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“A profound musical statement—emotionally rich, expansive, and visionary.”

- Regina Carter, NEA Jazz Master

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ISAIAH

MEG OKURA | PAN ASIAN CHAMBER JAZZ ENSEMBLE

Screenshot 2025-08-31 at 10_edited_edite

OUT NOVEMBER 14, 2025

“…the premiere violinist, jazz or otherwise, of our time.”

— Jim McNeely, composer/pianist

 

Violinist, composer, and outspoken cultural iconoclast Meg Okura returns with Isaiah (Adhyâropa Records, February 20, 2026) — a radiant new album marking the 20th anniversary of her Pan Asian Chamber Jazz Ensemble (PACJE) and the arrival of a fully realized jazz-composer voice shaped by a lifetime across musical worlds. Isaiah is a testament to Okura’s extraordinary achievement as a composer: fresh off a major symphonic milestone, she recently returned from Long Beach, CA, where she premiered her Shaon Overture—a work for 68-piece Symphonic Jazz Orchestra featuring Okura as the jazz violin soloist—as the winner of the SJO George Duke Commissioning Prize. She was also honored with the International Society of Jazz Arrangers & Composers’ Fundamental Freedoms Commission, placing her firmly among today’s most original compositional voices.

Long acclaimed as a virtuoso violinist, Okura has increasingly emerged as one of contemporary jazz’s most distinctive composer-bandleaders. Isaiah deepens her reputation as a boundary-crossing innovator whose artistic voice is tied to an ongoing process of self-definition.

Drawing on her lived experience and the ensemble language she has built over two decades, Okura describes the new album as “a musical memoir of my shifting identities... a realm where I am not an outsider.” From her upbringing in Japan, to her embrace of Judaism, to her life as a Japanese Jewish American in an interracial family, Okura uses composition as a space where these identities coexist.

“Through PACJE, I have shaped a sound distinctly my own, not bound to a single style but defined by the freedom to move among them,” she writes in the liner notes — a sentiment the album expresses with cinematic sweep, chamber-music intimacy, and the rhythmic fluidity of modern jazz.

Featuring Okura’s longtime PACJE collaborators, Isaiah unfolds as an emotionally rich, stylistically expansive suite. The opening track, 'Sushi Gadol,' pays tribute to her brother and bursts with explosive gestures and restless energy, establishing a spirit of defiance. 'Blessing,' inspired by the Pre-Haftarah Blessing she and her daughter both chanted at their bat mitzvahs, reframes sacred melody through orchestral and jazz-waltz textures.

The album’s centerpiece, 'African Skies,' reimagines Michael Brecker’s iconic composition through Okura’s previous work 'Afrasia,' turning a foundational influence into something unmistakably her own. Okura toured and recorded the song with the late tenor saxophonist; so it is central to her identity as a musician, with Michael’s brother, Randy, as guest soloist, furthering the Brecker legacy.

'Rice Country,' composed during her Aaron Copland House Residency, explores immigrant identity through a Japanese pop fragment refracted into Copland-esque Americana. 'Jubberish,' commissioned by Chamber Music America’s New Jazz Works, transforms her daughter’s childhood phrase (“Gibberish, but Jewish”) into a playful, imaginary folk language.

Performers include flautist Anne Drummond, clarinetist Sam Sadigursky, keyboardist Brian Marsella, guitarist John Lee, bassist Evan Gregor, and drummer Peter Kronreif, alongside special guests soprano saxophonist Sam Newsome, trumpeter Randy Brecker, alto saxophonist Remy Le Boeuf, and percussionist Rogério Boccato — artists whose sensibilities amplify the album’s emotional breadth.

With Isaiah, Okura is also stepping into a broader public role as a writer, speaker, and cultural thinker. Her brand new Substack newsletter and podcast, Meg’s Un-Kosher Notes will explore the intersections of identity, faith, race, art, and freedom of expression — extending the conversation that her music begins.

Praised by The New York Times for “grandiloquent beauty that transitions easily from grooves to big cascades to buoyant swing,” Okura now unites her musical mastery with a newly expansive cultural vision — shaping an experience that transcends genre, language, and identity. 

MEG OKURA | PACJE BIOS

SHORT BIO


Praised by The New York Times for music of “grandiloquent beauty that transitions easily from grooves to big cascades to buoyant swing,” Tokyo-born, New York-based composer and violinist Meg Okura has emerged as a distinctive voice in contemporary jazz. In 2025, she marks the 20th anniversary of her Pan Asian Chamber Jazz Ensemble (PACJE) with the release of Isaiah, the group’s fifth album, alongside the world premiere of her Shaon Overture (The Clock Overture), commissioned by the 68-piece Symphonic Jazz Orchestra as winner of the George Duke Commissioning Prize.

An acclaimed classical virtuoso from an early age, she toured internationally as soloist and concertmaster—including a Kennedy Center debut—before expanding her artistry into jazz and composition, working with Michael Brecker, Lee Konitz, Steve Swallow, Tom Harrell, David Bowie, and Pharaoh’s Daughter. Okura’s career has been recognized with many of today’s most significant honors for jazz artists, awarded by Chamber Music America, ISJAC, Jazz Road, and the Asian Cultural Council. Her recordings—including IMA IMA, Lingering with Kevin Hays, and NPO Trio Live at the Stone—have received international acclaim.

 

FULL BIO

 

Praised by The New York Times for music of “grandiloquent beauty that transitions easily from grooves to big cascades to buoyant swing,” Tokyo-born, New York-based composer and violinist Meg Okura has emerged as a distinctive voice in contemporary jazz. In 2025, she celebrates the 20th anniversary of her Pan Asian Chamber Jazz Ensemble (PACJE) with the release of Isaiah, the ensemble’s fifth album, alongside the world premiere of her Shaon Overture  (The Clock Overture), commissioned by the 68-piece Symphonic Jazz Orchestra after she was awarded the prestigious George Duke Commissioning Prize.

An acclaimed classical virtuoso from an early age, she toured internationally as soloist and concertmaster—including a Kennedy Center debut—before expanding her artistry into jazz and composition. She bridges classical and jazz with uncommon fluency, having performed with the Sirius and Scorchio Quartets—ensembles devoted to contemporary and cross-genre projects—and worked with artists such as Michael Brecker, Lee Konitz, Steve Swallow, Tom Harrell, David Bowie, and Pharaoh’s Daughter, the groundbreaking Jewish/world music group, celebrated internationally for its innovative sound, with which she has performed for over 25 years. She also received a Grammy nomination as a violinist on Argentinian jazz composer Emilio Solla’s Second Act.

PACJE has been her primary laboratory for two decades, appearing at Birdland, Blue Note, the Knitting Factory, Winter Jazzfest, and international festivals from Kuala Lumpur to Japan. Its repertoire includes works such as Rice Country (written at Copland House) and Jubberish (commissioned by Chamber Music America), emblematic of Okura’s ongoing evolution. The ensemble’s discography—Meg Okura’s PACJE (2006), Naima (2010), Music of Ryuichi Sakamoto (2013), IMA IMA (2018), and now Isaiah (2025)—has earned wide acclaim, with IMA IMA’s release show at Dizzy’s Club at Jazz at Lincoln Center named a New York Times Editor’s Pick and one of All About Jazz’s Best Releases of the Year.

In parallel, her compositions have increasingly reached beyond her own ensemble. Phantasmagoria has been featured at the Grand Teton Music Festival, Florida State University Festival of New Music, and LunART Festival, and recorded on the Grammy-nominated album Ourself Behind Ourself, Concealed with Tasha Warren and Dave Eggar. Her big band composition Silent Screams: An Anthem for the Unheard, commissioned by the International Society of Jazz Arrangers & Composers (ISJAC), was premiered at Vanderbilt University and later performed in New York by the BMI/New York Jazz Orchestra and by the Meeting House Jazz Orchestra.

With Shaon Overture, commissioned for the 68-piece Symphonic Jazz Orchestra, Okura composes on the largest scale of her career. The milestone feels both inevitable and extraordinary: a symphonic palette growing out of her formative experiences as a virtuoso soloist and concertmaster, as a cutting-edge chamber musician, and through years of “on-the-job training” with jazz legends and leading composer-arrangers such as Gil Goldstein and Steve Swallow, as well as extensive work in world-music ensembles. Without ever having studied jazz or composition formally in an institution—trained only as a violin major—she has nonetheless risen to this moment, her achievements all the more remarkable as the result of experience earned on stage rather than in the classroom.

Her career has been recognized with many of today’s most significant honors for jazz artists, awarded by CMA, ISJAC, Jazz Road, and the Asian Cultural Council. Her recordings also include Lingering, a duo album with Kevin Hays (“achingly beautiful,” The Ear), and NPO Trio Live at the Stone with Sam Newsome and Jean-Michel Pilc. Looking ahead, she will travel to Vietnam in 2026 as an Asian Cultural Council Fellow, studying the indigenous musical traditions of the H’mong and Jarai peoples, research that will further enrich her compositional voice.

PRESS PHOTOS

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TRACK LIST

ISAIAH

MEG OKURA | THE PAN ASIAN CHAMBER JAZZ ENSEMBLE

 Adhyâropa Records • Total time: 55:38

​​

  1. Sushi Gadol (feat. Meg Okura, Anne Drummond) – 5:48
     

  2. Blessing (feat. David Smith, Sam Sadigursky) – 4:04
     

  3. Isaiah (feat. Meg Okura, Remy Le Boeuf) – 6:10
     

  4. Rice Country (feat. Brian Marsella) – 7:48
     

  5. Afrasia Intro– 1:11
     

  6. African Skies (feat. Randy Brecker, Brian Marsella, Meg Okura) – 9:32
     

  7. Sunset Bells (feat. John Lee, Randy Brecker)  – 7:06
     

  8. Jubberish (feat. Meg Okura, Sam Newsome) – 7:56
     

  9. Will You Hear My Voice (feat. John Lee, Remy Le Boeuf) – 6:02

PERFORMERS

THE PAN ASIAN CHAMBER JAZZ ENSEMBLE

Meg Okura – violin, electric violin (erhu on tracks 2 & 6, vocal on track 2)
Anne Drummond – flute
Sam Sadigursky – bass clarinet (flute on tracks 5 & 9, B♭ clarinet on track 4)
David Smith – trumpet, flugelhorn
Rebecca Patterson – tenor & bass trombone
Riza Printup – harp
John Lee – electric guitar (acoustic guitar on tracks 4 & 9)
Brian Marsella – piano
Evan Gregor – acoustic & electric bass
Peter Kronreif – drums

Guest Musicians:
Randy Brecker – trumpet (tracks 5, 6, 7 & 8)
Sam Newsome – soprano saxophone (tracks 2, 5, 6, 7 & 8)

Remy Le Boeuf – alto saxophone & clarinet (tracks 3 & 9)
Rogério Boccato – percussion (tracks 6 & 8)

 

Additional Musicians:
Yotam Ishay – organ (tracks 6 & 7)

Naomi Newsome – vocal (track 2)

STREAM NOW

ISAIAH

MEG OKURA | THE PAN ASIAN CHAMBER JAZZ ENSEMBLE

 Adhyâropa Records • Total time: 55:38

マネージメント

モイシェ・ローゼンフェルド

Golden Land Concerts & Connections

concerts@goldenland.com

マネージメント

モイシェ・ローゼンフェルド

Golden Land Concerts & Connections

concerts@goldenland.com

マネージメント

モイシェ・ローゼンフェルド

Golden Land Concerts & Connections

concerts@goldenland.com

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