About Me
Live at Yoshi's: Two Rooms Same Door Now Available!
Welcome! I'm an alto saxophonist and composer dedicated to the pursuit of my own voice in the music. Check out some clips from my new album, Live at Yoshi's: Two Rooms Same Door, released on ArtistShare. It was recorded at Yoshi's Jazz House on November 21st, 2005 and features Randy Porter (piano), John Wiitala (bass) and Akira Tana (drums). The album is available at online retailers including i-tunes, CDBaby, Amazon and more!
Or check out MP3s from both my albums on iTunes!
Here's some more about me:
According to famed jazz writer Nat Hentoff, alto saxophonist and composer Sarah Manning "can swing as naturally as she breathes - an enlivening presence in the new generation of jazz makers. Manning plays - and writes - in what is unmistakably her own voice." Her singular dedication to developing that voice distinguishes her from her peers, and illuminates a path rife with intrigue.
Originally from New England, Manning immersed herself in jazz at a young age, playing in the combo at Hartfords Artist Collective as a high school junior, a school founded by the great saxophonist Jackie McLean. McLean covered his ears in mock horror at her purposely dissonant arranging debut, but encouraged the teen and she kept writing. A full scholarship at Interlochen Arts Academy for her senior year in high school led to her acceptance into the Jazz Studies Program at William Paterson College, directed by bassist Rufus Reid. In search of an interdisciplinary education, she left William Paterson after two years and got her degree in Womens Studies from Smith College in Massachusetts. It was in Massachusetts that she was able to study with Dr. Yusef Lateef, whose emphasis on searching for one's own voice in music gave her the courage to pursue her own path.
That path took her to the San Francisco Bay Area in 2002. Since her arrival on the West Coast, Manning produced two albums as a composer and bandleader and performed at top venues from Yoshis in Oakland to the Kuumbwa Jazz Center in Santa Cruz. Her first release, House on Eddy Street (2004), is a critically acclaimed album of her compositions with Randy Porter (piano), John Wiitala (bass), and Akira Tana (drums). In April 2005's JazzTimes, David Franklin observed, "Sounding like no one but herself, she possesses a well-focused, slightly edgy tone that suits equally her firmly swinging, uptempo postbop excursions and her highly melodic slow-tempo explorations. KCSM DJ Michael Burman named it number five in his list of the top ten new releases of 2004. Her second album, Live at Yoshi's: Two Rooms Same Door, which features seven new compositions performed by the same quartet, was recently released on ArtistShare and is available at her website.
2008 finds Manning revisiting her East Coast roots. Shatter the Glass is bent on achieving that elusive goal in today's jazz world - a working, stable group that through rehearsals and philosophy lives and breathes on stage as a musical unit.