios, quartets and quintets--take your pick. Miles Davis (or any other of your favorites) calls his guys into the studio or to the stage where they bump elbows and trade riffs, drawing their individual personalities out to form a collection of sound waves to craft a finished work of art. On the other hand, we have the solo outing. Alone at the piano, or with the guitar--or ...

16
Extended Analysis

String Planes

Read "String Planes" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Collin Sherman takes the 'A' train to his day job in Manhattan. Billy Strayhorn, the writer of the tune “Take the 'A' Train" that was made famous by the Duke Ellington Orchestra, must be smiling. Do the seeds of Sherman's compositions germinate during these forty-five-minute rides? Possibly, though his music has no resemblance to Ellington's or Strayhorn's. Day job and train rides aside, Sherman creates his music in a home studio in a one-person endeavor via the overdubbing ...

11
Album Review

Collin Sherman: Organism Made Luminous

Read "Organism Made Luminous" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


The Covid pandemic slowed artistic progress for many musicians. Opportunities to collaborate became scarce; live music in front of an audience blinked out. However, the enterprising players out there found a way. File sharing and solo projects blossomed, and these—along with the relative affordability of home studio set ups—had an invigorating effect on musical creativity. If you cannot go out and play to an audience, you might as well stay home and create. But for multiple instrumentalist (primarily ...

8
Album Review

Collin Sherman: Suitable Benchmarks of Reform

Read "Suitable Benchmarks of Reform" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Multi-reedist Colin Sherman's thirteenth album, Suitable Benchmarks Of Reform, was made from the same template from which his previous twelve releases came into being—recording alone in his New York City apartment, recording the individual parts then layering each onto the next to make an ensemble sound. This, in the time of the arrival of the Covid virus, has become a more common practice; it is just that Sherman got a head start on the go-it-alone process. Call it ...

12
Album Review

Collin Sherman: Arc of a Slow Decline

Read "Arc of a Slow Decline" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Music is typically a collaborative affair. A given number of players comes together and each takes a part in the shaping of a particular sound. Teamwork is the word. But sometimes a musician just has to go it alone and--in this technological age that allows such things--the recording then collaging and layering of sounds creates an ensemble work. Music lovers of a certain age may remember Paul McCartney's McCartney (Apple, 1970) as a groundbreaker in this style of expression.

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Music

Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Life Eats Life

Ex-tol Recordings
2025

buy

String Planes

Ex-tol Recordings
2024

buy

Noir

Ex-tol Recordings
2024

buy

Electric Empath

Ex-tol Recordings
2024

buy

Inhabiting the Other

Self Produced
2023

buy

Suitable Benchmarks...

Ex-tol Recordings
2022

buy

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