
The Steven Banks debut album is finally here. Cries, Sighs, and Dreams drops on May 8, 2026, through Il Pirata Records. Moreover, the release marks two firsts for Banks at once. It is his debut as both a duo recording artist and a composer on record.
Banks is not just a saxophonist. He is the first saxophonist to receive the prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant. Additionally, he is the first to win First Prize at the Young Concert Artists Susan Wadsworth International Auditions. Furthermore, he has performed with major ensembles including the Cleveland Orchestra and the Boston Symphony. In other words, this debut has been a long time coming.
Steven Banks debut album arrives with a clear mission
The title comes directly from composer Hector Berlioz. In 1842, Berlioz heard an early saxophone prototype and described it as an instrument that cries, sighs, and dreams. Banks says those words immediately resonated with how he has always thought about his instrument.
The album celebrates the full expressive range of the saxophone family. It moves across soprano, alto, tenor, and baritone saxophones. Banks performs alongside his longtime recital partner, pianist Xak Bjerken, and the two-time Grammy-nominated Dover Quartet. Consequently, the recording feels both intimate and expansive at the same time.
The Steven Banks debut album opens with his own composition, Surrender, written in 2024 for alto saxophone and piano. Banks describes it as a reflection on releasing the illusion of control. It is a short and accessible piece designed to open the listener’s mind before the more complex works that follow.
The 6 works on Cries, Sighs, and Dreams
The album features six works that span nearly a century of composition. Each piece brings its own distinct character and emotional world. Here is what appears on the full recording:
- Surrender by Steven Banks alto saxophone and piano, 2024
- Oboe Sonata in D by Saint-Saëns performed on soprano saxophone, 1921
- Sonata for E-flat Saxophone and Piano by Paul Creston 1939
- Cries, Sighs, and Dreams by Steven Banks alto saxophone and string quartet, 2022
- Come As You Are by Steven Banks tenor saxophone and piano, 2020
- hear them by Carlos Simon baritone saxophone and piano, 2020
Furthermore, the Creston sonata holds special significance on this recording. Banks wants listeners to hear it not just as a teaching piece but as a mature and worthy work in the classical repertoire. Additionally, the title track was written during the pandemic as a personal response to loneliness and isolation. Banks describes it as a universal search for peace amid pain.
Come As You Are and the mission to open classical music
One of the most personal tracks on the Steven Banks debut album is Come As You Are, written in 2020. Banks describes it as a love letter to his family and the community he grew up in. He grew up in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, surrounded by Motown, Gospel, and R&B.
He says there was a sense in his community that classical music was not for people like him. Therefore, he wrote Come As You Are to change that feeling. The piece has since been performed by saxophonists around the world. Moreover, it has been arranged for full orchestra, extending its reach even further.
The album closes with hear them, written by Grammy-nominated composer Carlos Simon. Simon currently serves as the Kennedy Center’s Composer-in-Residence and the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s inaugural Composer Chair. The piece draws inspiration from a poem by contemporary American poet Nayyirah Waheed and reflects on the presence of ancestors in everyday life.
Source: Il Pirata Records press release, April 2026




Leave a Reply