Showing posts with label Free Jazz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free Jazz. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2014

William Parker Returns to New Day Jazz: Praise, Remembrance, Poetry & Freedom



Returning to New Day Jazz this afternoon, in the 5 o'clock hour, bassist, composer, William Parker, discussing his most recent release on AUM-Fidelity, Wood Flute Songs: Anthology / Live 2006-2012.
Also this afternoon, in honor of Ornette Coleman, born this day, March 9, 1930, we will revisit Coleman's earliest recordings alongside his son, Denardo Coleman, beginning with The Empty Foxhole, and carrying on through Crisis.

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Sunday 3/09/2014 @ 3:00PM - 6:00PM

ArtistSongAlbumLabel
Phineas Newborn, Jr. The Blessing The Newborn Touch Contemporary
John Coltrane & DonCherry The Blessing The Avant-Garde Atlantic
Myron O'Higgins (Gloria Foster) To a Young Poet A Hand is on the Gate Verve-Folkways
James Vaughn (Roscoe Lee Browne) from Four Questions A Hand is on the Gate Verve-Folkways
Owen Dodson (Leon Bibb) Counterpoint A Hand is on the Gate Verve-Folkways
Ornette Coleman Song for Che Crisis Impulse
Ornette Coleman Space Jungle Crisis Impulse
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Lennie Tristano Intuition Crosscurrents Capitol
Lennie Tristano Digression Crosscurrents Capitol
Lee Konitz You Go to My Head Subconscious-lee Prestige
Louis Armstrong Stardust Louis Armstrong Favorites Vol. 4 Columbia
Louis Armstrong Stardust (Oh, Memory) Louis Armstrong Favorites Vol. 4 Columbia
Countee Cullen (James Earl Jones) From the Dark Tower A Hand is on the Gate Verve-Folkways
Langston Hughes (Ellen Holly) The Negro Speaks of Rivers A Hand is on the Gate Verve-Folkways
Robert Hayden (Moses Gunn) Frederick Douglass A Hand is on the Gate Verve-Folkways
Tommy Flanagan Parisian Thoroughfare Alone Too Long Denon
Jack Wilson Glass Enclosure The Two Sides of Jack Wilson Atlantic
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Muddy Waters Mannish Boy The Real Folk Blues Chess (France)
Howlin' Wolf Everybody's in the Mood The Legendary Sun Performers Charly R&B
Ornette Coleman Good Old Days The Empty Fox Hole Blue Note
Richard Pryor Grandmothers - Leroy Are You Serious? Laff
Roscoe Mitchell Sextet Ornette Sound Delmark
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William Parker Daughter's Joy Wood Flute Songs: Anthology/ Live 2006-2012 AUM-Fidelity
William Parker Late Man of This Planet Wood Flute Songs: Anthology/ Live 2006-2012 AUM-Fidelity
Interview with William Parker by Justin Desmangles Interview with William Parker by Justin Desmangles Interview with William Parker by Justin Desmangles Interview with William Parker by Justin Desmangles
Son House John the Revelator Father of the Blues Columbia
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Ruby & The Romantics Our Day Will Come Our Day Will Come Kapp

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Matthew Shipp: Mystic Vocation & Root of Things



This afternoon, on the 5 o'clock hour, we are joined by pianist, composer, Matthew Shipp, for a discussion of his most recent recording, Root of Things. 

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Sunday 3/02/2014 @ 3:00PM - 6:00PM

ArtistSongAlbumLabel
William Parker Orchestra Caravan Essence of Ellington: Live in Milano Centering Records
Duke Ellington Rain Check . . . and his mother called him Bill Bluebird
Billy Strayhorn featuring Ozzie Bailey A Flower is a Lovesome Thing Lush Life Red Baron
Billy Strayhorn featuring Ozzie Bailey Love Passed Me By Lush Life Red Baron
Billy Strayhorn featuring Ozzie Bailey Something to Live For Lush Life Red Baron
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Matthew Shipp Module One Thirsty Ear
Matthew Shipp GNG Harmonic Disorder Thirsty Ear
Matthew Shipp Trio Jazz It Root of Things Relative Pitch
Ran Blake & Jeanne Lee You Stepped Out of a Dream You Stepped Out of a Cloud Owl
Ran Blake & Jeanne Lee Newswatch You Stepped Out of a Cloud Owl
Roscoe Mitchell Ride the Wind Conversations Wide Hive
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David S. Ware featuring Muhammad Ali Duality is One Planetary Unknown AUM-Fidelity
Steve Coleman & Five Elements Cerebrum Crossover Functional Arrhythmias Pi Recordings
Sam Rivers / Dave Holland / Barry Altschul Disc Two: Part 4 Reunion: Live in New York Pi Recordings
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Matthew Shipp Trio Code J Root of Things Relative Pitch
Matthew Shipp Trio Path Root of Things Relative Pitch
Interview With Matthew Shipp By Justin Desmangles Interview With Matthew Shipp By Justin Desmangles Interview With Matthew Shipp By Justin Desmangles Interview With Matthew Shipp By Justin Desmangles
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Ivo Perelman Serendipity (excerpt) Serendipity Leo

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Lou's Mirror: Reflections on the Storyteller



We have lost one of our greatest storytellers. Lou Reed, whose vision of song, so tightly woven to America’s late 20th century, is gone. An artist of incalculable influence, it will be many decades before his sway over popular music may be properly assessed. Still, a number of things are decisively clear.


To begin, Reed radically altered the template for what was acceptable content and theme in a pop song. The earlier existing boundaries were utterly destroyed with the first Velvet Underground album, never to return again, never to be resurrected. So earth shattering was this momentous cultural event, conducted and supervised by Andy Warhol, that its breakthrough into the general consciousness seemed to happen just as quickly, and the initial shock has indeed faded. Nevertheless, facts about it, a number of vital genres in popular music can be traced back directly to Reed’s early works, without a detour. These would include most obviously Punk Rock (and its many vicissitudes), but also Noise, Industrial, and the rudimentary elements of Hip hop and its various subgenres, such as Gangsta Rap and Horrorcore.


Reed was, above all, a poet of the street. The junkies, winos, saints, pimps, transvestites, prophets, sinners, queers, deviants, freaks, criminals great and small, that he wrote about were by no means wholly the product of his imagination. These were his own real lovers, enemies, friends, dependents, and those he depended on, embodying his own pain, joy, satisfaction, refusal, protest, and acceptance of strange codes of obligation to freedom and art. These were the people he had been, the people he wanted to be, and the roles that he would play on and off the stages of his many lives. 


This is very important to understand, particularly for an artist who has so many imitators, some very strong, others pathetically weak. I am sure that, just as Black Power advocates of the 1960’s forced more moderate Civil Rights leaders to take on positions and rhetoric they otherwise would have shied away from, so Reed provoked countless songwriters to delve into subjects and pretend to walk neighborhoods they wouldn’t get anywhere near in their so-called real lives. Reed wrote with an undaunted sense of reality, often at its most perilous and violent extremes. His art became committed to the political act of the sexualized transgression long before the academy got hold of the theory behind such things. His abundant gifts as a lyricist just as frequently would lead Reed into territory previously staked out by the revolutionary novelist and playwright, Jean Genet. Most specifically, Reed would often employ his poetry as a means of persuasively creating a beautiful, charismatic, aesthetic experience, out of vulgar, sometimes evil, unbearable circumstances, creating a kind of moral vertigo in which the world of saints and sinners is turned upside down. The just, the righteous, the holy, the pure, are often inverted in Reed’s most powerful work, with his characters oscillating between Heaven and Hell as often as male and female, being both but neither, all or nothing.


Many of the men and women talked about in Reed’s earliest songs are prisoners of their own body and its nagging urges. All of them seem to want to get out of it, whether that “it” be gender or more simply the mundane details of the day-to-day doldrums of a plain, unremarkable existence. There is an enormous amount of desperation and loneliness that haunts the narratives that Reed shared with us over the many years. Abandonment, betrayal, and loss would remain consistent subjects he would return us to.  A great many of the people he chose to write to us about will do anything to escape themselves and the lives they lead, by sex, by drugs, by violence, but more often than not, a combination of all three. Courageously, Reed drew, again and again, throughout his career, portraits of those our society tries to hide from public view or imprison in order to silence the integrity of their experience of despair and its very real causes. Reed consistently gave voice to their stories, which were his stories, which are all of ours and America’s.


It is well known, I trust, that Reed was an unabashedly literary man. Among his culture heroes were the great writers Hubert Selby, Jr. and Nelson Algren, whose scenarios sometimes show up in Reed’s songs whole, and more recently, the American master, Edgar Allan Poe, whom Reed conceptualized an entire album around, The Raven. The poet Delmore Schwartz was an early mentor of Reed’s, and the concluding track of side B to the aforementioned first Velvet Underground record, European Son, is dedicated to him. That Reed would remain committed to the cultivation of the inner life through literature in its many uses should come as no surprise. After all, Reed was equally dedicated to the mysterious and medicinal powers of storytelling to heal the psyche and assist the body toward a deeper experience of wholeness within the universe. Less well known was Reed’s long standing commitment to jazz, particularly the jazz of the New Thang, Energy Music, Space Bebop, and the avant-garde. As a youth, Reed hosted a college radio program focused on Free Jazz, taking its name from a composition by Cecil Taylor, Excursions on a Wobbly Rail. In many interviews Reed would speak forthrightly about the influence of the New York jazz scene on the sound of the Velvet Underground and their conceptions, most especially the music of Ornette Coleman, with whom Reed would later record. An alumnus of the those very groups lead by Coleman, Don Cherry, would also contribute to the music of Reed, recording on the album The Bells. In fact, much of the experimental music Reed would create over the years has its roots firmly entrenched in the traditions of jazz and literature. Some of the best examples of this cross pollination in Reed’s imagination are the aforementioned European Son, and The Bells, but also The Murder Mystery, Street Hassle, and most recently, The Raven, featuring Coleman.


There is a great gentleness at the center of all of Reed’s work, I believe, and though he is not often regarded as a romantic, his songs and the stories they tell are clearly in awe of love’s power to heal and change the world into something glorious and fecund. How many people over the decades have sent along I’ll Be Your Mirror to their beloved as a prelude towards a deeper understanding or even simple seduction? Interestingly, among the best known of Reed’s songs, performed by Nico, it is also a plea for forgiveness and a kind of supplication. I’ll Be Your Mirror is a prayer. 

To be sure, Reed was spiritually complex, but nowhere as much as on his neglected masterpiece, Songs for Drella, a song cycle depicting the life of his friend and mentor Andy Warhol. Performed and recorded in duo with Reed’s earliest of collaborators, John Cale, Songs for Drella, not only contains examples of Reeds very best writing and music, but creates an uncanny atmosphere of mercurial intimacy, most especially in the material written in first person from Warhol’s perspective. Emotionally, this album may very well be Reed at his most vulnerable and raw. He is clearly trying very hard to heal some old wounds, ones that he has left unattended and have haunted him. Now it is time to let go, and letting go for Reed means not only talking about it, but telling it like it is, like it was, and how it ought to be. A kind of hagiography is conjured here, and it’s a shame this record has been for the most part ignored, possibly because it was overshadowed by New York, an album Reed released at near the same time. In conversation with Charlie Rose, Reed complained openly about the lack of reception afforded Songs for Drella. He said he had believed he was creating a new genre, and I agree, he was. Like Berlin, Songs for Drella is an album of deep conflict and profoundly mixed emotions, its also Reed at his most personal.

  
The news this morning of Reed’s death came as quite a shock. His life and music have become so much a part of our national culture it is hard to imagine him as truly gone. Some will say, as they have in the past, that Reed lent glamor and prestige to self-destruction and criminality, that his was a negative influence. I take the opposite view. If there was an overall message to Reed’s work (does there have to be?), it was a very simple one, “You don’t have to be as fucked up as I am.”

Monday, November 7, 2011

William Parker and Freedom Today


Show description for Sunday 11/6/2011 @ 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM

This afternoon, poet, philosopher, bassist, composer, William Parker returns to the program in the 5 o'clock hour. A preeminent figure in the development of the new music, Mr. Parker is a towering presence in international art & culture. His most recent release, on his own Centering Records, Crumbling In the Shadows Is Fraulein Miller's Stale Cake, is an extraordinary collection of solo bass performances. We will be listening in on many of his most recent projects, including those with David S. Ware, Planetary Unknown, and Craig Taborn, Out of This World's Distortions.

ArtistSongAlbumLabel

William ParkerPointed AcceptanceCrumbling In the Shadows Is Fraulein Miller's Stale CakeCentering Records

William Parker & Hamid DrakeAnaya DancingSummer SnowAUM-Fidelity

William Parker & Hamid DrakeKonteSummer SnowAUM-Fidelity

Farmers By NatureOut Of This World's Distortions Grow Aspens and Other Beautiful Things Out of This World's DistortionsAUM-Fidelity
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David S. Ware / Cooper-Moore / William Parker / Muhammad AliDuality is OnePlanetary Unknown AUM-Fidelity

David S. Ware / Cooper-Moore / William Parker / Muhammad AliDivination Planetary Unknown AUM-Fidelity

William ParkerVelocityCrumbling In the Shadows Is Fraulein Miller's Stale CakeCentering Records

William ParkerIf There's A Hell BelowI Plan To Stay A Believer: The Inside Songs Of Curtis MayfieldAUM-Fidelity

William Parker Organ QuartetThe StruggleUncle Joe's Spirit HouseCentering Records
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William Parker & Hamid DrakeSkySummer SnowAUM-Fidelity

William Parker & Hamid DrakeEarthSummer SnowAUM-Fidelity

Interview With William Parker By Justin DesmanglesInterview With William Parker By Justin DesmanglesInterview With William Parker By Justin DesmanglesInterview With William Parker By Justin Desmangles
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William ParkerGreen Mountains for Bill DixonCrumbling In the Shadows Is Fraulein Miller's Stale CakeCentering Records

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Matthew Shipp's NIGHT LOGIC

Show Details

Show description for Sunday 7/11/2010 @ 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Matthew Shipp returns to New Day Jazz this week on the four o'clock hour. Among the most innovative and inspiring of contemporary artists, Shipp will be discussing his most recent recording, Night Logic (RogueArt), featuring one of the most important alto saxophonists in the history of music, Marshall Allen, as well as longtime collaborator, Joe Morris, on bass.


New Day Jazz


Justin Desmangles

Jazz music for lovers and the lonely.

Genre

Jazz

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TrackArtistSongAlbumLabelComments

Declared EnemyFlowersSalute to 1000001 Stars: A Tribute to Jean GenetRogueArt

Declared EnemyAlberto's WorkshopSalute to 1000001 Stars: A Tribute to Jean GenetRogueArt

Declared EnemyMettraySalute to 1000001 Stars: A Tribute to Jean GenetRogueArt

Declared EnemyBlack PanthersSalute to 1000001 Stars: A Tribute to Jean GenetRogueArt
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Matthew Shipp4D4DThirsty Ear

Matthew ShippThe Crack in the Piano's Egg4DThirsty Ear

Matthew ShippEquilibrium4DThirsty Ear

Matthew ShippTeleportation4DThirsty Ear
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Marshall Allen-Matthew Shipp-Joe MorrisArk of the Harmonic CovenantNight LogicRougueArt

Marshall Allen-Matthew Shipp-Joe MorrisBow in the CloudNight LogicRougueArt

Interview with Matthew Shipp by Justin Desmangles Part One




Marshall Allen-Matthew Shipp-Joe MorrisNight LogicNight LogicRougueArt

Interview with Matthew Shipp by Justin Desmangles Part Two

AYLER MAJESTY COMES NOW, DRESSED IN BIRTH


Show Details

Show description for Sunday 7/11/2010 @ 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM

Justin Desmangles sits in for Brian Ang this week, celebrating the birth of one of the most controversial figures in the history of jazz, indeed the 2oth century, Albert Ayler. We will be listening in on scarce recordings of Ayler music, as well as rare interviews with Ayler himself. Also, in the 6 o'clock hour, we will hear from trumpeter, composer, Don Cherry, on his first meeting with Ayler, in Copenhagen.

Farewell Transmission


Brian Ang

Opaque art thing.

Genre

Experimental, Poetry

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TrackArtistSongAlbumLabelComments

Albert Ayler QuintetTruth Is Marching In / OmegaHoly GhostRevenant

Albert Ayler QuintetJapan (traditional) / Universal IndiansHoly GhostRevenant

Albert Ayler QuintetOur PrayerHoly GhostRevenant
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Albert Ayler Quartet featuring Don Cherryspoken radio introductionHoly GhostRevenant

Albert Ayler Quartet featuring Don CherrySpiritsHoly GhostRevenant

Albert Ayler Quartet featuring Don CherryVibrationsHoly GhostRevenant
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Ayler interview w/ Birger Jorgensen, Dec. 64travel and plansHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview w/ Birger Jorgensen, Dec. 64HolbaekHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview w/ Birger Jorgensen, Dec. 64the New BluesHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview w/ Birger Jorgensen, Dec. 64Christmastime statesideHoly GhostRevenant
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Albert Ayler Quintet[untitled minor waltz]Holy GhostRevenant

Don & Mocqui Cherry interview with Daniel Caux, 1970
Holy GhostRevenant

Albert Ayler Quintetconcert announcement by Ralf Schulte-BahrenbergHoly GhostRevenant

Albert Ayler QuintetGhosts / BellsHoly GhostRevenant
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Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970current activityHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970AntibesHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970Japan / Coltrane's funeralHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970clubsHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970ahead of my timeHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970home lives: Brooklyn and ClevelandHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970Impluse, pt. 1: hippiesHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970"space music"Holy GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970DonHoly GhostRevenant

Ayler interview with Kiyoshi Koyama for Swing Journal, 1970"Thank God for Women"Holy GhostRevenant

Albert AylerThank God for WomenHoly GhostRevenant

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

The Freedom Sound of Byard Lancaster, Jazz Master


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Our guest this afternoon on New Day Jazz, composer, arranger, multi-instrumentalist, the legendary, Byard Lancaster.

A man of great conscience and spiritual beauty, Lancaster generously shares his insights and recollections of our world today.
One of the most powerful forces in the new music, Lancaster writes and improvises with a rare authority and depth of emotion.

We will revisit a number of his recordings on his own Dogtown label, recently reissued by Porter Records.


Also this hour, a special visit from our favorite comedic talent, the great Paul Mooney!












Byard Lancaster



Miss Nikki




Personal Testimony



Porter



Byard Lancaster In Lovingkindness Personal Testimony Porter


Byard Lancaster Dogtown Personal Testimony Porter


Byard Lancaster Hoodoo Personal Testimony Porter

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Sounds of Liberation We'll Tell You Later Sounds of Liberation Porter (Dogtown)


The Byard Lancaster Unit Last Summer Live at Macalester College Porter (Dogtown)

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The Byard Lancaster Unit War World Live at Macalester College Porter (Dogtown)


Angela Davis
The Prison Industrial Complex Alternative Tentacles

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Angela Davis
The Prison Industrial Complex Alternative Tentacles


Byard Lancaster Free Mumia Personal Testimony Porter


Langston Hughes Youth The Sound of Langston Hughes Folkways


Sounds of Liberation New Horizons II (excerpt) Sounds of Liberation Porter (Dogtown)


Interview With Paul Mooney By Justin Desmangles





Sounds of Liberation Billie One (excerpt) Sounds of Liberation Porter (Dogtown)

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Byard Lancaster Prayer Cry Personal Testimony Porter


Byard Lancaster Tribalize Lancaster Personal Testimony Porter


Byard Lancaster Afro-ville Personal Testimony Porter



Interview With Byard Lancaster By Justin Desmangles





Byard Lancaster Mind Exercise Personal Testimony Porter

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Lou Reed Walk On The Wild Side Transformer RCA