Showing posts with label AACM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AACM. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

A Power Stronger Than Itself!


In an exciting, often astounding, work of original and powerfully deciphering scholarship, George E. Lewis has written one of the most important books on the subject of jazz in particular and American music in general. Rising to the challenges set forth in such masterworks as Harold Cruse's The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual and Eileen Southern's The Music of Black Americans, Mr. Lewis tells the story of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, an institution that has come to represent the cultural vanguard of international music for over forty years. Employing a mixture of oral histories from the musicians themselves, "front line" reportage and rare archival documents, many disclosed for the first time, Mr. Lewis weaves together a compelling, engrossing and frequently provocative narration of one of the most fascinating periods of history in the United States. In the tradition of "damn sure, telling it like it is", Mr. Lewis offers at times profound insight into the formative years of many our era's most significant composers, including such mercurial and often illusive personalities such as Muhal Richard Abrams, Roscoe Mitchell, Henry Threadgill and Anthony Braxton. With clarity and wit, hipness and humanity, Mr. Lewis also provides the much needed and invaluable context of the cultural revolutons taking place that surrounded and informed the often equally radical music of the 1960's and 70's. Bringing the story of the AACM up in to our 21st century, Mr. Lewis both strenghtens our roots and provides the fertile ground for the scholarship of tomorrow. A Power Stronger Than Itself: The Story of the AACM and American Experimental Music, is truly a book for the Ages.


Sunday, February 21, 2010

The Music Hears You, Too.

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This afternoon, on the 4 o'clock hour, we welcome back to the program, composer, saxophonist and founding member of the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Roscoe Mitchell. One of the key figures in the development of jazz and improvised music over the last 45 years, Mr. Mitchell is also among the greatest alto saxophonists in the history of the music. Mr. Mitchell will be performing in Sacramento this coming Thursday evening, February 25th, at the 24th Street Theater at the Sierra Two Complex in Curtis Park. Tickets are available at R5 Records, Broadway at 16th St., across from the Tower Theater.

As part of today's broadcast we will devote the entire musical content to the work of this powerful, inspiring and innovative artist. Included will be selections from the classic All the Numbers, Nonaah, and Congliptious, as well as more recent recordings, such as Spectrum (Mutable), and Roscoe Mitchell Transatlantic Art Ensemble (ECM)

Also this afternoon, at 3:25, we are joined by documentary filmmaker, Robert Clift. Mr. Clift most recent work is the extra-ordinary Blacking Up: Hip-hop's Remix of Race & Identity. This powerfully original and thoughtful work explores contemporary issues of cultural appropriation and misappropriation, racial representation and media distortions of same. Interviews included in the work feature two regular guests on this program, Paul Mooney and Amiri Baraka, as well as with Greg Tate, Aesop Rock, M1 (of Dead Prez), John Leland and the great D.J. Kool Herc.


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Artist Song Album Label


Lester Bowie Number 2 All the Numbers Nessa


Roscoe Mitchell Carefree - take 3 Congliptious Nessa


Roscoe Mitchell Tatas-Matoes Congliptious Nessa

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Interview with Robert Clift by Justin Desmangles




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Roscoe Mitchell duet with Anthony Braxton Off 5 Dark6 Nonaah Nessa


Roscoe Mitchell duet with Malachi Favors A1 TAL 2LA Nonaah Nessa


Roscoe Mitchell trio with Muhal Richard Abrams & George Lewis Tahquemenon Nonaah Nessa


Interview with Roscoe Mitchell by Justin Desmangles





Roscoe Mitchell duet with Muhal Richard Abrams Romu Spectrum Mutable

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Art Ensemble of Chicago with Cecil Taylor Intro to Fifteen Dreaming of the Masters Vol. 2 DIW