Wednesday
December 31
2025

New Year's Eve at Little Jumbo with the Soul Jazz Revival

The Soul Jazz Revival rings in 2026

Velvet curtains between dimensions. Four sonic alchemists stirring champagne bubbles into galaxies. When the clock chases midnight and the year dissolves into pure possibility, there's only one question that matters: where will you be when the groove takes over? This is the moment when midnight stops being a deadline and becomes a threshold. When the rhythms don't just move you—they rewrite your molecular structure. Soul jazz as time travel, as prophecy, as that feeling you get when you realize the party isn't ending, it's just shapeshifting into something more beautiful than the architects of soul ever dreamed possible.

Five masters of the moment—Jacob Rodriguez's sax melting time and space, Quinn Sternberg's bass threading through dimensions, Joe Enright's drums painting rhythm as color, Alex Taub finding infinity between the keys, Andy Page's guitar weaving stories from Montreux to these mountains—converge to transform the countdown into something closer to levitation than celebration.

The room leans in. The walls remember. The future arrives at Little Jumbo. New Year's Eve. Where the revival isn't just musical—it's molecular.

Featuring

Saxophone

From San Antonio street corners to Michael Bublé's Grammy-winning stages, Jacob Rodriguez has woven a musical tapestry that spans continents and genres. This Manhattan School of Music alumnus doesn't just play saxophone—he channels stories through reed and breath, whether he's painting midnight hues with Ambrose Akinmusire in Brooklyn's underground scene or igniting arena crowds alongside pop royalty. Now nestled in Asheville's Blue Ridge embrace, Jacob has become the valley's secret weapon, teaching the next generation at UNC Asheville while moonlighting with everything from Hard Bop Explosion's fire-breathing quintet to the mystical rhythms of Coconut Cake's traditional Congolese explorations. His baritone sax doesn't just anchor the low end—it rumbles with the wisdom of a world traveler who's learned that the most profound music happens when you're brave enough to blend your influences into something entirely new.

Bass

Quinn Sternberg doesn't just play bass—he becomes the gravitational center around which musical solar systems orbit, his four strings serving as the invisible force that holds melody and rhythm in perfect harmonic balance. In Asheville's intimate jazz venues, Sternberg has mastered the art of musical architecture, building rhythmic foundations so sturdy that horn players can stretch toward the stratosphere while drummers explore the outer reaches of syncopation. His upright bass doesn't merely walk—it tells stories with every step, each note choice revealing decades of deep listening to masters like Ray Brown and Ron Carter while forging his own path through the modern jazz landscape. This is bass playing as conversation rather than accompaniment, where Sternberg's melodic sensibilities transform traditional rhythm section roles into something more akin to chamber music, proving that the most profound musical statements often come from the spaces between the obvious beats, where subtlety meets groove and creates something that makes everyone else in the room sound better.

quinnsternbergmusic.com

Drums

Joe Enright transforms every drum kit into a storytelling machine, his sticks weaving rhythmic narratives that bridge the gap between Asheville's mountain soul and metropolitan jazz sophistication. This is drumming as architectural engineering, where every kick, snare, and cymbal crash serves both the song's immediate needs and its deeper emotional blueprint. Enright understands that great drumming isn't about technical flash—it's about becoming the heartbeat that allows other musicians to find their most authentic voices. His approach reflects the best of Asheville's musical spirit: deeply rooted in tradition yet unafraid to explore uncharted rhythmic territories. Whether providing the subtle brush work that makes a ballad breathe or laying down the propulsive grooves that turn a jazz standard into something urgently contemporary, Enright embodies the drummer's sacred responsibility to serve as both timekeeper and catalyst, proving that the best percussionists don't just keep time—they create the spaces where musical magic becomes inevitable.

Piano

**Alex Taub** started playing piano at six years old in Silver Spring, Maryland, which is not unusual. What's unusual is that by thirteen he had found his way to jazz — studying under pianist Jon Ozment and performing around the D.C. metropolitan area while most kids his age were still deciding whether to keep taking lessons. The instrument chose him early, and he had the good sense not to argue with it. At East Carolina University, he played in the Jazz Ensemble and performed at Lincoln Center and the Billy Taylor Jazz Festival, experiences that tend to recalibrate a young musician's understanding of what's possible. Then, in 2013, he moved to Asheville and did something that takes most transplants years to accomplish: he became essential. Not visible in the way that bandleaders are visible, but essential in the way that the best pianists are — the person everyone calls, the player whose touch and harmonic instincts make any room he sits in sound better than it did before he arrived. Jazz, funk, soul, R&B — Taub moves between idioms the way a fluent speaker moves between languages, without pausing to translate. A decade into building that reputation, he did something surprising. He left. He went to Montreal and enrolled at McGill University, pursuing a Master of Music in Jazz — the kind of decision that only makes sense if you understand what it means to be a working musician who still wants to be a student, who believes there are rooms in the instrument he hasn't opened yet. McGill's jazz program, housed in a city with its own deep improvisational tradition, gave him those rooms. He returned to the mountains with a degree and with whatever it is that happens to a player who steps away from the familiar long enough to hear it differently. Now he teaches at East Tennessee State University, and his duo recording *Six Feet Apart* with pandeiro master Scott Feiner — the founder of Pandeiro Jazz, whose four previous albums essentially invented a genre — captures something central about Taub's musicianship: the willingness to meet another tradition on its own terms and find the place where it intersects with his. Brazilian rhythm and jazz harmony and the particular warmth of a piano recorded at Seclusion Hill in Asheville, all of it threaded together by a musician who understands that versatility isn't the same thing as restlessness. Taub isn't searching for a style. He found it a long time ago. What he's still searching for is the edge of it — the place where what he knows meets what he doesn't, the next room in an instrument that started opening its doors to him when he was six years old.

alextaubmusic.com

Guitar

Nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains, Andy Page has become a cornerstone of Boone's vibrant music scene as a senior lecturer of jazz guitar at Appalachian State University's Hayes School of Music. For over two decades, this versatile virtuoso has woven his guitar strings through the fabric of the High Country's musical landscape, transforming local venues into stages of sonic storytelling. Together with his twin brother Zack, Andy has been known to arrive at open jams and parties, captivating audiences with their deep groove and seemingly endless musical creativity. His fingers dance across fretboards with equal fluency in jazz, rock, and original compositions, while his academic pursuits span from the History of Rock Music to Heavy Metal Culture. A true musical nomad, Andy has carried his craft from the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland to Japan's Muroran Jazz Cruise, and through jazz workshops in Germany. Yet he chose to plant his roots in the mountains of North Carolina, where he continues to nurture the next generation of musicians while maintaining his own creative flame through groups like The Page Brothers Trio and Swing Guitars—a testament to an artist who found his perfect harmony between teaching and performing in the shadow of the Appalachians.

Admission

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