Biography
Washington, D.C.-based guitarist Anthony Pirog navigates an unrestricted range of musical idioms. Trained in jazz yet drawn without hesitation into indie- and punk-derived rock as well as ambient exploration, he has established himself among the most distinctive figures on the twenty-first-century Washington-area scene. Live, he appears in constantly shifting formations: unaccompanied experimental performances, the boundary-crossing duo he maintains with cellist and partner Janel Leppin, the aggressive instrumental quartet New Electric, the progressive-leaning alternative-rock trio Skysaw alongside former Smashing Pumpkins drummer Jimmy Chamberlin and singer-songwriter Mike Reina, and an avant-garde jazz trio completed by bassist Michael Formanek and drummer Ches Smith. In 2011 he conducted a twenty-two-musician realization of Terry Riley’s minimalist landmark “In C” at the Sonic Circuits festival. Audiences can never anticipate his next move, a trait rendered even more compelling by his uncommonly astute deployment of technology, the clarity of artistic purpose that shapes every project, and his commanding technical facility.
Pirog entered the world in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. His early years unfolded in Maryland and California until the family relocated to Vienna, Virginia, outside Washington, D.C., when he was nine. His father, once an electric guitarist in a surf-oriented band, supplied a decisive spark: the boy absorbed the elder Pirog’s collection—spanning Howlin’ Wolf and Sonny Boy Williamson through doo-wop and surf—and began playing guitar at age eleven, starting with Roy Orbison’s “Pretty Woman” on a 1963 Fender Jaguar his father passed along. Throughout the 1990s he attended the same high school as Janel Leppin, though their collaborative partnership would not begin until 2005, and participated in numerous bands while his interests gravitated steadily toward avant-garde jazz and experimental music.
A scholarship to a summer session at Boston’s Berklee College of Music crystallized his decision to pursue music professionally; after high-school graduation he enrolled there full-time. Two years of jazz-guitar study at Berklee preceded completion of a jazz-performance degree at N.Y.U. in 2004. Six months later he returned to the D.C. region, having first steeped himself in New York’s club life—catching sets by Bill Frisell, Kurt Rosenwinkel, and Marc Ribot at Tonic and the Village Vanguard—to augment his academic training.
Upon resettling, Pirog quickly made his mark across every conceivable idiom. Club dates and solo appearances encompassed rockabilly, indie rock, avant folk, creative jazz, fusion, free improvisation, electronica, and experimental ambient music. He became a regular at Sonic Circuits, highlighted by the 2011 presentation of “In C,” and earned recognition for his command of electronic processing and looping, routinely surrounding himself onstage with more than twenty pedals.
His earliest documented recording was with the heavy, indie-meets-King-Crimson quartet New Electric on the self-titled EP issued by The Perpetual Motion Machine in 2005. Around the same time he formed the stylistically unbounded duo Janel & Anthony with Leppin and launched his own imprint, Sonic Mass Records, which released his solo debut Beginning to End—live improvisations spanning pastoral acoustic passages and abrasive processed noise—in 2009. Janel & Anthony material appeared on Zeromoon compilations through 2010, and Pirog issued his first leader date, the modern-creative and free-jazz-noise-ambient collection Trio/Sextet, in limited vinyl and digital editions on Sonic Mass in 2011. That same year he joined Chamberlin and Reina in Skysaw, contributing to the trio’s Dangerbird debut Great Civilizations.
During the ensuing decade, Silver Spring-based Cuneiform Records extended the guitarist his broadest platform yet. The duo’s Cuneiform debut Where Is Home drew substantial critical notice after its 2012 release, and Palo Colorado Dream appeared on the label in 2014. Co-produced by Pirog and Reina, the album placed the guitarist on guitar and electronics alongside Formanek and Smith.
Pirog entered the world in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. His early years unfolded in Maryland and California until the family relocated to Vienna, Virginia, outside Washington, D.C., when he was nine. His father, once an electric guitarist in a surf-oriented band, supplied a decisive spark: the boy absorbed the elder Pirog’s collection—spanning Howlin’ Wolf and Sonny Boy Williamson through doo-wop and surf—and began playing guitar at age eleven, starting with Roy Orbison’s “Pretty Woman” on a 1963 Fender Jaguar his father passed along. Throughout the 1990s he attended the same high school as Janel Leppin, though their collaborative partnership would not begin until 2005, and participated in numerous bands while his interests gravitated steadily toward avant-garde jazz and experimental music.
A scholarship to a summer session at Boston’s Berklee College of Music crystallized his decision to pursue music professionally; after high-school graduation he enrolled there full-time. Two years of jazz-guitar study at Berklee preceded completion of a jazz-performance degree at N.Y.U. in 2004. Six months later he returned to the D.C. region, having first steeped himself in New York’s club life—catching sets by Bill Frisell, Kurt Rosenwinkel, and Marc Ribot at Tonic and the Village Vanguard—to augment his academic training.
Upon resettling, Pirog quickly made his mark across every conceivable idiom. Club dates and solo appearances encompassed rockabilly, indie rock, avant folk, creative jazz, fusion, free improvisation, electronica, and experimental ambient music. He became a regular at Sonic Circuits, highlighted by the 2011 presentation of “In C,” and earned recognition for his command of electronic processing and looping, routinely surrounding himself onstage with more than twenty pedals.
His earliest documented recording was with the heavy, indie-meets-King-Crimson quartet New Electric on the self-titled EP issued by The Perpetual Motion Machine in 2005. Around the same time he formed the stylistically unbounded duo Janel & Anthony with Leppin and launched his own imprint, Sonic Mass Records, which released his solo debut Beginning to End—live improvisations spanning pastoral acoustic passages and abrasive processed noise—in 2009. Janel & Anthony material appeared on Zeromoon compilations through 2010, and Pirog issued his first leader date, the modern-creative and free-jazz-noise-ambient collection Trio/Sextet, in limited vinyl and digital editions on Sonic Mass in 2011. That same year he joined Chamberlin and Reina in Skysaw, contributing to the trio’s Dangerbird debut Great Civilizations.
During the ensuing decade, Silver Spring-based Cuneiform Records extended the guitarist his broadest platform yet. The duo’s Cuneiform debut Where Is Home drew substantial critical notice after its 2012 release, and Palo Colorado Dream appeared on the label in 2014. Co-produced by Pirog and Reina, the album placed the guitarist on guitar and electronics alongside Formanek and Smith.
Albums
Singles





