Based in Rochester, New York, Jacobo Vega-Albela is a jazz drummer and composer dedicated to bringing life to music — whether by composing new works, programming interesting pieces from the standard repertoire, or seeking out collaborators to create fresh and interesting musical chemistry.
In 2025, he released his debut album "Un-Belonging" with 577 Records. The album received press in Donos Kulturalny, Bob Osborne's Different Noises, the Las Cruces Bulletin, and Rochester City Magazine, and has been aired on 91.7 FM WMSE, 91.1 FM WFMU, 89.1 FM KURU, and 92.5 FM KOWS-LP. A subsequent release tour expanded his audience to venues in New York City, Connecticut, and New Jersey.
A multi-disciplinary background has earned Jacobo degrees in Classical Percussion (B.M., New Mexico State University) and Jazz Studies and Contemporary Media (M.M., Eastman School of Music). He was a 2023 participant in Betty Carter's Jazz Ahead, performing his original composition "Birthday Week" at the Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage and alongside Melissa Aldana at the Burlington Discover Jazz Festival.
He has performed at the Rochester International Jazz Festival, the Burlington Vermont Discover Jazz Festival, the Geneva Jazz Festival, and the Las Cruces Juneteenth Jazz Festival. He performs regularly throughout Upstate New York at Pausa Art House, The Trestle, and The Little Theatre Cafe.
My work as a composer is to give shape to deeply felt internal states, and at times to bring to light the otherwise opaque terrain of my unconscious. I believe I am a product of all the small moments I've lived, so I try to live fully and feel with depth and complexity, in the hope that I might write earnestly and imbue the work with some part of my humanity. I find myself drawn to the natural world, the dynamics of human connection, and our relationships to time, impermanence, and perception. These curiosities work their way into my material and serve as an evergreen source of inspiration.
As a writer for improvising bands, I aim to create compelling vehicles for improvisation — musical environments that put the groups I work with into a headspace conducive to open co-creation. The brilliance of improvised music often lives in the collective intelligence of the band, and I welcome the group reimagining and reinventing the material I precompose.
As an improviser, I strive to drop my masks and inhabit the moment, making music in real time without judgment. I am drawn to opposites and contrasts: density and sparseness, motion and stasis, counterpoint and the single line. I play with these polarities to shape the music, and I work with motives to develop a narrative through-line. The tremendous spirit my peers bring to their tireless improvising inspires me to dig ever deeper, to meet them fully in the moment, and to support and challenge them as they do the same.
Half of the tracks on the album are trio selections. A suite made up of "Moonbeams" and "To Hope" prominently features pianist Leon Hsu and bassist Zach Walgren, and "Moonbeams" includes a short drum solo for Vega-Albela. 390S showcases Vega-Albela's writing for trio and a dark re-imagining of "I Fall In Love Too Easily" provides opportunity for the three to stretch out on an old familiar form.
The playful but cerebral "Plonqs" introduces the listener to Jordan Lerner's alto saxophone sound, and an inspired tenor saxophone solo from Adam Aronesty leads the group into a solo from Vega-Albela over a vamp to end the piece. Tender and introspective, "Carousel" (the only quartet number on the record) gives Lerner the opportunity to shine as soloist, this time on tenor saxophone. "High Priest", a dark and evocative track is all about group interplay. Aronesty and Lerner trade ideas on two tenors to kick off a solo where Aronesty and the rhythm section push each-other to new heights. Finally Lerner and Hsu trade ideas to keep the momentum of the piece building. "Birthday Week" is a dynamic closer with a contrapuntal introduction that brings the group together piece by piece. It features Aronesty, Hsu and Lerner (this time on alto saxophone) as soloists, and the band cranks the intensity up all the way to the end of the record.