Composer and trombonist David Sanford displays his broad-minded approach to large ensemble jazz with his dynamic big band album A Prayer for Lester Bowie. The 2021 record finds him joined by a cadre of boundary-pushing performers including trumpeter Hugh Ragin, whose title-track composition works as the album's central thematic piece. There are also equally engaging improvisational contributions by players like trombonist Mike Christianson, trumpeter Brad Goode, tenor saxophonist Anna Webber, alto saxophonist Ted Levine, and guitarist Dave Fabris, among others. Primarily, A Prayer for Lester Bowie is a showcase for Sanford's boldly textural and harmonically daring composition and arranging skills, talents he first honed at the University of Colorado, then at New England Conservatory, and finally at Princeton, where he earned his doctorate on a Guggenheim Fellowship. Here, he displays his exuberant style, drawing upon such wide-ranging influences as Charles Mingus, Arnold Schöenberg, Parliament-Funkadelic, and more. It's an approach that allows for both straight-ahead moments like his thrilling reworking of Dizzy Gillespie's bop workout "Dizzy Atmosphere," as well as more outré pieces, including the Ragin-penned title track and the dissonant and bluesy "Substraf," both of which conjure the sprawling cacophony of the late trumpeter Lester Bowie's work with the Art Ensemble of Chicago. Sanford also contrasts brassy Teutonic harmonies with funk bass grooves and distorted guitar riffs on "popit" and "Soldier and the CEO," a sound that evokes both Miles Davis' fusion-era Agharta album and the Afro-centric punk of bands like Bad Brains and Living Colour. Elsewhere, he plays with dusky film noir tropes on "Woman in Shadows" and even draws inspiration from his love of roller coasters, crafting a funky, contrapuntal fun ride on "V-Reel." Listening to A Prayer for Lester Bowie, it's hard not to reflect on the trumpeter himself. A sonic innovator and avant-garde trickster, Bowie (who died from liver cancer in 1999) emerged in the '60s and helped to expand not just the idiom of jazz but also what sounds a trumpet can acceptably make. He always took the music, but never himself, too seriously, even as he fused together free jazz with gospel, African traditions, funk, and pop music. For Sanford and Ragin, he is a creative paradigm, and A Prayer for Lester Bowie isn't just a celebration of that legacy but a wildly charismatic expression of it.