November, 2025

Breaking Jazz: The Top Albums of 2025

Part I: The best of the best from the big cats on campus, The Varsity

*The WDR Big Band's "Bluegrass" (MCG Jazz), feat. mandolinist Mike Marshall, violinist Darol Anger and saxophonist/ WDR music director Bob Mintzer, earned plenty of spins on "Breaking Jazz" over the last year. But was it good enough to earn being called Breaking Jazz's Top Album of the Year? Here's a hint, it's on the list, but you'll have to keep checking to see if it earns the top spot.

By Matt Silver

Between now and the end of the calendar year, I’ll be revealing my favorite albums of the past year. I’ll present a new one each day or every couple of days, one at a time. It’ll be a list that will continue to grow as we approach the final day of 2025. Whether on paper or on digital screen, lists are inert, but for our purposes you might liken this list to something organic, a thing you can almost see growing in real time, like jazz itself.

This first group of ten albums comes from a group of musicians I call The Varsity. These are artists of proven, consistent excellence. They don’t audition for anyone anymore. They’ve developed signature sounds — and yet, they’re always evolving.

San Diego Symphony's JAZZ AT THE JACOBS Series Opens with a Blue Train Pulling into the Newly Renovated Jacobs Music Center on Nov. 29

This interpretation of the only recording session John Coltrane ever led for Blue Note Records — by a bi-coastal roster of contemporary jazz luminaries — promises to be the repertory jazz event of the holiday season.

By Matt Silver

On Saturday night, Nov. 29 (two days after Thanksgiving), the 2025-26 season of the San Diego Symphony’s “Jazz @ The Jacobs” concert series opens with trumpeter Gilbert Castellanos at the head of a stacked sextet interpreting John Coltrane’s one and only recording for Blue Note Records, 1957’s iconic Blue Train

Joining Castellanos are A-list musicians from both coasts: Brian Levy, the director of SDSU’s jazz studies program, plays tenor sax; Mike Gurrola (Eric Reed, Benny Green, Terry Gibbs, Benny Golson) plays bass; Ivan Malespin (Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra) plays trombone; Grammy nominee Victor Gould (Jeremy Pelt, Jazzmeia Horn, Black Art Jazz Collective, Wallace Roney) plays piano; and rhythmic royalty in the form of Joe Farnsworth (Eric Alexander, Harold Mabern, Cedar Walton, Benny Golson) plays drums.

Together they’ll revisit the period during which John Coltrane went from promising to pre-eminent. 

For Dave Drexler and INSIDE ART, it's a Three-Peat

Drexler's weekly artist interview show once again receives top honors at San Diego Press Club's annual awards.