Artist

Amanda Gardier

Genre: Jazz ,Post-Bop ,Modern Creative
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Blending fluid phrasing with intricate chordal layers and spontaneous invention, saxophonist Amanda Gardier unites longstanding jazz conventions with an adaptable approach and an alert curiosity toward mainstream entertainment. She completed her studies at Indiana University Bloomington, earning a bachelor’s in music pedagogy and a master’s in jazz scholarship. Although comfortable across formats ranging from intimate groups to large ensembles, Gardier has gained widest recognition through her partnership with guitarist and spouse Charlie Ballantine, contributing to multiple projects under his name such as the Pixies-influenced Where Is My Mind? (2017) and the interpretive collection Life Is Brief: The Music of Bob Dylan (2018). Her debut recording as leader, Empathy, surfaced in 2018, with the follow-up Flyover Country arriving two years afterward. Early in 2024 she issued her third album, Auteur, a four-piece session drawing from the cinematic work of Wes Anderson.

Born in St. Charles, Illinois, Amanda Gardier participated in her high school’s jazz workshop and performed with its jazz ensemble before entering Indiana University Bloomington in 2010 to pursue the dual degrees. While enrolled she performed in multiple contexts, among them a three-month stint with the Disneyland All-American College Band, membership in the Stardusters Jazz Orchestra, and a period of student teaching.

She also played in a regional cover group that included fellow IU attendee Charlie Ballantine on guitar; the pair began a relationship that led to marriage and sustained musical collaboration. Gardier appeared on five albums by Ballantine’s ensemble: Green (2015), Providence (2016), Where Is My Mind? (2017, containing a version of the Pixies track), Life Is Brief: The Music of Bob Dylan (2018, surveying the iconic folk artist’s material), and Vonnegut (2020, reflecting writer Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.).

Released in August 2018, Gardier’s initial leader date Empathy presented a quintet of Gardier, Ballantine, pianist Clay Wulbrecht, bassist Jesse Wittman, and drummer Chris Parker, augmented by saxophonist Rob Dixon and vocalist Mina Keohane. January 2020 brought her second album, Flyover Country, whose pieces took inspiration from figures in the crime series Ozark and showcased an entirely different quartet comprising pianist Ellie Pruneau, bassist Brendan Keller-Tuberg, and drummer Carrington Clinton.

In 2023 Gardier and Ballantine relocated from Indianapolis to Baltimore, Maryland, after Gardier joined the U.S. Navy Band Commodores in Washington, D.C. Early 2024 saw the release of her third album, Auteur: Music Inspired by the Films of Wes Anderson, a densely textured collection of original works exploring the distinctive director’s characters, recorded with Ballantine, bassist Jesse Wittman, and drummer Dave King.