Canadian trumpetist Simon Millerd collaborates with German piano star Pablo Held’s trio, in a set of originals that showcase the band’s strong interplay and skillful arrangements.
– Mark Werlin, AllAboutJazz
Simon Millerd, Canadian Trumpet player and composer based in Montreal, has been playing serious jazz trumpet since his teens. Lessons and Fairytales is his first recording under his own name.
Why the long wait? Partly circumstances. Simon first performed with his main bandmates here, Germany’s acclaimed Pablo Held Trio, in 2011 subsequent to a tour in the European Jazz Orchestra: “The trio has been a major inspiration for my own musical direction. They are so free, adventurous, interactive, united, it is really a joy to listen to. I have applied some of their concepts to my own bands, for example they don’t play with a set list but instead have all their music memorized and can jump from any point in any piece to any other point at the drop of a hat. It keeps the music fresh, keeps you on your toes!” When the trio was booked for a concert at the German Consulate in New York in the fall of 2016, Simon arranged for them to come to Montreal.
This is a very personal album. Almost every track also includes one or more guest artists who are longtime friends and co-leaders with Simon of the Montreal band Nomad. And like Simon they are all graduates of the jazz program at McGill University and former students of Chris McCann, who Simon credits with reorienting his playing and his life: “Chris was my first teacher to talk at length about the importance of developing as a person, not just as a musician. Music became about the expression of emotion, the illustration of the complexity of how we feel. His lessons were life lessons, philosophy, inquiries into truth. He had a lot of practical advice too, how to practice very efficiently and ‘go deep’ by playing very slowly, how to avoid injury etc. My closest friends were almost all private students of his as well. There was a group of us that really took his stuff to heart. Some of us lived together and formed different bands – Nomad, Isis Giraldo’s Poetry Project, Chronicle Infinitas, Brilliant Ally etc.”
And the sad, lovely “Quiet Now” was inspired Simon and vocalist Emma Frank’s relationship and breakup after three years together. Simon muses: “I was just thinking about the double meaning of the title, how it’s quiet after all the fighting of a breakup (it’s quiet now), but it’s also an encouragement to relax or meditate (be quiet now).” One way or another, all the pieces on the record reference a quest that began in his early 20s: “I stopped playing for three years after high school because I became very depressed and lost interest in everything. That experience led me to spirituality and the search for a meaning to all the suffering in the world. My music inevitably has become an expression of that, instead of this quest to be the best, impress people etc.”
“Coltrane and Wayne Shorter are definitely among my biggest influences [others include Icelandic bassist and electronic musician Skuli Sverrisson and Norwegian trumpeter Arve Henriksen]. It’s to Wayne and Trane that I go for relief. Their music is so powerful that it literally can take away my physical pain. It is interesting that they accomplish this in very different ways. Coltrane is very direct in his song titles and is almost always pointing towards the spiritual realm. With Wayne the song titles refer more to adventure, myths and so forth, only rarely alluding to his Buddhist roots…Innocence is a big theme throughout this music, yes…We can look at another’s harmful actions and remember that they just don’t know that they’re doing something wrong and are under the influence of powerful delusions and illusions. A Course in Miracles refers to it more often as our sinlessness. We are forgiven when we realize that there is nothing to forgive. These kinds of ideas are expanded on emotionally, subconsciously informing the music. The lessons seem to part the clouds for inspiration to come through, and the fairytales are more like little sparks igniting a collective movie that the band is creating together. Free improv is incorporated into these songs as a contrast. It’s a relief from the organized structure, and a chance for everyone to build something collectively. It takes a lot of trust and a lot of imagination and I think it brings out a lot of character and unity in the band, especially in the fairytales such as ‘Gnome Home’ and ‘Jonas and the Dragon’.”
Simon Millerd, trumpet, synthesizer (3)
Pablo Held, piano, synthesizer (1, 5)
Robert Landfermann, bass
Jonas Burgwinkel, drums
Jacob Wiens, guitar (1-3, 5-7)
Emma Frank, vocals (1, 5-7)
Mike Bjella, tenor saxophone (2-4, 8)
Ted Crosby, bass clarinet, clarinet (2, 3)
Recorded October 18-19, 2016 and mixed by Pascal Shefteshy at Studio PM, Montreal. Mastered by Djengo Hartlap at Artlab, Paris.
Tracklist
Please note that the below previews are loaded as 44.1 kHz / 16 bit.Total time: 00:44:07
Additional information
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SKU | SGL16222 |
Qualities | DSD 512 fs, DSD 256 fs, DSD 128 fs, DSD 64 fs, DXD 24 Bit, WAV 88.2 kHz, FLAC 96 kHz |
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Release Date | August 4, 2025 |
Press reviews
The Whole Note
Simon Millerd is a young Montrealer whose pensive lines and subtle expressiveness seem particularly indebted to Wheeler at this point in his career, as well as to the Norwegian trumpeter Arve Henriksen, another musician whose work is filled with a clear, Northern light. Millerd’s primary support here comes from a German group, the Pablo Held Trio….It’s a spare and lucid group, effectively setting off Millerd’s quietly intense horn….Millerd’s best moment is the concluding Tale of Jonas and the Dragon, a sprightly seven- minute outing for just Millerd and the trio, with fine upwardly spiralling trumpet lines.
All About Jazz
Simon Millerd is one of those musicians who effortlessly moves between genres. This new CD of his is a collection of work that mixes folk, jazz-rock, electronic minimalism and jazz in original and personal ways….The set feels like one unified project. Millerd’s melodies sound simple but they stick in your head and the constant changes in musical styles feel natural. This feels like the result of a long, personal journey. It is a lovely piece of work.
Musique Machine
…a lush masterpiece of an album….At times, with a sweetly tuneful lounginess, Millerd conjures Return to Forever and 70’s jazz fusion, with string bass and flute unisons. Elsewhere, he strays into desolate arctic soundscaping and subtle melancholic tonal realms befitting classical music or apocalyptic post rock. With nine pieces mostly around four minutes in length, the album breezes by, brimming with ideas and diverse approaches, but always keeping a mood of relaxed contemplation, the music breathing comfortably, the musicians making space for each other. The piano and saxophone emerge as the primary melodic voices….[The] ballads feature elegant, romantic playing from pianist Pablo Held, who has quite the gentle touch with accents and cascading flourishes. In general, one of the strongest suits of the band is their ability to add subtle melodic embellishments and ghost notes to every moment of the music, for an organic, swelling, sweeping elastic meter….This is one of the deepest, classiest and most melodically intelligent lounge albums I’ve ever had the pleasure of hearing….It may not be nearly as multigenre or new feeling as some of Songlines catalogue, but I would be hard pressed to name a more comfortable and confident example of this style. An absolute pleasure to listen to and absorb.
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