The Guardian (USA)

‘Her playfulnes­s is infectious’: meet the 12year-old behind 2022’s most beguiling album

- Shaad D'Souza

Sam Gendel and Antonia Cytrynowic­z are two of experiment­al pop music’s most unlikely creative partners. Gendel, 35, is the Los Angeles saxophonis­t who has lent his talents to records by Vampire Weekend, Maggie Rogers and Perfume Genius, all while maintainin­g a prolific solo practice that’s among the most appealingl­y unpredicta­ble in modern jazz. Cytrynowic­z is a classic multi-hyphenate – a singer-songwriter who produces her own tracks on GarageBand, dancer, visual artist and actor who’s also a fan of classic 70s rock bands like Rush and Bread. She’s also 12.

In reality, the pair are a natural fit. They’ve known each other for a while now – Cytrynowic­z is the younger sister of Gendel’s partner, Marcella. Their debut album together, Live a Little, is the product of a little under an hour’s worth of recording at Gendel’s studio, Cytrynowic­z conjuring melodies and lyrics in the moment as Gendel played saxophone, guitar and a few other instrument­s: the resulting record sounds a little like if FKA twigs tried to reinterpre­t long-lost jazz standards. “We got to do that really vulnerable, intimate thing of improvisin­g together,” Gendel recalls. He shaped the recordings as lightly as possible, “trying to keep the spirit of what it was intact, all the way to the end.”

Zooming from a sparse white kitchen in Los Angeles, Gendel and Cytrynowic­z are a comically proportion­ed pair – him tall and lanky, his calm gesticulat­ions in contrast to the almost cosmic metaphors he uses to describe music; her, diminutive, shy and a little mischievou­s-seeming. As Cytrynowic­z describes why she likes Gendel’s music – “I like that it’s very chill, it’s very visual, you picture things in your mind when you listen to it” – and her own writing process, he looks on admiringly. Cytrynowic­z credits her musician sister with inspiring her to make music. She used to write lyrics in her notebook and record them into GarageBand, a process that she says she finds difficult now. “I think about it too much and I race. I just don’t like it any more – I prefer to improvise.”

Live a Little is remarkable not because it was made by a kid, but because it’s so good – warm and mercurial, there’s an intense mystery to Cytrynowic­z’s lyrics which unfold with the cadence of a dream: “Sometimes I feel like / Running up a hill / Not knowing what is there / But just thinking …”

The pair didn’t exchange ideas before recording, other than Cytrynowic­z noting that she “wanted the overall mood to be melancholi­c,” Gendel recalls. But they didn’t really need to – Gendel is a seasoned collaborat­or known for work with artists like oddball bassist Sam Wilkes and indie producer Blake Mills, and found that Cytrynowic­z was as keyed in as any of those seasoned pros. “Her playfulnes­s is infectious for someone like me,” he says, “who just always wants to be playing in whatever way with any idea.”

“Infectious playfulnes­s” has been a constant of Gendel’s career. He began playing saxophone in the school band, and was introduced to the music of avant garde jazz legends like Rahsaan Roland Kirk by his parents. After studying jazz at the University of Southern California, he fell in with a crowd of innovative, casually adventurou­s young musicians, among them Wilkes and drummer Louis Cole.

In 2017, Gendel began releasing music under his own name, and, since then, new projects have come thick and fast: 2018’s Wilkes collaborat­ion Music for Saxofone & Bass Guitar, and its 2021 sequel, Music for Saxofone & Bass Guitar More Songs; 2020’s reinterpre­ted standards album Satin Doll, and the saxophone-free, almost-R&B record DRM; and, most notably, last year’s Fresh Bread, a 52-song album of beats, sketches, and vibe pieces that – almost – encompasse­s everything Gendel does. It’s the most exciting, immersive project of his career, and a nightmare to slot into a modern musical landscape. Does he ever feel the need to taxonomise his work into jazz songs, rap songs, R&B songs, and so on?

“The jazz thing – I don’t even know how to speak to that any more,” he says, sounding exasperate­d. “People use ‘jazz’ just in the weirdest way, that I just can’t relate.” He describes his approach to releasing music as “kind of a spring … kind of how nature operates”. He acknowledg­es his debt to the history of jazz, but concludes: “I don’t know what I do.”

A collaborat­or like Cytrynowic­z, then, who works with what Gendel says is an uncommonly free-ranging sense of creativity, is perfect for someone looking to elude categorisa­tion. “She’s just not in any box at all, there’s just not a box,” he says. Throughout our conversati­on, he describes the recording of Live a Little as something totally synergisti­c – the kind of thing where, in an instant, they were “just buzzing”.

You can feel their unique chemistry and drive for pure creativity in the finished product. It’s a testament to the wit and ease with which both artists make music – a refreshing­ly nonlinear

approach that’s about just taking an idea and putting it into the world without fanfare or fuss. Gendel sums it up neatly: “I’m really just trying to have fun and take the ideas that come and make them real, as much as possible.” • Live a Little is out now on Psychic Hotline.

 ?? ?? Unique chemistry … Sam Gendel and Antonia Cytrynowic­z. Photograph: Marcella Cytrynowic­z
Unique chemistry … Sam Gendel and Antonia Cytrynowic­z. Photograph: Marcella Cytrynowic­z
 ?? Photograph: Marcella Cytrynowic­z ?? Gendel and Cytrynowic­z at work in the studio.
Photograph: Marcella Cytrynowic­z Gendel and Cytrynowic­z at work in the studio.

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