Over the course of a 20-year career, Miguel Zenón has been renowned for his fusion of jazz and world music, drawn from the music he experienced as a young man. Hailing originally from Puerto Rico, his pursuit of jazz saw him head to the United States, graduating from both the Berklee and Manhattan colleges of music before settling in New York. Although Zenón was far from home, he explains there was always a part of Puerto Rico that stayed within his music.

“The only reason I moved over there is to study jazz – there wasn’t an institution at Puerto Rico at the time that could teach me the basics about it. So I started studying jazz and immersing myself in the style, the history of the music, the tradition of it, et cetera, and in doing that I came to realise that I never studied that music formally, in the way that you know something by ear, but you don’t know it from a musician’s point of view, if you know what I mean.

“I learnt a lot of the music from the Caribbean and Latin America, and eventually that research started finding its way into the kind of music I was writing and I was working on, and it all sort of came from these two worlds that I was living in musically – one was the jazz world, which was my second language, and then the Puerto Rican world, which was my first language.”

Zenón has made the most of being a world class alto saxophonist, composer and bandleader by learning about the cultures of the places he’s travelled to and trying to incorporate elements of their music into his own. “I’ve travelled a lot, and that’s part of the job!” he chuckles. “I’ve been everywhere – every continent except for Australia – and the more I travel, the more I feel like I don’t know everything and I need to know more. [It’s] a positive and a negative, I guess.

“I do go out of my way when I travel to seek out new music, because I sort of feel in the way of folklore and the way of music, that it’s the purest form of music that you can find. It’s music that isn’t part of a conservatory or part of a book, music that comes from the people – it’s like speaking. Like language.

“There’s something so powerful about those kinds of music, and I’ve experienced it myself – when you hear it, it’s obvious that it’s something folkloric and rooted, something powerful about the music that dwells in the core of what we are as human beings. I most definitely will be checking out indigenous music while I’m in Australia. Even if what I get out of it isn’t obvious, I’ll get something out of it.”

Zenón will be employing the talents of Sydney’s Jazzgroove Mothership Orchestra on his Australian tour to help him perform his boisterous repertoire as an ensemble. “Part of the whole idea was to not have to bring the whole big band over there – we bring the quartet, the core rhythm section and myself – and then use an ensemble based in Australia. I asked a few friends from Australia who were based in New York and they spoke so highly of the band, so it seemed like a great fit.”

Previous experiences working with outside bands have made Zenón and his crew wiser. “In cases where, for example, we worked with student bands, the music was a little challenging from what their band was used to playing. In this case, though, the Jazzgroove Mothership Orchestra are experienced musicians and I get the feeling it’s going to go great.”

Miguel Zenón Quartet perform with Jazzgroove Mothership Orchestra, as part of Vivid Sydney 2015, at The Basement on Thursday June 4.