Album info

Album-Release:
2026

HRA-Release:
26.06.2026

Label: LEITER

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Contemporary Jazz

Artist: Alden Hellmuth

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Microfictions 05:58
  • 2 Fake(rs) 06:20
  • 3 Definitely Not Friends 04:41
  • 4 Guesswork 05:50
  • 5 Supply Chain 02:29
  • 6 Satellite (K) 03:45
  • 7 Witness 04:55
  • 8 Face The Wall 05:45
  • Total Runtime 39:43

Info for Tether



In any band there is a constant push and pull. A state of tension and release between written music and improvisation, between leading and following each other. In the instinctive, unpredictable world of jazz, that push and pull can explode groups and compositions into entirely new forms, yet no matter how far each player might be stretched there is always something connecting them back to each other and back to the tune. A tether.

For New York-based saxophonist and composer Alden Hellmuth, that innate sense of connection between bandmates and between the dual states of form and freedom is a crucial aspect of her creativity. Following her German Jazz Prize winning 2024 debut album ‘Good Intentions’, Hellmuth now returns with the aptly titled ‘Tether’, an eight-track exploration of jazz, punk and freeform improvisation that centers on the notion that regardless of how loud and unruly her band might get, the tether always ties the players back to the listener and their invigorating experience. ‘Tether’ will be released via LEITER on limited edition vinyl and all digital platforms on June 26, 2026. The first two singles are out now.

“The record is a study in how to effectively write and communicate improvisational ideas,” she says. “We’re always bending and pulling to make something new out of the music in the present moment and even in the improvising world you have to stay tethered to other people in the band. All of us are connected.”

Drawing on the free jazz double bass ensembles of Ornette Coleman and Andrew Hill, ‘Tether’ sees Hellmuth enlist the thunderous ensemble of two innovative bassists – Logan Kane and Miller Wrenn – alongside drummer Justin Brown (Thundercat, Aja Monet) to deliver a suite of heavy low-end compositions. Panning each bassist left to right and playing off Wrenn’s and Kane’s distinct timbres, the resulting record veers from the frenetic rhythmic shuffle of opener ‘Microfictions’ to the punk-inflected riotousness of ‘Face The Wall’, the meditative bass harmonics and textural melodies of ‘Guesswork’ and the wonky polyrhythmic interchanges of the group’s take on the John Coltrane standard ‘Satellite’. Throughout, Hellmuth’s alto saxophone playing is bright, nimble and deeply felt, wreathing sharp lines through the heady bass-weight of her quartet to deliver a lead performance that only serves to uplift the group rather than subsume it in her virtuosity.

“I want to challenge and push myself all the time,” she says. “There was a lot of energy behind the project and I hope people can feel that. It isn’t just a jazz record – the influences range from Anthony Braxton to Japanese punk bands like Otoboke Beaver to Deerhoof and we were just letting it all fly.”

Growing up in Hartford, Connecticut – home of pioneering saxophonist Jackie McLean – Hellmuth was drawn to the instrument from an early age and began playing in middle school bands where she was exposed to jazz. “I was in awe the first time I heard Charlie Parker,” she says. “The idea that you could do all that on the saxophone opened my whole world up.”

Going on to study at the Hartt School in Connecticut, Hellmuth honed her compositional skills and after moving to New York post-graduation she formed the quintet featured on her 2024 debut album, ‘Good Intentions’. Across eight original compositions, Hellmuth builds a confident soundworld of lively improvisation and emotive melodies anchored in her lithe lines on the saxophone. The record led her to win the 2025 German Jazz Prize for Debut Album of the Year International, as well as earning the ASCAP Herb Alpert Young Jazz Composer Award in 2024.

Riding high on the success of her remarkable debut, Hellmuth had little time to rest on her laurels as she soon enrolled into the Master’s program at the prestigious Herbie Hancock Institute at UCLA. Mentored by contemporary jazz greats like trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire, saxophonist Walter Smith III and Herbie Hancock himself, who Hellmuth had a chance to tour with, she soon began formulating the ideas that would make up ‘Tether’.

“One of the bassists, Miller, asked me to play a show with him at a DIY performance space in LA called Non Plus Ultra and opening up for us was Logan performing this incredible solo bass set,” she says. “I felt really inspired by the grittiness of the space and suddenly thought, why not bring all of us together to write music with that ethos for two bassists?”

Adding LA drumming powerhouse Justin Brown into the mix, the group headed to the studio and began honing their spirited blend of written compositions with intuitive improvisations. “I was so inspired by all the artists I had been discovering and studying,” Hellmuth says. “‘Microfictions’ was inspired by Anthony Braxton’s ‘Ghost Trance Music’, for instance, and the way that he communicates expansive improvisational ideas through meticulous melodic structures, while ‘Face the Wall’ was inspired by the Japanese punk music I was listening to; the idea for ‘Satellite (K)’ came about after I heard the pianist Kaja Draksler’s project ‘Punkt’ and ‘Fake(rs)’ was written in cyclical groupings that could be played at any point to fit together like a weird puzzle. It’s a choose your own adventure piece that allows the players themselves to transform the music.”

Enlisting other friends including pianist Paul Cornish and trumpeter Yakiv Tsvietinskyi as featured guests to round out the ensemble, the resulting record is a remarkable feat of impassioned influences that cohere in the tethered energy of the band’s universal forward motion.

Finding a home for the record in the innovative and experimental roster of LEITER artists and with plans to bring this music to live audiences later in the year, as well as continuing to work on new repertoire for her sextet and quartet groups, Alden Hellmuth is clearly an exciting new talent with plenty more to say. “This album is simply me and my love of music,” she says. “It’s wholly authentic and that’s all that will ever matter.”

Alden Hellmuth, alto saxophone
Logan Kane, bass
Miller Wrenn, bass
Justin Brown, drums
Additional musicians:
Haana Lee, sound design, effects, processing
Paul Cornish, piano
Sharada Shashidhar, voice, effects
Yakiv Tsvietinskyi, trumpet
Caleb Buchanan, guitar, effects

Recorded by Laura Agudelo Cuartas
Mixed by Eli Heath
Mastering by Heba Kadry, assisted by Jacob Clements

Please Note: We offer this album in its native sampling rate of 48kHz, 24-bit. The provided 96kHz version was up-sampled and offers no audible value!



Alden Hellmuth
is a saxophonist, improviser, and composer “out of the ordinary” (In & Out Jazz) and currently based in New York. Originally from Hartford, Connecticut, she grew up surrounded by the legacy of the great saxophonist Jackie McLean and received her bachelor’s degree from the Hartt School at the University of Hartford. In 2025 she received her master’s degree from the Herbie Hancock Institute at UCLA, where she was mentored by artistic director Ambrose Akinmusire and Herbie Hancock. Grounded by her foundations in tradition and drawn to a wide spectrum of experimental musical practices, Alden is deeply inspired by art that moves with emotion and lives within dissonance. As a composer and improviser, Alden strives for authentic expression through freedom, intuition, and a deep dedication to her craft. Her debut album, "Good Intentions," released in September 2024 under the Fresh Sound New Talent label, won “Debut Album of the Year International” (Deutscher Jazz Preis) and garnered international acclaim, with Steve Smith of For The Record describing it as "a vital debut," and Culture Jazz praising it as "...full of character, great imagination, and vibrant energy." She recently recorded her sophomore album with Justin Brown, Logan Kane, and Miller Wrenn, featuring Paul Cornish and Yakiv Tsvietinskyi.

Alden has been awarded a number of opportunities including Chamber Music America’s Performance Plus grant (2025), ASCAP’s Herb Alpert Young Jazz Composer Award (2024), New Music USA Next Jazz Legacy Semi-Finalist (2022), The Focusyear Fellowship (2021-22), and since 2016 has participated in numerous programs committed to the support and empowerment of female artists, including the Women In Jazz Organization and the Dorothy Goodwin Fund. She has performed at venues and festivals across the globe including The Hollywood Bowl (LA), Blue Note Jazz Festival (LA), International Jazz Day (Morocco & Abu Dhabi), Stanford Jazz Festival (CA), the Jazz Aux Écuries Festival (FR), the Hartford Jazz Festival (CT), Ottawa Jazz Festival (CA), Rochester Jazz Festival (NY), The Jazz Gallery (NYC), Smalls (NYC), Smoke Jazz & Supper Club (NYC), Bird’s Eye (CH), Jamboree (ES), The Loft (DE), Porgy & Bess (AU), and many more.

Alden has performed and/or recorded widely across genres with artists including Herbie Hancock, Dianne Reeves, Adi Meyerson, Josh Evans, Lex Korten, Kahiem Rivera, Moses Sumney, and in 2023 released two electronic tracks (sophia x maxine). She has also arranged pieces for Moses Sumney, Brandee Younger, and other artists.

This album contains no booklet.

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