The Independent Ear

Ancient Future – the radio program: 2/25/09 Playlist

Do you know what it means to miss… (Mardi Gras)?

(selections listed in playlist order by artist, track, album title and label)

1) New Birth Brass Band, "Hush Your Mouth", New Birth Family, Valley

2) Professor Longhair, "Big Chief" pt. 1, Mardi Gras in New Orleans, Mardi Gras Records

3) John Boutte, "At The Foot of Canal Street", At The Foot of Canal Street, Valley

4) Professor Longhair, "Big Chief" pt. 2, Mardi Gras in New Orleans, Mardi Gras Records

5) Adonis Rose & the N.O. Vaders, "’Lil Liza Jane", Untouchable, House Swing

6) Irma Thomas, "Early in the Morning", Simply Grand, Rounder

7) Donald Harrison, "I’m The Big Chief of Congo Square", The Chosen, Nagel Heyer

8) Matt Perrine, "New Orleans Blues", Sunflower City, (no label listed?)

9) George French, "Gloryland", It’s a Beginning, Nia

10) Shannon Powell, "Powell’s Place", Powell’s Place, King of Treme

11) Ed Blackwell, "Nevermore", Boogie Live 1958, AFO

12) Harold Battiste, "We’ll Be Together Soon", Lagniappe, AFO

13) Germaine Bazzle, "Secret Love", Standing Ovation, AFO

14) Herlin Riley, "Trouble in Treme", Cream of the Crescent, Criss Cross

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DREAM LUCKY by Roxane Orgill

 

 

 

Dream Lucky, the new book by Roxane Orgill (Smithsonian Books 236pp) would make splendid firestarter for a film.  Subtitled "When FDR was in the White House, Count Basie was on the radio, and everyone wore a hat…" the book is a beautiful stroll through the late 1930s using the Roosevelt administration, with Eleanor as an essential and quite resonant subtext, and the parallel evolution of Count Basie from territory band member then band chief, to his not-without-pitfalls conquering of Manhattan, to renowned road warrior bandleader to provide vivid context to the era.  Included also are chapters that shine a vivid light on the big band contrasts between the Benny Goodman and Chick Webb (with Ella as subtext in the manner of Eleanor to Franklin) outfits and their eventual historic confrontation at the Savoy Ballroom.  I found the passages on Reverends Adam Clayton Powell Sr. and (and eventual congressman) Jr. particularly strong, especially Jr.’s dogged and dashing determination and boycott leadership to open up Harlem businesses as employers of it’s black residents.  As they say in the publishing game, this is a true page-turner and highly recommended.  Ms. Orgill handles this colorful period in our history with aplomb and wry humor.

 

 

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The Monday Night Big Band Phenomenon

Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra births a tradition

Being on the campus of the University of Missouri February 17 & 18 for a NEA Jazz Masters Live site-visit for a presentation of Jon Poses’ exceptional We Always Swing series brought home just how special the Monday Night big band tradition is in New York.  As their participation in the NEA Jazz Masters Live funding program which supports a select number of presenting organizations to engage NEA Jazz Masters in special programming, We Always Swing had the brilliant idea of commissioning NEAJM Bob Brookmeyer to write a new piece for the Grammy-winning Vanguard Jazz Orchestra.  The concert and premiere of the new work, a suite entitled simply "Suite For Three" (written to spotlight three stellar VJO soloists: saxophonists Dick Oatts and Rich Perry, and trumpeter Scott Wenholdt played to a robust house at the University of Missouri Theatre.  But all the brilliance of their performance aside, let’s for a moment ponder just how difficult it is in the 21st century to bring an entire big band from New York all the way out to Columbia, Missouri for a one-nighter; sure makes you realize just how special this effort was!  The concert was also special for some marvelous solo turns from one of the finest trumpeters in the music, Terell Stafford.  Drummer John Riley kept the pots cooking in the grand tradition of Mel Lewis, and the band boasts one of the great baritone players of our time Gary Smulyan.

 

The preceding day as part of their NEAJM project the organization presented two interview sessions; the first featured NEAJM and renowned jazz historian-journalist Dan Morgenstern in a one-on-one reminiscing in tempo session with Bob Brookmeyer at the Univerisity of Missouri School of Music.  That was followed by Brookmeyer and Morgenstern being joined onstage by two of the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra’s co-leaders, trombonists Douglas Purviance and John Mosca to further reflect on the storied 44+ year history of the orchestra which has morphed in that time from the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra to the Mel Lewis Orchestra (upon Thad’s departure to Denmark) to what is now the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra (VJO), fresh off their Grammy win for the 2008 Planet Arts release "Monday Nights".  Brookmeyer, a charter member of the band and frequent contributor to its book, told funny stories about how the band started in rehearsals upstairs from the musician’s hang-out Jim & Andy’s, and about further adventures.  What became the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Jazz Orchstra officially launched on Monday, February 2, 1966.  Purviance and Mosca, both of whom came onboard in the 70s, spoke about how special it has been to play in the band and how Monday nights at the Vanguard have evolved over the years — including the three evolutions of the band to the point where today leadership is shared by five members, including themselves. 

 

I asked them a question about how the band first locked down the Monday night at the Vanguard gig and learned that when it all started at the time there was a musician’s union ban on Monday night gigs, which were officially designated as musician’s night off.  They were able to circumvent that edict and since that time their storied gig has spawned all sorts of regular and semi-regular Monday night band gigs at clubs around Manhattan, none of which has enjoyed the longevity of the VJO, the grandaddy of them all.  I was reminded of an encounter a couple of weeks ago with two large ensembles on a Monday night in Manhattan.

 

Mingus Big Band

 

Of all the jazz widows of great masters my hat has long been off to Sue Mingus for the tireless way she has gone about maintaining and upholding the legacy of Charles Mingus and his music.  The Mingus Big Band is currently enjoying a Monday night residency at the Jazz Standard, a club which among other things enjoys hands-down the best menu and cooking of any jazz club in Manhattan.  Among her many efforts Sue Mingus has been quite clever about doing more than just ensuring gigs for the Mingus Big Band, Orchestra, and Dynasty; she has always stayed one step ahead of the game by seeking fresh approaches to their presentations.  For example this year they’re celebrating the 50th anniversary of three important Mingus records: "Blues and Roots", "Ah Um", and "Dynasty".  So the band is performing music pretty much exclusively from those three sessions — though they did veer off into some slightly more obscure Mingus from his "Baron Mingus" days for a vocal selection — and the results are bracingly fresh as always. 

 

Nominal co-leadership of the band appears to be shared by  bassist Boris Kozlov, who performs on Charles’ famed lion’s head bass, and tenor saxophonist Wayne Escoffery, who also share the various intros.  Among other marvelous moments on this particular evening were excursions into such Mingus lore as "My Jelly Roll Soul" and "GG Train", tunes that have not been often performed otherwise.  Among the stalwarts in the big band on that particular Monday were saxophonists Vincent Herring, Abraham Burton, Jason Marshall, and Donny McCaslin; trumpeters Randy Brecker, Kenny Rampton, and former VJO trumpeter Earl Gardner (still one of the best lead trumpeters on the planet), trombonists Frank Lacy (who contributed one of his customary humorous vocal turns) and Andy Horton, Donald Edwards on drums, and the bracingly fresh Orrin Evans on piano, who injected some wicked clave into one of his turns.  When a band boasts such sturdy soloists it can be difficult for each to get a proper turn, but indeed each did as the set was very skillfully arranged.

 

 

Properly refreshed I headed over to Roulette for a large ensemble performance of a different flavor,  Percussionist-composer Adam Rudolph’s Go Organic Orchestra.  Rudolph, known by some for his long-standing duo with the great reedman Yusef Lateef, is a man who has long straddled the fence between jazz, improvising music, and various global music expressions.  On this night his Go Organic Orchestra was a string-heavy ensemble that included such notables as cornetist Graham Haynes, reed specialist J.D. Parran, and guitarists Leni Stern and Kenny Wessel — through a program of his original music heavily steeped in the Butch Morris school of gestural conduction.  Appropos the fresh flavor of Rudolph’s conduction, when I arrived the first people I spotted just off the entrance to the performance space were Butch Morris and Henry Threadgill!  Just another wintry Monday night in Manhattan! 

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African Rhythms, the autobiography of Randy Weston #3

Randy Weston (shades) and your correspondent during a 2007 interview sposored

by Jazz Alliance International onstage at University of District of Columbia.

 

This is the latest installment in our ongoing series of anecdotes and excerpts from the forthcoming book African Rhythms, the autobiography of Randy Weston (composed by Randy Weston; arranged by Willard Jenkins) which will be published by Duke University Press.  This time we focus on Randy’s experiences at the historic 1977 FESTAC, the African world Festival of Arts and Culture held in Lagos, Nigeria.  Randy’s experiences are particulary pertinent now because the African nation of Senegal will host FESMAN ’09, the successor to FESTAC and thus the third African world festival, in December ’09.  Scroll down through the latest installments in The Independent Ear to Read details of the recent U.S. launch event for FESMAN 2009 last January at the UN.  Weston serves on the U.S. organizing committee of FESMAN 2009.

 

FESTAC ’77 and another hang with Fela…

In 1977 I traveled [to Africa] on my own to join a delegation of artists and great thinkers at the FESTAC event.  FESTAC ’77 was actually the second Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture.  The organizer’s idea was to bring over black representatives of the global arts and culture community from across Africa and the Diaspora, including places as far away as Australia, which sent some Aborigine artists.

 

    Once again I traveled to Lagos, which by that time was a bit different place than it was when I was there in the 1960s.  For one thing cars had literally taken over the place and the traffic was horrendous around the clock.  Ethiopia was the host of FESTAC ’77 even though NIgeria was the site.  The Nigerian government reportedly put up huge amounts of oil money to stage this event.  The whole idea is that we are one African people, that was the goal of FESTAC.  No matter if we’re in Mississippi or Havana or Australia, or wherever…

 

    They invited about 20,000 artists from across the globe.  I only wound up playing once, at least officially, though I did jam with Fela; but we’ll get to that in a minute.  Sun Ra was there and he played once.  There was so much great artistry at this conference that you didn’t need to play more than once.  Representatives from the entire black world organized this thing.  They hosted colloquiums throughout FESTAC on everything from education to health to music, all things involved with African people.  It was designed to develop a sense of global unity.  FESTAC lasted one month, throughout January.  I stayed most of the month because I had come individually on my own; I didn’t come with the American delegation because I was living in France at the time.

 

    The array of folks there was incredible.  For example I’d have breakfast and my tablemates might be Louis Farrakhan, Stevie Wonder, Queen Mother Moore, and a heavy Sufi master named Mahi Ismail.  Imagine me hanging out with those cats!  When he arrived Stevie came into the hotel with his guitar, walked in the lobby, sat down and started singing and playing his guitar.

 

    Fela was one of the main people I wanted to see while there, and like many African musicians he had his own club called The Shrine, just opposite his village in Lagos.  Fela’s club was really big, it must have held about 1,000 people and the night I went there it was packed.  When I got to Fela’s village he was sitting in a corner, holding court and eating away.  I’m stepping through all kinds of women, all surrounding this dude.  It was quite a scene.  He saw me and said "Randy, come on and have some food."  We talked awhile then it was time for him to perform, so he put on his stage costume and we were stepping around all these women to get outside.  As we’re walking through this village it was obvious Fela was like a king to these people.

 

    We entered The Shrine and this place, along with Bobby Benson’s joint, really became my inspiration for wanting to open up my own club.  Fela got his band together for the performance and he called me over and said "Randy, you sit there."  He had an English film crew capturing his every move.  He started playing this little rhythm on the piano, then the band came in and he grabbed his saxophone.  The rhythm was totally infectious, but you have to hear it live, you have to be where people are dancing to this band to fully appreciate this groove.  At one point in his performance Fela grabbed the mike and said "Ladies and gentlemen, I want you to meet my brother from America," and they brought me onstage.  So we jammed a bit.  Next thing I know he’s talking on the mike again and he’s got me by the hand and he’s cursing out the military — and there were military guys in the club!  I wanted to get the hell off that stage with a quickness ’cause those cats don’t play!  Man, Fela was fearless, but I was sweatin’… what this guy DIDN’T call the government… and he wouldn’t let go of my hand!  The people were cheering him on!

 

    One week later, after we had all left, the soldiers raided Fela’s village and destroyed the place.  They threw his mother out of a window, beat him up and took him to prison, and raped all his girls.  But when he came out of jail Fela was the same, still defiant.  He said "I’m the president of Africa"; he was against all that stuff that was in opposition to the true Africa, he was incredible.

 

    As for FESTAC, which was over by the time all that madness happened to Fela, the final night was Stevie Wonder, Miriam Makeba, and Osibissa in a stadium with 50,000 people in the stands.  As I always say, we’re all a part of this, all our music is different, and all our music is the same.  But this FESTAC thing was too powerful, it was too big.  The white press gave it absolutely no coverage…  But this was the most fantastic event I ever participated in up to that point.

    

 Excerpted from African Rhythms, the forthcoming autobiography of NEA Jazz Master Randy Weston.  Stay tuned to these pages for further anecdotes from our book…

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Interview: Toyin Spellman-Diaz/Imani Winds

Members of Imani Winds backstage. That’s Toyin Spellman-Diaz in between John Patitucci and Joe Lovano.  Flautist Valerie Coleman next to Patitucci, bassoonist Monica Ellis next to Lovano.  (Not shown: Mariam Adam, clarinet; Jeff Scott, French horn.)

 

One of the most exciting young ensembles in chamber music is the group Imani Winds.  Part of their charm is the broad nature of their pallet, which has included liberal interactions with jazz composers, musicians and ensembles.  Among others they have collaborated with Paquito D’Rivera, Wayne Shorter, Steve Coleman, and Jason Moran in concert and on record.  Last year they performed a triumphant concert interacting with the Wayne Shorter Quartet at Carnegie Hall. 

 

The development of Imani Winds has been a particular pleasure to behold having known their oboe and English horn specialist Toyin Spellman-Diaz since she was — in her words — "a little girl."  She is the daughter of two exceptional people on the Washington, DC arts scene, producer Karen Spellman and jazz historian-author ("Four Lives in the Bebop Business"), poet and former National Endowment for the Arts program director A.B. Spellman, who was very important in the development of a program near and dear to Open Sky, the NEA Jazz Masters (and in whose name the annual NEAJM jazz advocate award is bestowed).   On the heels of their performance with the Wayne Shorter Quartet and in light of their recent and quite exceptional Christmas holiday recording for the Koch label which featured Moran and bassist James Genus among others, I caught up with Toyin recently to ask her about the development of this unusual chamber ensemble Imani Winds.

 

Willard Jenkins: Tell us about the history of Imani Winds.

 

Toyin Spellman-Diaz: Imani Winds started in 1997 when we were all idealistic grad students living in New York.  Our flute player had the idea of putting together a wind quintet made up of musicians of color who would play the standard wind quintet chamber music repertoire, but would also champion works by composers of color.  She also wanted to have a group that would play for children, especially children with little or no access to our instruments or even classical music in general, and to serve as role models for young people (especially young people of color) as people who had an idea and followed through with it.

 

We started out with a tiny concert season of about 4 or 5 concerts per season which we put on ourselves.  After a couple of years we did competitions and these competitions led to management.  From there we hired ourselves a publicist, got a recording contract with Koch International Classics with whom we made 5 CDs (one Grammy-nominated) and have managed to go on liking what we do and liking each other for 11 years.

 

WJ: What is the guiding music philosophy of Imani Winds?

 

TSD: Anything goes, but all points lead back to classical music.  The whole point of getting together was, in a nutshell, to expand the way classical music is perceived.  That means that the ensemble will try its best to defy convention in every aspect of our performances and recordings.  As mentioned before we play music by people you might not expect to write classical music, i.e. musicians of color, but we also commission works by jazz artists, Middle Eastern and Jewish artists, and collaborate with musicians from different backgrounds as well.

 

We also don’t always perform traditionally, either.  We get up and play from inside the audience, especially for children, we’ll play and move across the stage, and even when we are sitting and playing we try to bring a unique, communicative energy.  All of that is designed to try to make the audience feel like they are a part of the performance too.

 

WJ: Given your family history — your dad is a jazz historian and poet, your mom has produced jazz festivals and there was obviously music all around your house — and the fact that you attended Oberlin College, which has an exceptional jazz studies program directed by Wendell Logan, were you one of the leading voices in the group that have helped broaden the Imani Winds repertoire and performing career to include interactions with jazz musicians and composers?

 

TSD: Everyone in the group is a leader and brings their own ideas to the group, be they about music or about how the business of the group is run, and I have certainly contributed many ideas and helped form the identity of the ensemble.  That being said, I wish I could claim the role as a leader in bringing the jazz influence into Imani Winds, but I am not a composer or an arranger so I couldn’t literally bring jazz into the group.  The member/composers of the group are Valerie the flutist and Jeff the french horn player, and they brought some arrangements of jazz songs to the group that are just beautiful.

 

As far as the wonderful jazz musicians we have commissioned and collaborated with, besides Wayne Shorter, Paquito D’Rivera, Steve Coleman we are also working with Jason Moran, Stefon Harris and others; I think they got wind of us through the grapevine or through knowing us personally.  As a matter of fact I went to school with Jason and Stefon, so there you go… I did have some influence on the jazzness of the group!

 

WJ: What have been some of the differences you’ve experienced in their individual approaches between working with such disparate jazz composers as Paquito D’Rivera, Wayne Shorter, and Steve Coleman?

 

TSD: Three very different people, and three different approaches to writing…  For instance, Steve would give us diagrams with symbols and numbers and those would be the basis for when and what we played, while Paquito would use the computer program Sibelius, a program that a lot of classical composers use, to write out our parts.  All of them treated us with the utmost respect and were very patient with us learning to fold into their particular style of jazz, as were their band members.

 

WJ: Of the jazz composers the Imani Winds has collaborated with, is it safe to say that the most extensive experience has been with Wayne Shorter — particularly considering the Carnegie Hall and Montreal Jazz Festival performances?

 

TSD: Wayne literally took us under his wing in a way that still leaves me in awe.  He is a man that is all about moving forward with his music and right now he is going into a more classical style of writing.  When we commissioned a wind quintet piece from him a few years ago he gave us parts and a couple of months later we played it for him, then we all went out to dinner at a Mexican restaurant around the corner from Lincoln Center.

 

We were all kind of shy around him at first, but then he just opened up and started telling us all of these stories about Miles and Coltrane and just about everyone.  But he also wanted to talk about movies and comic books and joke around.  I think he really took a liking to us that day, the way we were "onstage", and the way we were "offstage", and he wanted to use us as, I wouldn’t say muses, but maybe vehicles, for his expansion, and expand our way of performing too.  So he took us on the road with him and his quartet and I think we’ve done about 15 concerts together now.  Each one was different, each one was challenging to everyone onstage, and each one was fulfilling in a way that is hard to describe.

 

WJ: Since the Wayne Shorter Quartet is comprised of not one but four bandleader-composers, do you foresee any future collaborative efforts with the other members of that quartet — Danilo Perez, Brian Blade, and John Patitucci?

 

TSD: We are definitely going to commission Danilo in the next couple of years and we would LOVE to have something from Brian and John too.

 

WJ: What’s next for Imani Winds?

 

TSD: Well, we are going to premier a piece by Haitian/African American composer Daniel Bernard Roumain on March 5th at Carnegie Hall.  We will continue our extensive touring schedule and visit places like Olympia, WA and Pittsburgh, PA, Washington, DC and Monroe, LA.  We will premier our new work by Stefon Harris in the fall and start working on our collaboration with Palestine-born composer Simon Shaheen.  Not a bad life if you ask me!

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