Showing posts with label free jazz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free jazz. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2009

KEITH JARRETT

Download Music!: Keith Jareet-Body And Soul; Keith Jarrett-My Song; Keith Jarrett-For Yawuh

Keith Jarrett (born May 8, 1945 in Allentown, Pennsylvania) is an American pianist, composer and jazz icon.

His career started with Art Blakey, Charles Lloyd and Miles Davis. Since the early 1970s he has enjoyed a great deal of success in both classical music and jazz, as a group leader and a solo performer. His improvisation technique combines not only jazz, but also other forms of music, especially classical, gospel, blues and ethnic folk music.

In 2003 he received the Polar Music Prize, being the first (and to this day only) recipient not sharing the prize with anyone else.

Early years

Jarrett grew up in suburban Allentown, Pennsylvania with a significant exposure to music. He displayed prodigious talents as a young child and possessed absolute pitch or perfect pitch. He played his first formal public concert to paying customers at the age of six and it ended with two of his own compositions. He took intensive classical lessons, and particularly enjoyed playing compositions by Bartok. In his teens, as a student at Emmaus High School, he learned jazz and quickly became proficient in it. At one point, he had an offer to study composition with the legendary Nadia Boulanger in Paris; this was amiably turned down by Jarrett and his mother. In his early teens, he developed a stronger interest in the contemporary jazz scene: he recalls a Dave Brubeck show as an early inspiration.

Following his graduation from Emmaus High School in 1963, Jarrett moved from Allentown to Boston, Massachusetts, where he attended the Berklee College of Music and played cocktail piano. Jarrett then moved to New York City, where he played at the renowned Village Vanguard club.

In New York, Art Blakey hired him to play with his Jazz Messengers band, and he subsequently became a member of the Charles Lloyd Quartet (a group which included Jack DeJohnette, a frequent musical partner throughout Jarrett's career). The Lloyd quartet's 1966 album Forest Flower was one of the most successful jazz recordings of the late 1960s. Jarrett also started to record as a leader at this time, in a trio with Charlie Haden and Paul Motian. Jarrett's first album as a leader, Life Between The Exit Signs (1967), appeared around this time on the Vortex label, to be followed by Restoration Ruin (1968), which is easily the most bizarre entry in the Jarrett catalog. Not only does Jarrett barely touch the piano, he plays all the other instruments on what is essentially a folk-rock album, and even does all the singing. Another trio album with Haden and Motian followed later in 1968, this one recorded live for the Atlantic label and called Somewhere Before.

Miles Davis

When the Charles Lloyd quartet came to an end, Jarrett was asked to join the Miles Davis group after Miles heard Jarrett in a New York City club. During his tenure with Davis, he played both Fender Contempo electronic organ and Fender Rhodes electric piano, alternating with Chick Corea; after Corea left, he often played the two simultaneously. Despite Jarrett's dislike of amplified music and electric instruments, he stayed on out of his respect for Davis and his wish to work again with DeJohnette. Jarrett can be heard on five of Davis's albums, Miles Davis at Fillmore: Live at the Fillmore East, The Cellar Door Sessions (recorded December 16–December 19, 1970 at a club in Washington, DC) and Live-Evil, which was largely composed of heavily-edited Cellar Door recordings. The extended sessions from these recordings can be heard on The Complete Cellar Door Sessions. He also plays electric organ on Get Up with It; the song he features on, "Honky Tonk", is an edit of a track available in full on The Complete Jack Johnson Sessions. In addition, part of a track called "Konda" (rec. on May 21st, 1970) was released during Davis' late-70's retirement on an album called Directions (1976). The track features an extended Fender-Rhodes piano introduction by Jarrett and was released in full on 2003's The Complete Jack Johnson Sessions.

Officially released Miles Davis recordings on which Jarrett appeared:
At Fillmore (double LP issued in 1971, recorded June 1970, taken from four consecutive nights at the Fillmore East).
Live-Evil (1970).
Get Up With It (1974).
Directions (1980) (a release of previously unavailable recordings).
The Columbia Years: 1955-1985 (1990) (mainly a collection of previously issued recordings; includes some of the above cited Jack Johnson outtakes).
Miles Electric: A Different Kind of Blue (2004) (a 1970 performance at the Isle of Wight festival, released on DVD in 2004).
The Cellar Door Sessions (2005) (complete recordings of live sessions that produced the live segments of Live-Evil).

1970s quartets

From 1971 to 1976, Jarrett added saxophonist Dewey Redman to the existing trio with Haden and Motian. The "American Quartet" was often supplemented by an extra percussionist, such as Danny Johnson, Guilherme Franco, or Airto Moreira, and occasionally by guitarist Sam Brown. The members would also play a variety of instruments, with Jarrett often being heard on soprano saxophone and percussion as well as piano, Redman on musette, a Chinese double-reed instrument, and Motian and Haden on a variety of percussion. Haden also produces a variety of unusual plucked and percussive sounds with his acoustic bass, even running it through a wah-wah pedal for one track ("Mortgage On My Soul," on the album Birth). The group recorded for Atlantic Records, Columbia Records, Impulse! Records and ECM.

The group's recordings include:

Birth, El Juicio (The Judgement) and The Mourning of a Star (all 1971), recorded at the same sessions, though Redman does not appear on the latter; these albums were issued by Atlantic Records
Expectations (1972), Jarrett's only album for Columbia, an ambitious, wide-ranging session that included rock-influenced guitar by Sam Brown as well as string and brass arrangements, and for which his contract with Columbia was immediately terminated
Fort Yawuh (1973), recorded live at the Village Vanguard in New York City; his first album on Impulse! Records
Backhand (1974)
Treasure Island (1974)
Death and the Flower (1974)
Shades (1975)
Mysteries (1975)
The Survivors' Suite (1976)
Eyes of the Heart (1976), a live recording originally released as a three-sided LP by ECM, with the fourth side containing blank grooves.
Byablue (1976)
Bop-Be (1977)
The last two albums, both recorded for Impulse!, primarily feature the compositions of the other band members, as opposed to Jarrett's own which dominate the previous albums.

Jarrett's compositions and the strong musical identities of the group members gave this group a very distinctive sound. The group's music was an interesting and exciting amalgam of free jazz, straight-ahead post-bop, gospel music, and exotic Middle-Eastern-sounding improvisations.

In the mid and late 1970s Jarrett led a "European Quartet" concurrently with the above discussed "American Quartet", which was recorded by ECM. This combo consisted of saxophonist Jan Garbarek, bassist Palle Danielsson, and drummer Jon Christensen.

Albums recorded by this group include:
Belonging (1974)
My Song (1978)
Personal Mountains (1979, live in Tokyo, released a decade later)
Nude Ants (1979, live at the Village Vanguard in New York)

This ensemble played music in a similar style to that of the American Quartet, but with many of the avant-garde and "Americana" elements replaced by the European folk influences that characterized ECM artists of the time.

Following the release of the album Gaucho by the US jazz/rock band Steely Dan in 1980, Jarrett became involved in a legal wrangle over the title track. Arguably intended as a tribute to Jarrett, the song was credited only to Donald Fagen and Walter Becker, despite its undeniable resemblance to the Jarrett composition "Long As You Know You're Living Yours," from the "Belonging" album. Jarrett threatened legal action, and Becker and Fagen were then forced to add his name to the credits and to include him in future royalties.

Solo piano

Jarrett's first album for ECM, called Facing You (1971) was a solo piano date recorded in the studio. He has continued to record solo piano albums in the studio intermittently throughout his career, including Staircase (1976), The Moth and the Flame (1981), and The Melody At Night, With You (1999). Book of Ways (1986) is a studio recording of clavichord solos.

The studio albums are modestly successful entries in the Jarrett catalog, but in 1973, Jarrett also began playing totally improvised solo concerts, and it is the voluminous recordings of these concerts that have made him one of the best-selling jazz artists in history. Albums recorded at these concerts include:
Solo Concerts: Bremen/Lausanne (1973). Recorded in Bremen and Lausanne these concerts were originally released as a three-LP set
The Köln Concert (1975), one of the best-selling jazz albums of all time
Sun Bear Concerts (1976), five complete Japanese concert recordings, originally released as a ten-LP set
Concerts (Bregenz/München) (1981), originally released as a three-LP set, only the Bregenz concert is included on the single CD release. The München concert (more than an hour and a half long) has not yet been reissued on CD, apart from a ten minute section on the :rarum collection which was compiled by Jarrett himself. According to the ECM website however, a reissue is in the works.
Dark Intervals (1988) recorded in Japan, it is the first of Jarrett's live solo albums to feature shorter, more concise improvised pieces rather than the more familiar extended improvisations of his earlier solo albums.
Paris Concert (1990) featuring a 38 minute improvisation, a composition (The Wind) and a blues.
Vienna Concert (1991), which Jarrett has stated is his finest solo concert recording
La Scala (1997), which was the first ever non classical concert in Milan's La Scala Opera House
Radiance (2005)
The Carnegie Hall Concert (2006)

Jarrett has commented that his best performances were during the times where he had the least amount of preconception of what he was going to play at the next moment. An apocryphal account of one such performance had Jarrett staring at the piano for several minutes without playing; as the audience grew increasingly uncomfortable, one member shouted to Jarrett, "D sharp!", to which the pianist responded, "Thank you!," and launched into an improvisation at speed.

Jarrett's 100th solo performance in Japan was captured on DVD at Suntory Hall Tokyo on April 14th 1987 and released the same year. The DVD was titled Solo Tribute.

A DVD entitled Last Solo was released in 1987 from a live solo concert at Kan-i Hoken hall, Tokyo recorded in Januuary 25th 1984.

Another of his solo concerts, Dark Intervals (1987, Tokyo), has less of a freeform improvisation feel to it due to the brevity of the pieces. Sounding more like a set of short compositions, these pieces are nonetheless entirely improvised. In addition to the shorter form, they lack the 'jazzy' feel associated with the above concerts.

In the late 1990s, Jarrett was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and was confined to his home for long periods of time. It was during this period that he recorded The Melody at Night, With You, a solo piano record consisting of jazz standards presented with very little of the reinterpretation in which he usually engages. The album had originally been a Christmas Day gift to his second wife, Rose Anne.

By 2000, he had returned to touring, both solo and with the Standards Trio. Two 2002 solo concerts in Japan, Jarrett's first solo piano concerts following his illness, were released on the 2005 CD Radiance (a complete concert in Osaka, and excerpts from one in Tokyo), and the 2006 DVD Tokyo Solo (the entire Tokyo performance). In contrast with previous concerts (which were generally a pair of 30-40 minute continuous improvisations), the 2002 concerts consist of a linked series of shorter improvisations (some as short as a minute and a half, a few of fifteen or twenty minutes).

In September 2005 at Carnegie Hall Jarrett performed his first solo concert in North America in more than ten years, released a year later as a double CD set (The Carnegie Hall Concert).

In December 2008 he performed solo in the Royal Festival Hall, playing solo in London for the first time in seventeen years.

In January 2009 he again performed solo at Carnegie Hall in New York. The concert was recorded for possible future CD release.

The Standards Trio

In 1983, Jarrett asked bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Jack DeJohnette, with whom he had worked on Peacock's 1977 album Tales of Another, to record an album of jazz standards, simply entitled Standards, Volume 1. Standards, Volume 2 and Changes, both recorded at the same session, followed soon after. The success of these albums and the group's ensuing tour, which came as traditional acoustic post-bop was enjoying an upswing in the early 1980s, led to this new "Standards Trio" becoming one of the premier working groups in jazz, and certainly one of the most enduring, continuing to record and perform live over more than twenty years.

The trio has recorded numerous live and studio albums consisting primarily of jazz repertory material. They each list Ahmad Jamal as a major influence in their musical development for both his use of melodical and multi-tonal lines. They are:

Standards, Vol. 1 (January 1983; studio recording)
Standards, Vol. 2 (January 1983; studio recording)
Changes (January 1983; studio recording)
Standards Live (July 1985; live recording)
Still Live (July 1986; live recording)
Changeless (October 1987; live recording), a record of free improvisation
Standards in Norway (October 1989; live recording)
Tribute (October 1989; live recording), which consists of songs played in tribute to various jazz figures associated with them
The Cure (April 1990; live recording)
Bye Bye Blackbird (October 1991; studio recording), a tribute to the recently deceased Miles Davis
At the Deer Head Inn (1992; live recording)
At the Blue Note (June 1994; live recording), a six-disc boxed set that documents three nights (six sets) in the famous New York City nightclub
Tokyo '96 (March 1996; live recording)
Whisper Not — Live in Paris 1999 (July 1999; live recording)
Inside Out (July 2000; live recording), a record of free improvisation
Always Let Me Go (April 2001; live recording), a double album of free improvisation
The Out-of-Towners (July 2001; live recording)
Up for It - Live in Juan-les-Pins, July 2002 (July 2002; live recording)
My Foolish Heart - Live at Montreux (July 2001; a double album of a live recording, Montreux Jazz Festival 2001)
Setting Standards - New York Sessions (2008; 3CD set of the first three albums by the trio: Standards1, Standards2, Changes from 1983)
Yesterdays (2009)

The trio has also released videos of performances in Japan, which are available on DVD, including:
Standards (February 1985; live recording)
Standards II (October 1986; live recording)
Live at Open Theater East (July 1993; live recording)

Tokyo 1996 (March 1996; live recording), a video document of the same concert which was released on CD as Tokyo '96

The Jarrett/Peacock/DeJohnette trio has also produced recordings that consist largely of challenging original material, most notably 1987's Changeless. (These recordings are noted above.) Several of the standards albums contain an original track or two, some attributed to Jarrett but mostly group improvisations. The live recordings Inside Out and Always Let Me Go (both released in 2001) marked a renewed interest by the trio in wholly improvised free jazz. By this point in their history, the musical communication among these three men had become all but telepathic, and their group improvisations frequently take on a complexity that sounds almost composed. The Standards Trio undertakes frequent world tours of recital halls (the only venues in which Jarrett, a notorious stickler for acoustic sound, will play these days) and is one of the few truly lucrative jazz groups to play both "straight-ahead" (as opposed to smooth) and free jazz.


A related recording, At the Deer Head Inn (1992), is a live album of standards recorded with Paul Motian replacing DeJohnette, at the venue in Jarrett's hometown where he had his first employment as a jazz pianist. It was the first time Jarrett and Motian had played together since the demise of the American quartet sixteen years earlier, and also reunited the drummer and bassist who had backed Bill Evans on his album Trio 64 (1963).

Classical music

Since the early 1970s, Jarrett's success as a jazz musician has enabled him to maintain a parallel career as a classical composer and pianist, recording almost exclusively for ECM Records.

1973's In The Light album consists of short pieces for solo piano, strings, and various chamber ensembles, including a string quartet, a brass quintet, and a piece for cellos and trombones. This collection demonstrates a young composer's affinity for a variety of classical styles, with varying degrees of success.

Luminessence (1974) and Arbour Zena (1975) both combine composed pieces for strings with improvising jazz musicians, including Jan Garbarek and Charlie Haden. The strings here have a moody, contemplative feel that is characteristic of the "ECM sound" of the 1970s, and is also particularly well-suited to Garbarek's keening saxophone improvisations. From an academic standpoint, these compositions are dismissed by many classical music aficionados as lightweight, but Jarrett appeared to be working more towards a synthesis between composed and improvised music at this time, rather than the production of formal classical works. From this point on, however, his classical work would adhere to more conventional disciplines.

Ritual (1977) is a composed solo piano piece recorded by Dennis Russell Davies that is somewhat reminiscent of Jarrett's own solo piano recordings.

The Celestial Hawk (1980) is a piece for orchestra, percussion, and piano that Jarrett performed and recorded with the Syracuse Symphony under Christopher Keene. This piece is the largest and longest of Jarrett's efforts as a classical composer.

Bridge of Light (1993) is the last recording of classical compositions to appear under Jarrett's name. The album contains three pieces written for a soloist with orchestra, and one for violin and piano. The pieces date from 1984 and 1990.

In 1988 New World Records released the CD Lou Harrison Piano Concerto & Suite for Violin, Piano and small orchestra, featuring Jarrett on piano with Naoto Otomo conducting the piano concerto with the New Japan Philharmonic. Robert Hughes conducted the Suite for Violin, Piano and Small Orchestra. 1992 also saw the release of Jarrett's performance of Peggy Granville-Hicks Etruscan Concerto with Dennis Russell Davies conducting The Brooklyn Philharmonic Orchestra. This was released on Music Masters Classics with pieces by Lou Harrison and Terry Riley. In 1995 the record label Music Masters Jazz released a CD on which one track featured Jarrett performing the exquisite solo piano part in Lousadzak, a 17-minute piano concerto by American composer Alan Hovhaness. The conductor was Dennis Russell Davies. Most of Jarrett's classical recordings are of older repertoire, but Jarrett may have been introduced to this modern work by his one-time manager George Avakian, who was a friend of the composer.

In addition to his classical work as a composer, Jarrett has also performed and recorded classical music for ECM's New Series since the mid-1980s, including the following:
Arvo Pärt, Fratres on Tabula Rasa with Gidon Kremer (1984)
Johann Sebastian Bach, Das wohltemperierte Klavier, Book 1 (1987)
Johann Sebastian Bach, Goldberg Variations (1989)
Johann Sebastian Bach, Das wohltemperierte Klavier, Book 2 (1990)
Georg Friedrich Händel, Six Sonatas for Recorder and Harpsichord with Michala Petri (1990)
Dmitri Shostakovich, 24 Preludes and Fugues (1991)
Johann Sebastian Bach, 3 Sonaten für Viola da Gamba und Cembalo (1991)
Johann Sebastian Bach, The French Suites (1991)
Georg Friedrich Händel, Suites for Keyboard (1995)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Piano Concertos, Masonic Funeral Music and Symphony in G Minor (1994)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Piano Concertos and Adagio and Fugue (1996)

In 2004, Jarrett was awarded the Léonie Sonning Music Prize. The prestigious award usually associated with classical musicians and composers has only previously been given to one other jazz musician — Miles Davis. The first person to receive the award was Igor Stravinsky in 1959.

Other works

Jarrett also plays harpsichord, clavichord, organ, soprano saxophone, drums and many other instruments. He often played saxophone and various forms of percussion in the American quartet, though his recordings since the breakup of that group have rarely featured other instruments. In the last twenty years, the majority of his recordings have been on the acoustic piano only. He has spoken with some regret of his decision to give up playing the saxophone, in particular. Some of Jarrett's other albums, many of which contain examples of his instrumental diversity are:

Gary Burton & Keith Jarrett (1971), Burton receives top billing at this early date, but all of the compositions except one are Jarrett's. Jarrett plays some electric piano.

Ruta and Daitya (1972), an album of duets with Jack DeJohnette, both fresh from Miles Davis' band and demonstrating his influence. In addition to acoustic piano, Jarrett plays electric piano and organ, the only time he would ever do so on an ECM recording.
Hymns/Spheres (1976), improvisations recorded on an 18th century pipe organ of the Ottobeuren Abbey, a Benedictine abbey in Germany.
Invocations/The Moth and the Flame (1981), partially recorded on the same organ as Hymns/Spheres and also featuring Jarrett improvising on saxophone in the extraordinarily resonant abbey.
Spirits (1986), a collection of "back to basics" multitracked home recordings, performed mainly on a variety of wind instruments

Spheres (1986), Shortened, one-disc re-release of Hymns/Spheres.

There are several compilations and collections covering various aspects of Jarrett's career:

Foundations, a two-CD compilation of early work, from the Jazz Messengers and Charles Lloyd to the trio with Haden and Motian
The Impulse Years, 1973-1974, the albums Fort Yawuh, Treasure Island, Death and the Flower and Backhand, with outtakes
Mysteries: The Impulse Years, 1975-1976, the albums Shades, Mysteries, Byablue and Bop-Be, with outtakes
Silence (1977), a CD reissue of the Byablue and Bop-Be albums, with three tracks omitted to fit on a single CD
Works, an ECM compilation, covering the years 1972-1981.
:rarum, a two-CD ECM compilation, chosen by Jarrett himself, and intended to highlight aspects of his ECM catalogue (Spirits, Book of Ways, the organ improvisations) which he felt had been neglected, as well as the more well-known work with the European quartet, the standards trio, and solo.

After leaving Miles Davis, Jarrett did not often work as a sideman, but he did appear on a few other musician's albums, including the following:
Paul Motian: Conception Vessel (1972)
Airto: Free (1972)
Freddie Hubbard: Sky Dive (1972)
Kenny Wheeler: Gnu High (1975)
Charlie Haden: Closeness (1976)
Scott Jarrett: Without Rhyme or Reason

On April 15, 1978, Jarrett was the musical guest on Saturday Night Live. His music also has been featured on many television shows, including The Sopranos on HBO.

Idiosyncrasies

One of Jarrett's trademarks is his frequent, highly audible vocalization (grunting, groaning, and tuneless singing), similar to that of Glenn Gould, Thelonious Monk, Erroll Garner, and Oscar Peterson. Jarrett is also physically active while playing, writhing, gyrating, and almost dancing on the piano bench. These behaviors occur in his jazz and improvised solo performances, but are for the most part absent whenever he plays classical repertory. Jarrett has noted his vocalizations are based on involvement, not content, and are more of an interaction than a reaction.

Jarrett is notoriously intolerant of audience noise, including coughing and other involuntary sounds, especially during solo improvised performances. He feels that extraneous noise affects his musical inspiration. As a result, cough drops are routinely supplied to Jarrett's audiences in cold weather, and he has even been known to stop playing and lead the crowd in a "group cough." This intolerance was made clear during a concert on October 31, 2006, at the restored Salle Pleyel in Paris. After making an impassioned plea to the audience to stop coughing, Jarrett walked out of the concert during the first half, refusing at first to continue, although he did subsequently return to the stage to finish the first half, and also the second. A further solo concert three days later went undisturbed, following an official announcement beforehand urging the audience to minimize extraneous noise. In 2008, during the first half of another Paris concert, Jarrett complained to the audience about the quality of the piano which he had been given, walking off between solos and remonstrating with staff at the venue. Following an extended interval, the piano was replaced. In 2007, in concert in Perugia, angered by photographers, Jarrett implored the audience: 'I do not speak Italian, so someone who speaks English, can tell all these assholes with cameras to turn them fucking off right now. Right now! No more photographs, including that red light right there. If we see any more lights, I reserve the right (and I think the privilege is yours to hear us), but I reserve the right and Jack and Gary reserve the right to stop playing and leave the goddamn city'. This caused the organizers of Umbria Jazz Festival to declare that they will never invite him again.

Jarrett is also extremely protective over the quality of recordings of his concerts. In 1992, a trio concert at the Royal Festival Hall in London was temporarily stopped as he thought he had identified someone in the audience with a recording device. It turned out to be a light on the mixing desk and the concert resumed after an apology.

Jarrett has been known for many years to be strongly opposed to electronic instruments and equipment. His liner notes for the 1973 album Solo Concerts: Bremen / Lausanne states: "I am, and have been, carrying on an anti-electric-music crusade of which this is an exhibit for the prosecution. Electricity goes through all of us and is not to be relegated to wires." He has largely eschewed electric or electronic instruments since his time with Miles Davis.

Jarrett has been known to write back disdainful letters to critics who have negatively reviewed his music.

For many years he has been a follower of the teachings of metaphysician and mystic G. I. Gurdjieff. In 1980 he recorded an album of Gurdjieff's compositions, called Sacred Hymns of G. I. Gurdjieff, for ECM.

Personal

Jarrett's younger brother, Chris Jarrett, is also a pianist and his other brother Scott Jarrett is a producer/songwriter.

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Biography 

Born: May 8, 1945 

Over the past 40 years, Keith Jarrett has come to be recognized as one of the most creative musicians of our times - universally acclaimed as an improviser of unsurpassed genius; a master of jazz piano; a classical keyboardist of great depth; and as a composer who has written hundreds of pieces for his various jazz groups, plus extended works for orchestra, soloist, and chamber ensemble.

Born May 8, 1945 in Allentown, Pennsylvania, Keith Jarrett began playing the piano at age 3 and undertook classical music studies throughout his youth; performing as a child in programs at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia and at Madison Square Garden. He undertook formal composition studies at age 15, before moving to Boston to briefly study at the Berklee College of Music. While still in his late teens, arrangements were made to study composition in Paris with the great pedagogue Nadia Boulanger, but then canceled at the last moment in favor of moving to New York in 1964 to play jazz.

After a tentative period sitting in at the Village Vanguard and other New York jazz spots, Jarrett toured first with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. From 1966 to 1968 he was the pianist with the Charles Lloyd Quartet which quickly became one of the most popular groups on the changing late-Sixties jazz scene with best-selling records and worldwide tours. He soon led his own trio with Charlie Haden and Paul Motian (which in 1972 expanded to a quartet with the addition of tenor saxophonist Dewey Redman). Then in 1970/71, Jarrett became a featured member in Miles Davis' electric fusion group, playing electric piano and organ - his last stint as a sideman, thereafter, dedicating himself exclusively to performing acoustic music as a solo artist and as a leader.

In 1971, Keith Jarrett began his recording collaboration with German producer Manfred Eicher and ECM Records (Editions of Contemporary Music). This fruitful collaboration has produced over 60 recordings to date, unparalleled in their scope, diversity, and quality.

The foundation of the Jarrett/ECM discography is made up of the landmark solo piano recordings which have helped redefine the role of the piano in contemporary music. The piano improvisations on Facing You, Solo Concerts, The Köln Concert, Staircase, Sun Bear Concerts, Moth and The Flame, Concerts, Paris Concert, Dark Intervals, Vienna Concert, and La Scala incorporate a broad spectrum of musical idioms and languages - classical, jazz, ethnic, gospel, folk, blues and pure sound - revealing a creative process based on a deeply conscious state of awakeness and listening in the moment, producing music both deeply personal, yet universal. This body of solo piano work is without precedent with the Köln Concert being the best selling piano recording in history.

In May 2005, ECM released Radiance, a new 2-CD set of solo piano improvisations recorded live in Japan in November 2002.

On September 26, 2005 Keith Jarrett performed his first American solo concert in nearly a decade at New York’s Carnegie Hall. The sold out concert which featured five encores including solo versions of his popular compositions My Song and Paint My Heart Red was recorded and is being prepared for CD release by ECM in September 2006.

In 1999, The Melody At Night, With You, a solo piano studio recording of classic melodies was released by ECM and has become one of the best selling instrumental recordings by a jazz artist in the past decade, winning many “Best of the Year” awards in Europe, Japan and the US.

For the past two decades, Keith Jarrett's main context for playing jazz has been his trio with bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Jack DeJohnette, which in 2003 celebrates its 20th Anniversary together. The trio first played together in 1977, when Jarrett and DeJohnette played on Peacock's first ECM Records recording, Tales of Another (Jarrett and DeJohnette had already played together in the late-'60's with both Charles Lloyd and Miles Davis). In 1983, Jarrett invited the other two to make playing “standards” - the rich body of American Broadway show and jazz tunes from the 1930's, '40s and '50s. At the time it was considered passé for top players to concentrate on “standards”, instead of original material, but Jarrett thought it was important to show that: “Music wasn't about the material, but what the player brings to the material.”
The original 1983 trio session in New York produced the trio's first three ECM releases: Standards Vol. 1 and Vol. 2, and Changes. Thirteen “live” concert recordings have followed on ECM, each recorded in a different international city: Standards Live (Paris 1985), Still Live (Munich 1986), Changeless (US Tour 1987), Tribute (Cologne 1989), Standards in Norway (Oslo 1989), The Cure (New York/Town Hall 1990), Live at The Blue Note (New York 1994), Tokyo '96 (Tokyo, 1996), Whisper Not (Paris 1999), and the releases, Inside Out (London, 2000) and Always Let Me Go (Tokyo, 2001), both recordings of freely improvised trio music recorded live in concert.

In 2003, in celebration of their 20-year collaboration, ECM released Up For It - a live recording capturing the trio's 2002 performance at the Festival de Jazz D'Antibes/Juan-Les-Pins (France). The latest trio release is The Out-of-Towners, a live concert recording taken from the trio’s July 2001 concert at Munich’s State Opera House which was nominated for a Grammy in 2004 and was recently awarded the Deutsche Schallplattenpreis in Germany

The 1995 ECM release, Keith Jarrett At The Blue Note: The Complete Recordings, is a special 6-CD box set that captures the trio's complete, sold out engagement at the Blue Note jazz club in New York in June 1994. Featuring nearly 40 standards, Jarrett originals, plus extended trio improvisations, the CD box set was voted “Album of the Year” in the 1996 Downbeat Critics Poll.

In 1991, two weeks after the death of Miles Davis, the trio returned to the studio for the first time in 8 years to record Bye Bye Blackbird, their deeply felt tribute to the jazz giant that all three had played with in their early years.

Another Jarrett trio release on ECM is At The Deer Head Inn, a recording that captures him playing a one-time-only gig with his old friends Paul Motian and Gary Peacock at The Deer Head Inn, a venerable 14O-year old inn in the Pocono Mountains in Eastern Pennsylvania with a 60-year history of presenting jazz, where Jarrett played his first professional jazz gig as a leader at age 16.

There are also 4 ECM releases by BELONGING, Jarrett's acclaimed late-1970's Scandinavian quartet featuring Jan Garbarek (saxophone), Palle Danielsson (bass) and Jon Christensen (drums). Several of the quartet's recordings which include Belonging, My Song, Nude Ants, and Personal Mountains became bestsellers, influencing a whole generation of young players in Europe and the US.

Other early Jarrett jazz recordings include more than a dozen recordings by his original quartet with Charlie Haden, Paul Motian, and Dewey Redman for Atlantic, Columbia, Impulse Records and ECM - The Mourning of a Star, Birth, El Juicio, Expectations, Fort Yawuh, Treasure Island, Death and the Flower, Back Hand, Mysteries, Shades, The Survivor's Suite, and Eyes of the Heart - many of which won “Best of the Year” awards from international music press.

Impulse/GRP Records has released two multi-CD sets, The Keith Jarrett: Impulse Years, 1973-1974 (5-CD set) and Mysteries: The Impulse Years 1975-76 (4-CD set) that include the complete Impulse recordings of his American quartet with Haden, Redman and Motian. The two volumes document in depth the main body of recorded work of one of the period's finest acoustic jazz groups, featuring all the music on the eight original Impulse LPs, plus more than two hours of previously unreleased alternate takes from the original Impulse sessions.

Rhino/Atlantic Records has released a 2-CD retrospective box set, Foundations, that documents the early years in Jarrett's recording history from 1966-1974 with selected tracks from the early Atlantic sessions with the American trio/quartet, plus Jarrett's first recordings as a sideman with Art Blakey and Charles Lloyd, and studio sessions with Jim Pepper/Bob Moses (previously unreleased), Gary Burton and Airto.

For Jarrett, one of his most important recordings is Spirits, a deeply personal and primal work of musical communion on which he alone plays all the instruments - recorders, Pakistani wooden flute, tabla, various percussion instruments, guitar, saxophone, piano, and chant - guided more by intuition, than by technical conditioning. The haunting music, reminiscent of both ethnic and medieval music, was recorded simply by Jarrett at his home in 1985 with no engineer or other people present using only two cassette tape recorders and two microphones with each instrument being added layer by layer. He considers this music to be vertical communion (from the earth up), rather than horizontal communication. Spirits joins Hymns/Spheres (organ), Book of Ways (clavichord), and Vienna Concert (piano) on Jarrett's personal short list of his most essential recordings. Each of these varied musical invocations exemplifies the pure essence of true improvisation.

Other Jarrett/ECM releases include Sacred Hymns, a recording of mystic philosopher G.I. Gurdjieff's sacred piano music as transcribed by Thomas DeHartmann a performance of Arvo Pärt's “Fratres” with violinist Gidon Kremer on the Pärt release Tabula Rasa. There are several recordings of Jarrett orchestral/chamber music compositions - In The Light, Arbour Zena and Luminessence (both featuring saxophonist Jan Garbarek), Celestial Hawk (with the late Christopher Keene and Syracuse Symphony); and Bridge of Light which features Jarrett's chamber orchestral compositions, Elegy for Violin and String Orchestra, Adagio for Oboe and Strings, Bridge of Light for Viola and Orchestra as performed by The Fairfield Orchestra under the direction of Thomas Crawford (conductor) with soloists Michelle Makarski (violin), Patricia McCarty (viola), and Marcia Butler (oboe); plus the Jarrett Sonata for Violin and Piano with Ms. Makarski (violin) and Mr. Jarrett (piano). The scores and parts for these four compositions are currently available through Schott Music International.

Classical music releases by Keith Jarrett on ECM include the J.S. Back keyboard works: Well-Tempered Clavier Book I (piano) and Book II (harpsichord), Goldberg Variations (harpsichord), French Suites (harpsichord), and Sonatas for Viola Da Gamba and Cembalo with Kim Kashkashian (viola) and Jarrett (harpsichord).; plus the Shostakovich 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op. 87; and a piano recording of selected Handel Keyboard Suites. And there are two ECM volumes of Jarrett performing selected Mozart Piano Concertos with the Stuttgart Kammerorchester under the direction of Dennis Russell Davies.

BMG/RCA Records has released two CD's with Jarrett (harpsichord) accompanying Michala Petri, the Danish recorder virtuoso, performing the Handel Sonatas for Recorder and Harpsichord, and the J.S. Bach Sonatas for Flute and Harpsichord.

Other Jarrett recordings of contemporary piano literature include on New World Records, the Lou Harrison Piano Concerto (composed for Jarrett) and Harrison's Suite for Violin, Piano and Orchestra (Lucy Stoltzman, violin); and on MusicMasters Records, Alan Hovaness's Lousadvak for Piano and Orchestra with the American Composers Orchestra and Dennis Russell Davies (conductor) and the Etruscan Concerto by Australian composer Peggy Glanville-Hicks with the Brooklyn Philharmonic with Mr. Davies conducting.

Keith Jarrett has performed baroque, classical and contemporary keyboard music at many of the major international music centers including works by Barber, Bartók, Peggy Glanville-Hicks, Lou Harrison, Alan Hovhaness, Colin McPhee, Mozart and Stravinsky performed with the symphony orchestras of Boston, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Detroit, Atlanta, Brooklyn, Rochester, as well as the American Composers Orchestra, Beethovenhalle Orchestra Bonn, Handel and Haydn Society (Boston), the St. Paul and English Chamber orchestras with conductors John Adams, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Dennis Russell Davies, John Eliot Gardiner, Christopher Hogwood, Christopher Keene, Jeffrey Tate, and Hugh Wolff.

Recitals of works by J.S. & C.P.E. Bach, Bartók, Beethoven, Handel, Hindemith, Mozart, Purcell, Scarlatti, and Shostakovich have been performed at Lincoln Center, The Kennedy Center, Beethovenhaus (Bonn), Franz Liszt Academy of Music (Budapest), and in San Francisco, Boston, Minneapolis, Toronto, and Stockholm.

Numerous Jarrett compositions received their premieres at major music centers. Celestial Hawk for Orchestra, Percussion, and Piano premiered in 1980 with Christopher Keene and the Syracuse Symphony at Carnegie Hall and in Syracuse. Adagio for Oboe and String Orchestra premiered in 1984 with the Pasadena Chamber Orchestra and Elegy for Violin and String Orchestra premiered in 1985 in Tokyo. Elegy had its American premiere in 1986 with Dennis Russell Davies and the Philadelphia Orchestra. Sacred Ground for Piano, Flute, Cello, and Clarinet was commissioned by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and had its premiere in 1985 with Mr. Jarrett joined by Paula Robison, Fred Sherry and Richard Stoltzman. Woodwind Quintet premiered in 1989 with the Dorian Wind Quintet. Bridge of Light for Viola and Orchestra premiered in 1991 with violist Patricia McCarty and The Fairfield Orchestra with Thomas Crawford. In 1987, Chamber Music Chicago dedicated an evening at Orchestra Hall to Keith Jarrett as composer with the world premiere of four Jarrett chamber music works: Rem(a)inders for Piano, Clarinet, Flute, Cello, and Violin ; Terra Cotta for Clarinet and Tuned Drums ; Suite for Solo Violin; and Sonata for Flute and Piano. In March 1992, the Lincoln Center Great Performers Series hosted an evening dedicated to Keith Jarrett's orchestral works with performances of Bridge of Light, Elegy, Adagio for Oboe, plus Sonata for Violin and Piano.

Two books about Keith Jarrett have been published. Keith Jarrett: Inner Views written by Kunihiko Yamashita, former editor of JazzLife (Japan), has been published in Japan and Italy. Keith Jarrett: A Man and His Music, a biography written by the acclaimed British jazz trumpeter and critic Ian Carr, has been published in Britain by Grafton Books and in the US by Da Capo Books.

As an essayist, Mr. Jarrett has been invited to contribute critical essays to the New York Times, Musician and Downbeat magazines. He has also written forwards to The Piano Book, by Larry Fine on Brookside Press (US) and The Complete Guide to High-End Audio by Robert Harley on Accapella Publishing (US) and a preface for the American edition of Geoff Dyer's But Beautiful (North Point Press), an evocative work on jazz.

Seven Keith Jarrett concert videos have been filmed in Tokyo and released worldwide on DVD. Last Solo documents Jarrett's last solo concert before taking a 4-year hiatus (1983-87) from all solo work. Standards I and Standards II feature the trio in concert in Tokyo in 1985 and 1986. Solo Tribute captures a rare solo piano concert in 1987 with Jarrett performing a complete evening of solo “standards”, rather than with his trio. The Keith Jarrett Trio: Live at The Open Air Theatre East and Keith Jarrett/Gary Peacock/Jack DeJohnette Tokyo '96 capture the trio's 1993 and 1996 Tokyo performances. In May 2006 ECM released its first DVD, Keith Jarrett: Tokyo Solo, a complete concert video filmed in November 2002.

In May 2005 on the occasion of his 60th Birthday, a full length 90-minute documentary film entitled Keith Jarrett: The Art of Improvisation was released worldwide on DVD (Euro Arts). The film, directed by British documentary film maker Mike Dibb in collaboration with Keith Jarrett biographer Ian Carr, explores in depth Keith Jarrett’s music and work over the past 40 years.

Keith Jarrett's many honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship, Prix du President de la Republique and Grand Prix du Disque awards from the Academie Charles Cros (France), seven Deutscher Schallplattenpries (Germany), and eight Grammy (US) nominations in both the jazz and classical categories. He has received dozens of “Artist” or “Album of the Year” awards from the New York Times, New Yorker, Time, Stereo Review, Downbeat, Billboard, CD Review, and Rolling Stone; including Best Classical Keyboardist in Keyboard Magazine Reader's Polls (1991, '93), Best Classical CD in CD Review Editor's Poll (1992) for the Shostakovich 24 Preludes and Fuques, Op. 87; and dozens of “Critic's” and “Best of The Year” awards” from the international music press. The Melody At Night, With You (1999) , Whisper Not (2000), and Up For It (2003) all received Swing Journal's Gold Disc Award for “Best Album of the Year” in Japan, as well as the Choc des Chocs Award from Jazzman Magazine (France).

In the annual Downbeat Magazine polls, Keith Jarrett has garnered multiple awards for “Pianist of The Year” in the Critics Poll (1996, and ‘01 to ‘05 consecutively ) and Readers Poll (1994, '96/97, and '99/'05 consecutively), “Best Acoustic Group” in the Readers Poll (1998/99 and 2004)), and “Album of The Year” in the Critics Poll (1996) for the Live At The Blue Note.

In 1989, Jarrett was named “Officier de L'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres”, one of the highest honors the French Ministry of Culture can bestow on an artist. In 1996, he was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music, joining Duke Ellington as only the second foreign jazz artist to ever be so honored. In 2002, he was elected to be Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the America's oldest honorary society founded in 1780.

In 2003 Keith Jarrett was awarded the 2003 Polar Music Prize,, one of the world's most prestigious music awards, presented by the King of Sweden in a special televised ceremony in Stockholm. Then July 2004, he was presented the Leonie Sonning Prize in Copenhagen, another of the world’s major music awards. He is only the second jazz artist to receive the Sonning Prize since it’s founding in 1959, Miles Davis being the first in 1985. Also in July 2004, he was presented with the Miles Davis Prize by the 25th Anniversary of the Festival International de Jazz de Montreal.

Keith Jarrett was the first musician to ever perform improvised music at several of the world's most important music venues. In 1978 he performed at the Metropolitan Opera in New York; 1990 at the Musikverein in Vienna; 1991 at the Vienna State Opera (Staatsoper); and 1995 at La Scala in Milan.

In 2008 he was inducted into the prestigious Downbeat Hall of Fame by the Downbeat Magazine 73rd Annual Jazz Readers Poll.

Source: http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/musician.php?id=7984 Readmore...

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

JIMMY GARRISON

Remembering Jimmy Garrison

Jimmy Garrison (March 3, 1933 – April 7, 1976) was an American jazz double bassist best known for his long association with John Coltrane from 1961 – 1967.

Biography

He formally joined Coltrane's quartet in 1962 as a replacement for Reggie Workman and appears on many Coltrane recordings, including A Love Supreme. During live performances of music by John Coltrane's group, the leader would often provide Garrison with time and space for an unaccompanied improvised solo (sometimes as the prelude to a song before the other musicians joined in).

Garrison also had a long association with Ornette Coleman, first recording with him on Art of the Improvisers. He and drummer Elvin Jones have been credited with eliciting more forceful playing than usual from Coleman on the albums New York is Now and Love Call.

Outside of the Coltrane and Coleman ensembles, Jimmy Garrison performed with jazz artists such as Kenny Dorham, Philly Joe Jones, Curtis Fuller, Benny Golson, Lennie Tristano, Lee Konitz, Jackie McLean, Pharoah Sanders, and Tony Scott, among others. After Coltrane's death, Garrison worked with Hampton Hawes, Archie Shepp, and groups led by Elvin Jones.[1]

Family


Jimmy Garrison's son Matthew Garrison is also a bass player, playing mainly bass guitar. Matthew has recorded with Joe Zawinul, Chaka Khan, The Saturday Night Live Band, John McLaughlin, Joni Mitchell, Herbie Hancock, Steve Coleman and others. [2] Garrison's daughter MaiaClaire Garrison is a dancer and choreographer who worked as a child acrobat with Big Apple Circus in New York.

Source: http://nightlight.typepad.com/nightlight/2005/10/remembering_jim.html

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Biography by Chris Kelsey

Garrison is best known as bassist for one of the most important jazz groups, John Coltrane's classic quartet with drummer Elvin Jones and pianist McCoy Tyner. But Garrison had a full career backing other prominent saxophonists, including Pharoah Sanders, Archie Shepp, and Ornette Coleman. Garrison's work with Coleman is especially noteworthy; his earthy, hard-swinging approach contrasted greatly with the work of the saxophonist's other, more finesse-oriented bassists like David Izenson or Scott LaFaro. The Garrison/Elvin Jones rhythm section transformed Coleman on two very underrated albums made for Blue Note, New York Is Now and Love Call. Nowhere else on record does Coleman sound so consistently forceful and passionate. The lithe tunefulness that marks the saxophonist's earlier playing is augmented by a more pronounced physicality that pushes the blues aspect to the fore; this due in no small part to Garrison and Jones' focused intensity, which drives Coleman harder than he's ever been driven. Of course, it's with Coltrane that Garrison did his most enduring work. Although Garrison could be a compelling soloist when the occasion presented itself (witness his work on A Love Supreme), he didn't need the spotlight to be effective. His propulsive sense of time never failed, and his empathy with those playing around him was complete. 

Garrison grew up in Philadelphia, where he learned to play bass. Garrison came of age in the midst of a thriving Philadelphia jazz scene that included Tyner, fellow bassists Reggie Workman and Henry Grimes, and trumpeter Lee Morgan. Between 1957 and 1960, Garrison played and recorded with trumpeter Kenny Dorham; clarinetist Tony Scott; drummer Philly Joe Jones; and saxophonists Bill Barron, Lee Konitz, and Jackie McLean, among others. His first record with Coleman was Art of the Improvisers (Atlantic, 1959). In 1960, he made My Favorite Things (Atlantic) with Coltrane. He continued to play with Coleman and others -- Cal Massey, Walter Bishop, Jr., and Dorham, to name a few -- but by 1962 his job with Coltrane had essentially become full-time. Garrison remained with Coltrane until the saxophonist's death in July 1967. The Olatunji Concert: The Last Live Recording (Impulse!, 2001), a live recording made by Coltrane just a couple of months before his death, includes Garrison with Pharoah Sanders, Alice Coltrane, Rashied Ali, and Jumma Santos. After Coltrane, Garrison worked with Ornette Coleman once again, and played on record dates led by Sanders, Jones, Shepp, Sonny Rollins, and Alice Coltrane. Garrison also taught occasionally; William Parker, one of the most highly regarded bassists of the late '90s and early 2000s, was his student.

Source: http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:gzfixqt5ldde~T1

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Jimmy Garrison was one of the most advanced bassists of the 1960s, a perfect candidate to play with John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman. 

He grew up in Philadelphia and came to New York with Philly Joe Jones in 1958. He freelanced for a couple of years with the likes of Bill Evans, Benny Golson, Kenny Dorham and Lennie Tristano and then succeeded Charlie Haden in Ornette Coleman's Quartet (1961). However Garrison will always be associated with John Coltrane (1961-67), not only playing with the classic quartet (which included McCoy Tyner and Elvin Jones) but surviving the tumultuous changes and staying with 'Trane until the end. 

Garrison's solos (which were thoughtful and slow to build) were not to everyone's taste but his ability to play coherent and inspiring lines in the raging ensembles behind Coltrane and Pharoah Sanders was quite impressive. After Coltrane's death, Garrison played in groups led by Alice Coltrane, Archie Shepp and Elvin Jones before lung cancer cut shorthis life. 

Source: Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

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Biography by Richard Eskow 

genius, teacher, good man

John at Crooks and Liars just made my day, by linking to this CNN story - John Coltrane has two of this week's three top jazz albums, 38 years after he passed away. I took lessons from his bass player, Jimmy Garrison, many years ago. It was an honor and privilege I didn't fully grasp at the time.

At every stage in my life there have been musicians or songs that triggered a near-mystical response in me: the first one I remember is "Stranger on the Shore" by Mr. Acker Bilk (I must have been four, maybe?), then Buddy Holly and the Chiffons at around the same time, Otis Redding at 12 -- for a while in my teens Trane was the guy elected to send me into an altered state.  

When I started taking lessons from Jimmy I was the least schooled and proficient of his students, but he said he liked my attitude and "philosophy" toward music. (We would have very theoretical conversations ...) When I ran out of money, he offered to keep teaching me for free.  

I took him up on his offer for a while, but the fact is I didn't have the self-control to woodshed as much as would be appropriate and respectful to him as my teacher. I was seventeen years old and not at my best. I couldn't keep up with his lessons and pursue my bad habits, too. I was ashamed to tell him that, so I lied and said I couldn't make the bus fare to his apartment either. When he offered to give free lessons and pay my way, I just disappeared.  

When he died I regretted having ended our relationship on a falsehood. He was a beautiful cat - and unusually tolerant of the fact that I sang in a country/western band on weekends. I even wrote country songs in the three- and four-chord structure Jimmy considered imprisoning and unimaginative, but elitism was not his thing. Today I can admit to him - and to you - that I've never been very disciplined, and that chops aren't my strong suit on guitar either.  

Hanging out at Jimmy's apartment was a thrill all its own. You never knew which legend would stop by. A fellow student and I once went through the black book by his telephone while we were waiting for him, just to see the names of the greats ...

His family now maintains a website in his memory. I'm glad. "Genius" is an overused word, but he was one. He was also kind, sensitive, warm, and generous. I wish I could talk to him. I'm not greedy - one time would be enough. I'd like to say "thank you" once more, with feeling.  

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Garrison is best known as bassist for one of the most important jazz groups, John Coltrane's classic quartet with drummer Elvin Jones and pianist McCoy Tyner. But Garrison had a full career backing other prominent saxophonists, including Pharoah Sanders, Archie Shepp, and Ornette Coleman. Garrison's work with Coleman is especially noteworthy; his earthy, hard-swinging approach contrasted greatly with the work of the saxophonist's other, more finesse-oriented bassists like David Izenson or Scott LaFaro. The Garrison/Elvin Jones rhythm section transformed Coleman on two very underrated albums made for Blue Note, New York Is Now and Love Call. Garrison grew up in Philadelphia, where he learned to play bass. Garrison came of age in the midst of a thriving Philadelphia jazz scene that included Tyner, fellow bassists Reggie Workman and Henry Grimes, and trumpeter Lee Morgan. Between 1957 and 1960, Garrison played and recorded with trumpeter Kenny Dorham; clarinetist Tony Scott; drummer Philly Joe Jones; and saxophonists Bill Barron, Lee Konitz, and Jackie McLean, among others. His first record with Coleman was Art of the Improvisers (Atlantic, 1959). In 1960, he made My Favorite Things (Atlantic) with Coltrane. He continued to play with Coleman and others -- Cal Massey, Walter Bishop Jr., and Dorham, but by 1962 his job with Coltrane had become full-time. Garrison remained with Coltrane until the saxophonist's death in July 1967. Garrison worked with Ornette Coleman once again, and played on record dates led by Sanders, Jones, Shepp, Sonny Rollins, and Alice Coltrane.

Source: http://www.jayhungerford.com/bassplayers-garrison.html

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Bassist Jimmy Garrison was the anchor in the classic John Coltrane Quartet, from 1961-'66, which recorded all of its well-known albums on Impulse. Garrison's big, blunt sound, steady time and inventive counter lines were an elemental ingredient in the sound of that famous group. He actually fitted into the group with great insight, supplying a traditional role on the more straight ahead material and exploratory counter melodies and responses as the music grew more progressive.

Garrison was born on March 3, 1934, in Miami, but grew up in Philadelphia, where he first played briefly with Coltrane and McCoy Tyner, in 1957. Garrison moved to New York the following year, where he worked with Curtis Fuller, Philly Joe Jones, Benny Golson, Bill Evans, Kenny Dorham and Lennie Tristano.

Garrison’s early work with Ornette Coleman earned him respect and recognition in the New York jazz circle, and his joint effort with Elvin Jones in that period is thought to be some of Coleman’s best outings.

His first record with Coleman was “Art of the Improvisers,” (Atlantic, 1959). In 1960, he made “My Favorite Things” (Atlantic) with Coltrane. He continued to play with Coleman and others, but by 1962 his job with Coltrane had essentially become full-time. Garrison remained with Coltrane until the saxophonist's death in July 1967. “The Olatunji Concert: The Last Live Recording” (Impulse!, 2001), a live recording made by Coltrane just a couple of months before his death, includes Garrison with Pharoah Sanders, Alice Coltrane, Rashied Ali, and Jumma Santos. After Coltrane, Garrison worked with Ornette Coleman once again, and played on record dates led by Sanders, Jones, Shepp, Sonny Rollins, and Alice Coltrane. He was featured on quite an extensive number of sessions as bassist. He also taught at Bennington and Wesleyan colleges

Jimmy Garrison died on April 7, 1976, in New York.

Source: http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/musician.php?id=6964

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Discography

As leader

1963: Illumination! (Impulse! Records) - co-leader with Elvin Jones

As sideman

Jazz Contrasts (Kenny Dorham , 1957)
Blues For Dracula (Philly Joe Jones, 1958)
Swing, Swang, Swinging (Jackie McLean, 1959)
Live at the Half Note (Lee Konitz, 1959)
Images of Curtis Fuller (Curtis Fuller, 1960)
Ballads (John Coltrane, 1962)
Coltrane (John Coltrane, 1962)
Duke Ellington & John Coltrane (John Coltrane, 1962)
John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman ((John Coltrane, 1962)
Live at birdland (John Coltrane, 1963)
Crescent (John Coltrane, 1964)
A Love Supreme (John Coltrane, 1964)
Ascension (John Coltrane, 1965)
First Meditations (John Coltrane, 1965)
The John Coltrane Quartet Plays (John Coltrane, 1965)
Kulu Sé Mama (John Coltrane, 1965)
Live at the Half Note: One Up, One Down (John Coltrane, 1965)
Live in Seattle (John Coltrane, 1965)
The Major Works of John Coltrane (John Coltrane, 1965)
Meditations (John Coltrane, 1965)
Transition (John Coltrane, 1965)
Sun Ship (John Coltrane, 1965)
Live in Japan (4 discs) (John Coltrane, 1966)
Live at the Village Vanguard Again! (John Coltrane, 1966)
Expression (John Coltrane, 1967)
The Olatunji Concert: The Last Live Recording (John Coltrane, 1967)
East Broadway Run Down (Sonny Rollins,1966)

Readmore...

Monday, March 2, 2009

HAMID DRAKE

Download Music!: Hamid Drake, Pharoah Sanders, Adam Rudolph-Roundhouse; Hamid Drake, Pharoah Sanders, Adam Rudolph-Morning In Soweto; Hamid Drake & William Parker-Sky 

Hamid Drake (b. Monroe, Louisiana, August 3, 1955) is an American jazz drummer and percussionist. He lives in Chicago, IL but spends much of his time traveling around the world for concerts and studio dates.

He first became known for his work with Chicago tenor saxophonist Fred Anderson. Drake was one of the founders, along with Foday Musa Suso and Adam Rudolph, of The Mandingo Griot Society. His other frequent collaborators include New York bassist William Parker, saxophonist David Murray, composer and percussionist Adam Rudolph, German free jazz saxophonist Peter Brötzmann, fellow drummer Michael Zerang and Chicago free jazz saxophonist Ken Vandermark.

In addition to the drum set, he also performs on the frame drum, the tabla, and other hand drums.

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Hamid Drake...

By the close of the 1990s, Hamid Drake was widely regarded as one of the best percussionists in improvised music. Incorporating Afro-Cuban, Indian, and African percussion instruments and influence, in addition to using the standard trap set, Drake has collaborated extensively with top free jazz improvisers Peter Brotzmann, Fred Anderson, and Ken Vandermark, among others.

Drake was born in Monroe, LA, in 1955, and later moved to Chicago with his family. He ended up taking drum lessons with Fred Anderson's son, eventually taking over the son's role as percussionist in Anderson's group. As a result, Fred Anderson also introduced Drake to George Lewis and other AACM members.

Drake also has performed world music; by the late '70s, he was a member of Foday Muso Suso's Mandingo Griot Society, and has played reggae. Drake has been a member of the Latin jazz band Night on Earth, the Georg Graewe Quartet, the DKV Trio, Peter Brotzmann's Chicago Octet/Tentet, and Liof Munimula, the oldest free improvising ensemble in Chicago.

Drake has also worked with trumpeter Don Cherry, Pharoah Sanders, Fred Anderson, Mahmoud Gania, bassist William Parker (in a large number of lineups), and has performed a solstice celebration with fellow Chicago percussionist Michael Zerang semiannually since 1991. Hamid Drake recorded material is best represented on Chicago's Okkadisk label.

Source: http://www.drummerworld.com/drummers/Hamid_Drake.html

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A Fireside Chat With Hamid Drake

By Fred Jung

I make no bones about the fact that Hamid Drake is a personal favorite of mine. But my argument is a substantial one. No other drummer has worked with as many heavy hitters as Hamid (a list that includes Peter Brotzmann, Fred Anderson, George Lewis, Don Cherry, Misha Mengelberg, Pharoah Sanders, Jemeel Moondoc, William Parker, Roy Campbell, Mats Gustafsson, Ken Vandermark). And no drummer works as much as Hamid. Han Bennink, Paal Nilssen-Love, and Tony Oxley are killing, but my money is on Hamid. Check out both volumes of Die Like a Dog's Little Birds Have Fast Hearts or Fred Anderson's Missing Link Classic, or the out of print, but too good to not search the ends of the Earth, For Don Cherry with Mats Gustafsson, or the DKV live sessions Live in Wels & Chicago, 1998. Hamid is the poo. So it is truly an honor to present to you, Hamid Drake, unedited and in his own words.

All About Jazz: Let's start from the beginning.

Hamid Drake: I would say that it was being around the family, being at home because there was a lot of music in the home and also, my father and Fred Anderson were really good friends. I think just from being around the music itself, interest developed and also, when I was young, I wanted to be in the stage band at school, in grade school. So that was the first time that I actually started playing within the stage band. I was in the fourth grade. So it was a combination of that, the stage band situation and just being around the music, hearing music a lot. Both of my parents played a lot of records and stuff. It wasn't to any particular type of music per say, it was just that I wanted to play an instrument.

FJ: Serendipitous that you now play with Fred Anderson.

HD: They were very good friends. Yeah, I have known Fred, mostly all my life (laughing). I have mentioned this before, but I actually wanted to play trombone. That's the instrument that I actually wanted to play in the stage band, but when I was in grade school, the instruments were allotted out to the kids and so, unfortunately, there weren't any trombones left. I wanted to be in the stage band and I had to play the only thing was left to play which was snare drum and the big orchestral bass drum. There was another guy and we used to switch off. Sometimes he would play bass drum and I would play snare drum. Sometimes I would play bass drum and he would play snare drum.

FJ: If only the music program had more funding.

HD: (Laughing) Right, yeah. Yeah, I would be playing trombone. I guess it was destiny that it worked out that way. There was a drum teacher in the school and at the same time, I started studying with him. That was how it worked out. It was something that was, at first, can be viewed as a mistake, turned into a lifetime pursuit.

FJ: How did your progression develop from drum studies to a devoted learning of African drums?

HD: Well, actually, it was through a good friend of mine, Adam Rudolph. We met each other in a drum shop that used to be in Chicago called Frank's Drum Shop. We met there and he is a hand percussionist and he had been studying congas and so he asked me if I had any interest in congas and I said, "No." But I thought it might be a good idea to study and he told me about a guy that he was studying with who taught in the drum shop two doors down from Frank's Drum Shop and so I started studying with him, with this guy that Adam had been studying with. From the interest in the hand drums and the congas, I started to develop an interest in other forms of hand drumming, which naturally took me to start to investigate and appreciate the different styles of music from Africa, first starting with hand drums. Fortunately, at that time, there was a very good record shop also in downtown Chicago called Rose's Records and they sold music from everywhere. At that time, it was albums of course. I started going to Rose's Records and just looking in the record bins, first for music from Cuba and South America. Since I was playing congas, that would be a good place to start. I began buying records of people like Mongo Santamaria. From there, my interest started to drift across the Atlantic to the continent itself, to the origin of congas and various types of conga derivative type hand drums. From there, the interest in African music developed more and more until in 1977, Adam Rudolph, along with myself and a kora player from the Gambia named Foday Musa Suso, we started this group called the Mandingo Griot Society. Suso, he was a Griot and kora player from the Gambia. From that experience, the interest developed even more and it became more of a lived experience because now I was actually playing in situations where there was someone from the continent who also played a very important instrument from West Africa.

FJ: Most people couldn't tell the difference between a tenor saxophone and an alto saxophone, how do you explain kora music?

HD: I would say that first of all, the kora is a harp type instrument that is played in West Africa amongst Mandingo speaking people. Also, the kora is played by a group of people that are known as Griots. Griots are the keepers of the oral history of their various people. Griots are not only amongst Mandingos, but amongst many different tribes in Africa. Traditionally, the kora, amongst the Mandingo people is played by the Griots, those who are the holders of the oral tradition. I would let them know that the kora is a harp sounding type instrument. It is played very much like the harp where there is two sides, the left hand is playing one side and the right hand is playing another side.

FJ: Joe Morris and I had a conversation and he spoke about his interest in kora music.

HD: Yeah, that is true.

FJ: Joe told me that you had one up on him, having had tea in a tent with Alhaji Bai Konte.

HD: He is going way back. Yeah, he is going way back to the Bear Mountain Festival (laughing) in upstate New York. That's correct, yeah. In fact, Alhaji Bai Konte and the kora player, the Griot that we formed Mandingo Griot Society with Foday Musa Suso, they were very good friends. Alhaji Bai Konte was his elder of course, but still they were very good friends. I think the time that Joe was talking about was, this was the early Eighties when we still had some pretty good festivals going on in the States and there was this one particular festival called the Bear Mountain Music Festival, which pretty much centered around various types of folk music throughout the world. It concentrated a lot on American folk music. Mandingo Griot Society, we were on the Flying Fish label at the time, which also concentrated a great deal on American folk music and American bluegrass, but we happened to be on that label. Through that, we played this music festival in Bear Mountain and that particular time that Joe was talking about also was quite a very interesting festival because Mandingo Griot Society, we did the festival with a slew of folk and bluegrass musicians. Also, there was a great oud player from the Sudan by the name of Hamza El-Din and on that particular festival also, the Sun Ra Arkestra played too. It was quite a festival that particular year. We were all hanging out together, Alhaji Bai Konte and his adopted son Malamini Jobarteh, Foday Musa Suso, myself, and Adam Rudolph and the other guys from Mandingo Griot Society.

FJ: As a percussionist who has played with so many other percussionist, I would like to get your opinion on a few. First, Adam Rudolph.

HD: We're old time friends. We have been knowing each other and playing music together since we were both fourteen years old. I think Adam, simply as a percussionist, Adam is one of the greatest percussionists that I know to tell you the truth. What he has developed on the hand drums, I think, conceptually and playing wise is truly phenomenal. Also, Adam is a great composer too. He has composed some very extraordinary music. It is stuff that when you perform it, you really have to think seriously about it because it challenges you on many levels, especially from the rhythmic perspective. Also, Adam is a good friend. Adam and I, we are musical buddies, but we are also life buddies. We spent a lot of time together traveling to different parts of the world, traveling to different parts of this country, playing in various musical situations, very diverse musical situations with different people. I have a very high regard and respect for Adam. He is one of those people that I have learned a lot from and I continually learn from. Whenever we are in a musical situation together, I feel that I always learn something from Adam and I am very appreciative.

FJ: Tragically, Adam rarely gets the recognition he deserves because he plays hand percussion, a lost form in improvised music.

HD:That's right. He is a multi-instrumentalist extraordinaire. Yeah.

FJ: And Michael Zerang.

HD: Michael and I have been playing together for about twelve years now in various situations, particularly with Peter Brotzmann, but also in duet situations. For the past twelve years now, we have been doing in Chicago, we have been hosting these Winter Solstice concerts every year. The phenomenal thing is that we have done it twelve years consecutively, like non-stop every winter solstice. For the last twelve years, we have been doing this and over the years, it has really grown and it brings out people of diverse backgrounds and people with their children. The phenomenal thing is that now, for the last several years, we have been only doing early morning performances starting at six in the morning. We still get packed houses at six in the morning of people coming to see this music to see drums and percussions. The nice things about working with Michael is over the years, we have had time to develop a way of communicating with each other and really to develop our own duet style not only from the Winter Solstice concerts that we do, but also from working together with various ensembles, but particularly with Peter Brotzmann and the Chicago Tentet.

FJ: You also are part of the DKV Trio.

HD: Yeah, I think Ken (Vandermark) and I started working together in '92. The first project we did together was a project called Standards Project and it was Ken, he was doing this project with various artists. It just worked out that the project that Ken and I were doing was with Kent Kessler. From doing that project, the Standards Project, it felt like we had a nice connection, the three of us, so DKV, that was actually the starting point of DKV. Then we started doing gigs together at a few places around Chicago and we were doing things on a weekly basis and that kind of formed, those were the situations that helped solidify the musical relationship of the three of us. DKV is a situation that I really love and appreciate a lot because the nature of how we play together allows us to go in any direction. We have the freedom to explore many different stylistic textures and landscapes. It is not just one particular mode of expression, but we express a lot of different things within that group setting. People seem to appreciate it.

FJ: And Fred Anderson.

HD: There is really, oh, I don't have a lot of words to express the relationship with Fred other than it is definitely, it manifests in many ways. Sometimes it is the relationship of teacher/apprentice or master/apprentice type situation and other times, we are, I can't say equals because Fred is my elder, so he has been around way longer than I have and he has experienced and seen more life than I have experienced, so I can't say equal, but I will say, we definitely share a common, we have a shared love for this music. It is great to see when we travel to different places to see these young audiences really being so appreciative of Fred and really digging and understanding what he is doing. It is such a delight to see.

FJ: And Peter Brotzmann, whom you have worked with in both his Tentet and his Die Like a Dog Quartet.

HD: Yeah, Die Like a Dog, we have the quartet, which was with William Parker, Peter Brotzmann, and Toshinori Kondo, a trumpet player from Japan and myself. Right now, we are mostly concentrating on the Die Like a Dog Trio, which is William Parker, Peter, and myself. The quartet is a really great group, but actually, it was too expensive sometimes to always bring Kondo from Japan. He became very busy doing other projects also. Kondo and I, we still work together in different projects with Bill Laswell for instance. In Europe, Peter speaks about how Chicago was a new starting place for him. Also, he speaks about how it is wonderful for him to be a part of, and to see, and to experience this whole new generation of people that are becoming very much into his music. Of course, some people coming to him through knowing of his son, Casper Brotzmann, but also others from strictly Peter himself, listening to his music, knowing his music, and having an appreciation for his music. It is really delightful for him to see also, this whole new group of people, young Americans that are into his music. It is great to see that.

FJ: You are the most in demand drummer I know of, how often do you get to sleep in your own bed?

HD: (Laughing) The last couple of years, Fred, I have been gone more than I have been home, actually. I just returned home from touring with David Murray because I have been working with David now for the past couple of years. I leave tomorrow to do a couple of things with David and then I am off to start a six day tour of Europe with William Parker and Peter Brotzmann. Then I come home and I will be home for a little while after that. Lately, I have been gone more than I have been home.

FJ: You are in the studio enough with others, but only have a handful under your own name.

HD:Well, that is one of my resolutions for this year actually. I am glad that you mentioned that. That is something that I really want to concentrate on this year, doing more of that. It has been good for me to work with a lot of other people and to be in a very supportive role because that has its advantages, but one of my resolutions for this year is to begin the process of putting more things out specifically out under my own name.

FJ: There was Brothers Together (Eremite) with Sabir Mateen .

HD: Yeah, with Sabir. He is great. Sabir, he is a great musician, a great artist. I had heard Sabir play quite often from going to New York and everything, but playing with him was a whole other experience. I think he is great.

FJ: What are the various nuances between drums and frame drums?

HD: First of all, let me say that all drums are primarily string instruments (laughing) because historically, the skins for all drums was made from some animal part, some goat or cow or deer. Also, historically, in the past, all strings were also made from some animal part. So drums really, a drum head is really a large expanded string that is draped over something just as strings in the past were gut or goat skin that was draped over a pole. The frame drum is probably one of the oldest drums in the world. We see it in all the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics, old Greek statues of people playing frame drums. It is basically a wooden hoop with a large stretched string or skin draped over it. So basically, it is a string instrument also. The frame drum is a type of, musicologists call it menbranophones. The frame drum is one of the oldest drums in existence. The only difference between frame drums and your modern, standard drum kit is that the modern, standard drum kit is played with the sticks. Traditionally, most frame drums with the exception of a few are played with the hands, skin on skin. There are some cultures that do play frame drums with sticks, primarily the Celtic culture from Britain. Some Native American cultures play the frame drum with a stick or a mallet. Frame drum is just a type of, one of the many varieties of drums that we find in existence today. Another unique quality of the frame drum is usually when people play the frame drum, they sing also. It is the drum that is easy to sing with. It is the same with congas. Very seldom do you see players of the drumset singing as they play. That doesn't seem to be a part of the tradition of drumset playing.

FJ: Art Blakey is not breaking out in song on his Blue Note sessions.

HD: Right. It has always been part of the tradition of frame drumming to sing as one plays and also with other types of hand drums too, the conga and stiff like that.

FJ: Have you reached the mountaintop?

HD: Oh, no. Definitely, I don't think I have reached it and I can't say when that might be. I think we are always experiencing hills and valleys. Definitely, I haven't reached it and I hope I never reach it (laughing). I always want to have room for more growth and development.

FJ: You are certainly on the hill.

HD: Thank you, Fred.

Source: http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=156

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Hamid Drake (multiple percussion drum kit, frame drum, tabla, voice), a sensitive, endlessly rhythmic, intelligent, spiritual, and powerful drummer/percussionist from Chicago, was born in 1955 in Monroe, Louisiana and raised in Illinois.

He started out playing with local rock and R&B bands and eventually came to the attention of A.A.C.M. master Fred Anderson, through whose workshops young Hamid first got to know and work with many other A.A.C.M. masters around Chicago.

Hamid's flowing rhythmic expressions and interest in the roots of the music drew other like-minded musicians together into a performance and educational collective named the Mandingo Griot Society, combining traditional African music and narrative with distinctly American influences.

Hamid Drake and fellow percussionist Adam Rudolph traveled with Don Cherry to Europe, exploring the interior landscape of percussion while working nonstop to share deeply in Mr. Cherry's grasp of music's spiritual powers.

Other musicians Hamid cites as having been influential to him are Ed Blackwell, Philly Joe Jones, and Jo Jones, and it was through the latter's broad-based concepts that Hamid was impelled to explore earlier forms of drumming before the advent of free jazz.

Thanks to these studies, his playing is often more structured and touches upon more identifiable bases than that of most other contemporary percussionists.

Now touring and recording all over the world and in constant demand, Hamid Drake provides rhythmic support to forward-thinking musicians such as Peter Brötzmann, Marilyn Crispell, Pierre Dorge, Johnny Dyani, Hassan Hakmoun, Herbie Hancock, Joseph Jarman, George Lewis, Sabir Mateen, Joe McPhee, William Parker, Jim Pepper, Dewey Redman, Pharoah Sanders, Wayne Shorter, Foday Musa Suso, John Tchicai, Malachi Thompson, Ken Vandermark, fellow percussionist Michael Zerang, and almost all the members of the A.A.C.M.

With these diverse artists, playing in a broad range of musical settings, Hamid adapts comfortably to North and West African and Indian impulses, as well as reggae and Latin, American jazz, and musics from all over the African diaspora.

A deeply spiritual being, Hamid Drake is both a Sufi Muslim and a Buddhist. “Sufism is the delight of my heart, and Buddhism is the illumination of my mind," he has said, and his artistic and spiritual powers are such that this delight and this illumination translate directly into the profound effect of his playing on the souls of all who hear him.

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Partial discography

As leader

Blissful (RogueArt)
Bindu (RogueArt)
Hu: Vibrational "Universal Mother (Soul Jazz)

With IsWhat?!
2004 - You Figure It Out (Hyena)
2006 - The Life We Chose (Hyena)

With Adam Rudolph's Moving Pictures
Contemplations
12 Arrows

With William Parker
2001 - Piercing the Veil (Aum Fidelity)
2007 - First Communion/Piercing the Veil [LIVE] (Aum Fidelity)

With Yakuza
2007 - Transmutations (Prosthetic)

Readmore...

Sunday, March 1, 2009

RASHIED ALI

Rashied Ali (born Robert Patterson on 1 July 1935 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American free jazz and avant-garde jazz drummer best known for playing with John Coltrane in the last years of Coltrane's life.

Biography

Rashied Ali was born into a musical family; his mother had sung with Jimmie Lunceford. His brother, Muhammad Ali, is also a drummer, who played with Albert Ayler, among others.

Ali moved to New York in 1963 and worked in groups with Bill Dixon and Paul Bley.  He has also recorded or performed with Pharoah Sanders, Alice Coltrane, Arthur Rhames, James Blood Ulmer and many others. In addition, Ali was scheduled to be the second drummer, alongside Elvin Jones, on John Coltrane's landmark free jazz album, Ascension, but he dropped out just before the recording was to take place. Coltrane did not replace him, and settled for one drummer. Ali began to record with Coltrane from Meditations in November 1965 onwards.

Among his credits is the last recorded work of John Coltrane's life, the Olatunji Concert and Interstellar Space an album of duets with Coltrane, recorded earlier in 1967. Ali "became important in stimulating the most avant-garde kinds of jazz activities".  During the early 1970s, he ran an influential loft club in New York, called Ali's Alley. Ali also briefly formed a non-jazz project called Purple Trap with Japanese experimental guitarist Keiji Haino and jazz-fusion bassist Bill Laswell. Their double-CD album, Decided...Already the Motionless Heart of Tranquility, Tangling the Prayer Called "I", was released on John Zorn's Tzadik label in March of 1999.

Rashied Ali though most known for his work in the Jazz idiom has also made his contributions to other experimental art forms including multi-media Performances with The Gift of Eagle Orchestra and Cosmiclegends. Performances such as Devachan and the Monads, Dwarf of Oblivion which have taken place at the Kitchen center for performance Art, and a special tribute to John Cage in Central Park have taken 'Performance Art' to new levels with the addition of fully improvised large scale performances pieces. Other artists of the orchestra and Cosmic Legends have included Hayes Greenfield (sax), Perry Robinson (clarinet), Wayne Lopes (guitar), Dave Douglas (trumpet), Gloria Tropp (vocals), director/pianist Sylvie Degiez along with Poets and actors, Ira Cohen, Taylor Meade, Judith Malina (Living Theater). More recently, Ali has played with Sonny Fortune.

Rashied Ali has recently been playing with his own Quintet, The Rashied Ali Quintet. A double CD entitled "Judgement Day" was released on February 17, 2005 and features: Jumaane Smith on Trumpet, Lawrence Clark on Tenor Sax, Greg Murphy on Piano, Joris Teepe on Bass and Rashied Ali on Drums. This album was recorded at Ali's own Survival Studio which has been running since the 1970s.

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Rashied Ali...

Rashied Ali is a progenitor and leading exponent of multidirectional rhythms/polytonal percussion. A student of Philly Joe Jones and an admirer of Art Blakey, Ali developed the style known as "free jazz" drumming, which liberates the percussionist from the role of human metronome.

A Philadelphia native, Rashied Ali began his percussion career in the U.S. Army and started gigging with rhythm and blues and rock groups when he returned from the service. Cutting his musical teeth with local Philly R&B groups, such as Dick Hart & the Heartaches, Big Maybelle and Lin Holt, Rashied gradually moved on to play in the local jazz scene with such notables as Lee Morgan, Don Patterson and Jimmy Smith. Early in the 1960s the Big Apple beckoned, and soon Rashied Ali was a fixture of the avant-garde jazz scene, backing up the excursions of such musical free spirits as Don Cherry, Pharoah Sanders, Paul Bley, Archie Shepp, Bill Dixon and Albert Ayler. It was during this period that Rashied Ali made his first major recording (On This Night with Archie Shepp, on the Impulse label) and began to sit in with John Coltrane's group at the Half Note and other clubs around Manhattan. 

In November 1965 John Coltrane decided to use a two-drummer format for a gig at the Village Gate; the percussionist Trane chose to complement the already legendary Elvin Jones was Rashied Ali. Thus began a musical odyssey whose reverberations are still felt in the music today - Trane probing the outer harmonic limits and changing the melodic language of jazz while Rashied Ali turned the drum kit into a multirhythmic, polytonal propellant, helping fuel Coltrane's flights of free jazz fancy. The rolling, emotion-piercing music generated by the Coltrane/Ali association is still being discussed, analyzed, reviewed and enjoyed in awe as the new compact disk format introduces the era to a new host of the sonically aware. After Coltrane's passing in 1967, Rashied Ali headed for Europe, where he gigged in Copenhagen, Germany and Sweden before settling in for a study period with Philly Joe Jones in England.

Upon his return from the continent, Rashied Ali resumed his place at the forefront of New York's music scene, working and recording with the likes of Jackie McLean, Alice Coltrane, Archie Shepp, Gary Bartz, Dewey Redman and others too numerous to mention here. In response to the decaying New York jazz scene in the early 1970s, Rashied Ali opened the loft-jazz club Ali's Alley in 1973 and also established a companion enterprise, Survival Records. Ali's Alley began as a musical outlet for New York avant-garde but soon became a melting pot of jazz styles. Although the Alley closed in 1979, its legacy continues in the New York jazz scene and Rashied Ali has been busy gigging with a virtual Who's Who in jazz, refining his music and encouraging a host of younger musicians.

Source:
bigmagic.com

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Rashied Ali is a progenitor and leading exponent of multidirectional rhythms/polytonal percussion. A student of Philly Joe Jones and an admirer of Art Blakey, Ali developed the style known as "free jazz" drumming, which liberates the percussionist from the role of human metronome. The drummer interfaces both rhythmically and melodically with the music, utilizing meter and sound in a unique fashion. This allows the percussionist to participate in the music in a harmonic sense, coloring both the rhythm and tonality with his personal perception. By adding his voice to the ensemble, the percussionist becomes an equal in the melodics of collective musical creation rather than a "pot banger" who keeps the others all playing at the same speed. Considered radical in the 1960s and scorned by the mediocre, multidirectional rhythms, polytonal drumming is now the landmark of the jazz percussionist.
A Philadelphia native, Rashied Ali began his percussion career in the U.S. Army and started gigging with rhythm and blues and rock groups when he returned from the service. Cutting his musical teeth with local Philly R&B groups, such as Dick Hart & the Heartaches, Big Maybelle and Lin Holt, Rashied gradually moved on to play in the local jazz scene with such notables as Lee Morgan, Don Patterson and Jimmy Smith. Early in the 1960s the Big Apple beckoned, and soon Rashied Ali was a fixture of the avant-garde jazz scene, backing up the excursions of such musical free spirits as Don Cherry, Pharoah Sanders, Paul Bley, Archie Shepp, Bill Dixon and Albert Ayler. It was during this period that Rashied Ali made his first major recording (On This Night with Archie Shepp, on the Impulse label) and began to sit in with John Coltrane's group at the Half Note and other clubs around Manhattan.
In November 1965 John Coltrane decided to use a two-drummer format for a gig at the Village Gate; the percussionist Trane chose to complement the already legendary Elvin Jones was Rashied Ali. Thus began a musical odyssey whose reverberations are still felt in the music today--Trane probing the outer harmonic limits and changing the melodic language of jazz while Rashied Ali turned the drum kit into a multirhythmic, polytonal propellant, helping fuel Coltrane's flights of free jazz fancy. The rolling, emotion-piercing music generated by the Coltrane/Ali association is still being discussed, analyzed, reviewed and enjoyed in awe as the new compact disk format introduces the era to a new host of the sonically aware. 
After Coltrane's passing in 1967, Rashied Ali headed for Europe, where he gigged in Copenhagen, Germany and Sweden before settling in for a study period with Philly Joe Jones in England. Upon his return from the continent, Rashied Ali resumed his place at the forefront of New York's music scene, working and recording with the likes of Jackie McLean, Alice Coltrane, Archie Shepp, Gary Bartz, Dewey Redman and others too numerous to mention here. In response to the decaying New York jazz scene in the early 1970s, Rashied Ali opened the loft-jazz club Ali's Alley in 1973 and also established a companion enterprise, Survival Records.
Ali's Alley began as a musical outlet for New York avant-garde but soon became a melting pot of jazz styles. Although the Alley closed in 1979, its legacy continues in the New York jazz scene and Rashied Ali has been busy gigging with a virtual Who's Who in jazz, refining his music and encouraging a host of younger musicians.

Source: http://www.bigmagic.com/bios/rashied.htm

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Rashied Ali By Hank Shteamer

Rashied Ali is a survivor. Best known for replacing Elvin Jones as John Coltrane's drummer of choice in the mid-sixties, Ali has sustained himself as a working, thriving musician right through to the present day. Since his stint with Trane, Ali has founded a label, Survival Records, and a club, Ali's Alley; led countless groups in styles from funk to free; and mentored many young musicians (including John Coltrane's son, Ravi) while constantly refining his remarkable technique. 

Ali performs in a duo with saxophonist Sonny Fortune at Sweet Rhythm in April. He recently sat down with All About Jazz New York in his home studio to discuss his current projects, the initial development of his 'multi-directional' rhythms, and his many illustrious musical associations.

AAJ: What can a listener expect from a Rashied Ali / Sonny Fortune duet performance?

RA: Well, what they can expect is to see two cats playing their hearts out. You know, because we just get up there, and we don't hold back anything. And we just do it from the way we were taught to do it by the masters; we just go right after the music. 

Sometimes it takes us ten minutes; sometimes it takes us an hour to get it over with. We can play one song for an hour almost before we feel like we've exhausted every means of trying to get to what we were getting to in the music- take it to another level. 

The repertoire could be whatever tune we play. It's not really a repertoire; we know so much music. We've been playing together ever since we started playing music back in the fifties or something, and we know so much music. And we were listening to all the great players like Coltrane, who was the cat who raised me in the music, and Sonny as well. And we listened to records with Bird, Clifford Brown- the history of the music, we know about that. 

That makes us want to do more with the music. We try to play the music unadulterated ... no watered down stuff; it's just purely as on-the-money as we can. So there's no pretense in it. It's all sheer- well, I wouldn't say sheer brute strength, or that kind of a thing. It's that as well as beautiful melodic lines. 

So we could play a standard; we could play Tin Pan Alley tunes; we could play originals. We do that; we go through all of them. We play Irving Berlin's shit; we play Cole Porter's shit; we play Charlie Parker's shit; we play Sonny Fortune's stuff; we play Rashied Ali's stuff. And we treat it all the same way. Say we play a standard like 'Love for Sale' or 'But Not for Me;' we try to exhaust the tune. It's like all of a sudden gravity don't work no more, you know what I mean? 

You just go into a thing until it completely becomes like nothing. Everything just starts working together; that's when it's right. You can take any tune and do that. It doesn't have to be an original tune you write; it can be any tune. If it's music, you can do that with it; you can get free. 

I mean being free, still playing 'But Not for Me,' but just open and loose. Being a drummer, you can understand what I'm saying, just to be able to play uninhibited, just to do whatever you feel like you want to do, and it's all right in there with what's happening. And that's how I feel about what we're doing musically.

AAJ: You've returned to the duet format throughout your career.

RA: I've dubbed myself 'The Duet Drummer.' I just remember even before Coltrane or any of that, I've always played with just a saxophone player or a piano player, whoever was available. I love playing with rhythm sections; I do. But it was really more open playing just with another instrument- a drummer, whatever. And I've been doing that all my life just about. 

And when I did Interstellar Space with Coltrane, that really put it on the map, but if you go back and listen to some of my records before Trane - with Archie Shepp, Marion Brown, Albert Ayler, Cal Massey, just a lot of different people ' you would hear me playing duets with Marion on some cuts, duets with Alan Shorter on some cuts, or duets with Archie Shepp. In fact, Archie Shepp and I, we played duets for almost six months before I went with Coltrane. 

That concept came actually from listening to Trane because I first heard Trane play duets with Philly Joe Jones back in the fifties, and then I heard him play with Elvin Jones all the time, just duets. The whole band would split, and [leave] just the drummer and the saxophone. So that kind of got me up on that really. 

So by the time I got to play duets with Trane, I was definitely ready for it. And since, I think I have more duo records than any drummer out. That's been one of my fortes, although I love playing with a rhythm section.

AAJ: How did the idea for Interstellar Space come about?

RA: I didn't have a clue what was happening. John told me that we were going to be going in to the studio, and I said, 'Cool.' And I went in there, and I was setting up, and I didn't see Jimmy, I didn't see Alice; I didn't see nobody else. And I was like, 'Where's everybody else?' and he said, 'It's just going to be you and me.' And I went, 'Oh!' 

So everything was completely spontaneous except for at times I would ask him to give me some kind of clue as to what was happening, you know like, 'Is this going to be slow like a ballad?' or, 'Is this going to be in a certain time like 3/4 or 4/4? Is it going to be fast? Is it going to be slow?' Because you know, he would just ring the bells, pick up his horn and start playing. 

And I'd been playing with him not that long anyways, and I'm like, 'What the fuck?' And you know I would get in there, and I would play, and he would go, 'How do you like that?' and I would say, 'Well, I wasn't quite prepared for it.' And he'd say, 'Well, you want to do it again?' and I'd say, 'Yeah, let's do it again.' 

There's probably some other takes of that stuff because we did a few things twice, but [John] didn't really like to do that. But he saw I was in such agony that he would do that for me; that's the kind of cat he was. 

And so, that record came about like that. Meditations was like that too, actually. That's why I always wanted a chance to do [Interstellar Space] again at some point, but it's pretty hard to do it without [John], you know? 

But I did Meditations again; I recorded that again [with Prima Materia, Ali's group featuring saxophonists Louie Belogenis and Allan Chase]. That turned out ok. Still, I wasn't ready for the original Meditations, but I like the original Meditations better than mine.

AAJ: So, you had never heard the music on Interstellar Space before you recorded it?

RA: No; first time meeting it, first time playing it, and a lot of times it was a first take thing, and then I never heard it again until like twenty-five or thirty years later when they put it out.

AAJ: Did you ever play live duets with Trane?

RA: Well, no, but in the songs sometimes everybody would lay out and just John and I would play for a little bit, and then the rest of the band would come back in. And then on some tunes like 'Ogunde' and some other tunes, the whole band was playing, and then they would all just lay out, and then John and I would go and solo and play, and then the whole band would come back in to close it. So it was that kind of duo thing I did with him before. 

But, like I was saying, I was pretty much versed into duos because that was one of my fortes, and it still is very much. I really do dig playing with a duo because I have a lot of freedom, and when I get with a good cat who really knows what's happening up there with the changes and everything, it works out really good.

AAJ: You were one of the first drummers to break away from timekeeping in jazz. How did you come up with your free style of playing?

RA: I came up with playing the way I play by listening to the top drummers of the world like Max Roach, Art Blakey. I say those two cats first because I listened to them a lot as a kid, but they wasn't really my main influences. My main influences was right in my family. Charlie Rice and his brother Bernard was really my main influences because they were really hell of a drummers; they were my second cousins, my father's first cousins. 

But I listened to 'Philly' Joe Jones, and although he was playing straight ahead without the avant-garde groove - like Andrew [Cyrille], and Milford [Graves], and Sunny [Murray], and myself ' there were segments in his playing that he broke time up, and that interested me in his playing. Because he would go sometimes like five or six bars just breaking up time before he would go back to his time thing, and I was like, 'Damn, what would happen if you could just extend that?' 

So I heard 'Philly' Joe Jones breaking up the time like that, and then I got into listening to Elvin Jones with Coltrane and, wow... I heard 'Philly' Joe Jones with Coltrane first with Miles Davis's band, and there would be times when 'Philly' Joe Jones and Coltrane would just take off ' the rest of the band would just cool out; Miles would go somewhere ' and those cats would just play for like a half-hour, forty-five minutes. 

Then I heard John play with Elvin Jones in that same kind of situation, you know. So I was pretty much mesmerized by the sound of the drums and the saxophone, by looking at that. And I think that's where I started trying to find something else to do instead of just trying to play time. Because I was a Max Roach freak, and I love that period in my life because Max Roach turned me on to melodies and how to play the drums in a melodic sense and [how to have] a feel for the structure of the music you're playing and the tune and knowing the tunes and all that. I came up with that, so I had that kind of under my belt. 

But when I started hearing these cats play all this free shit in between phrases, that sort of prompted me. Then when I heard Elvin Jones with Trane, I was like, 'Wow, man; I got to get my shit together or find another instrument to play' because it was that kind of a serious thing. 

And I just went in to 'shed, and Sunny Murray, who was also in Philadelphia, we was all just trying to play open and free. He split to New York, and he met up with Cecil Taylor. I'm still in Philadelphia, and Sunny comes to New York and fucks people up with this free shit he was playing. Cecil got him and pretty soon I said, 'It's time for me to leave Philly.' 

Trane actually told me to leave Philly, and I left Philly and I came to New York and I started playing with people like Albert Ayler, Archie Shepp, and I met people like Beaver Harris and Andrew Cyrille and Milford Graves, and there was a whole different kind of a music out here at that point: Don Cherry, Albert Ayler, Archie- they called us the avant-garde 'New Wave' players, you know what I mean? 

And we were actually trying to play a different kind of rhythm, and a lot of the drummers started homing in on each other and trying to steal licks from each other, and we just sort of stayed in here with it, and a few of us are still here. And I think it meant a lot because I hear a lot of players playing this type of avant-garde music.

AAJ: Could you talk about your background in R&B? 

“And that's what the avant-garde is; it's a very personal kind of a thing; it's stuff that you can do after you learn how to do everything else.”

RA: Well, that was the beginning of my whole drumming thing because that was the first kind of stuff I played as a drummer- rhythm-and-blues and playing backbeats and playing for blues singers: Dick Hart and the Heartaches; Big Maybelle, I played with her a little bit; I played with Muhammad Abibala [sp.?], [who] was kind of a Louis Jordan-type saxophone player, or an Arnett Cobb-type of saxophone player. 

I played with a lot of those kinds of rhythm-and-blues groups around Philadelphia; Philadelphia was that kind of a place. In fact, I followed Coltrane in one of them bands because he also played with Abibala, I heard before me. 

I mean I was sort of just right there trying to learn how to play and watching and just going through the same grooves like the cats ahead of me went through, just learning how to hold how to hold myself up with the rhythm-and-blues groove, and trying to practice how to play time and listening to Bird and listening to my cousins- they used to play. In fact, actually Bird played at my high-school dance, and my cousin, Bernard Rice, he played drums with Bird at the high-school dance because Bird used to come to Philly, and he wouldn't bring a band; he'd just come and just bring his horn, and he would get a band there; that's how that stuff was there. 

So I seen bands like that at my high school; I seen Stan Kenton's band, he played at my high-school dance; Woody Herman's Third Herd with the Four Brothers: Brew Moore, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, Allan Eager- they played at my high school dance too! Check that out, right?! 

R&B was a hell of an introduction to the drums for me because you've got to use a lot of strength and shit... In the seventies I had a group called the Funky Freeboppers, and we was sort of integrating electric instruments with acoustic instruments. And we was doing a lot of funky things, singing and stuff like that with that band in the seventies actually. And I kept the Funky Freeboppers alive for a couple of years, two or three years; a lot of different guys came through the band. 

And then I didn't get tired of the groove, but I wanted to get back into really playing what I felt. And I didn't really feel Funky Freebop like I did playing open. And so we did that; we did a lot of funk shit, and I played as open as I could; I played as far out as I could take it. Then I said, 'Alright, that's it; let me go back to what it is I really love to do.' [The Funky Freeboppers have] never been recorded, but I do have tapes; one day you might get a chance to hear the Funky Freeboppers.

AAJ: With your group Prima Materia, you've recorded recreations of both Albert Ayler's Bells and John Coltrane's Meditations. Were these records an attempt to create a kind of avant-garde jazz repertory?

RA: It's not really the importance of the compositions as it is the importance of the composer. Those cats, man- Albert Ayler to me was a major, major, major force in the music; I don't care what you name it. He was just a very different saxophone player, and he was respected by great saxophone players like Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane and people like that. 

And I got a chance to play with [Albert], and he was an incredible musician, and he played stuff sometimes that I couldn't even deal with. But after listening to him for awhile, I could hear where he was coming from. 

Albert Ayler was a very creative musician, and everybody realized that, and the contribution that he made, it's too bad that's it's going unsung like it is. I mean nobody knows who Albert Ayler is. You can ask people who've listened to jazz forever, you ask them about Albert Ayler, and they go, 'Who?' 

So, that's what's missing. And so, I did [Prima Materia's Bells] because I wanted people to hear Albert's music. Maybe that record would get them to go out and buy an Albert Ayler record, you know what I mean? That record doesn't get out that much anyway, but if they would hear that then they would go, 'Damn, I wonder what the original cat sounds like?' 

So, we did that in remembrance of Albert, and we also did two records in remembrance of Coltrane. And that's what Prima Materia was about. We was going to do one for Eric Dolphy as well, but we haven't got to that one yet. But we do have one coming out which I call Configurations, which is Coltrane's music from his album Stellar Regions- 'Configurations' is one of the tunes on Stellar Regions. I finished that last year, and it should be coming out this year. We call that Configurations, and I've got two basses on there, Wilber Morris and Joe Gallant; Allan Chase is playing alto; Louie Belogenis is playing tenor, and Greg Murphy on piano.

AAJ: Could you talk about the history and future of Survival Studios/Records [Ali's personal studio and label]?

RA: Well, this is the studio here. And the label 'we've got some stuff coming out. Actually, Configurations is coming out on Survival as well as Cutting Corners, which is another CD that I did down here with a group that I played the Vision Festival with in 1999: Greg Tardy's playing tenor, James Hurt is the pianist, and Omer Avital's playing bass. 

...I've never really recorded on my own, as a leader, with a major record company in the thirty, forty years that I've been working for some reason. With other bands I've played on major record companies, but as a leader, playing my own music and playing with my own band, I never did it with a major company. I don't know if that's because we never agreed on things- I had chances, but it didn't work out 

So I developed Survival Records, and most of my stuff has been done on my own label. And I'm glad I did it now because it really works out better for me because I'm building up a catalog and the whole thing, and I've got two more records coming out around the spring, maybe in the summer they'll be coming out: Configurations and Cutting Corners, which I feel like is really good. 

And this last one I did, No One In Particular [featuring Ravi Coltrane on tenor and Matthew Garrison, son of Ali's late associate Jimmy Garrison, on bass]... It was really cool because those kids ' well, they're not kids anymore; Ravi will be ... thirty-something years old; Matthew's in his early thirties. 

But I knew them when they were inside their mothers! They didn't know me, but I knew them. And I used to see Alice, she used to make sessions with this boy in her, and then when they were born, they were little babies, and I seen them as little babies until I guess Ravi was about six or seven or eight when he moved out to California. 

But Matthew, I watched him because he lived right around the corner with his mother, Roberta, and Jimmy. When he died, she stayed there I guess before she moved to Italy with him. He was like about eight or nine or ten, and she moved him to Italy, and I didn't see him no more until he came here to go to school at Berklee. 

And then Ravi, I was kind of seeing him because I was making trips out to California ' my father's out there ' plus I was doing gigs with Alice sometimes, and that's how I met Ravi... 

So, you know, the rest is history. I sort of got [Ravi] to come here to New York. He came here, and he stayed with us for a little while, and he got himself together. And then I met Matthew through some kid named Gene Shimosato who plays guitar ' he's a good guitar player. [Gene] was teaching, and he was going to Berklee at the same time Matt was going there. He came over, and Matt goes, 'Oh, that's Rashied Ali's house!' and boom, boom, boom... Then I got those cats together, man. 

So I took them, and I had this band with Ravi and Matt and Gene and Greg [Murphy]. We went to Europe; we were together a couple of years. I made a few tapes, and I finally got this record out. 

And it's a gas to play with those cats, being they're the sons of some great musicians that I respected a lot. And Matthew [laughs], Matthew is a motherfuckin' hell of a bass player, man! Whoo! He plays the shit out of that electric bass! ... I don't know if he ever wanted to play acoustic, but if he ever did, it wouldn't make no difference. 

He's an incredible bass player, and Ravi is a very great young saxophone player with all the time in the world to develop ... You know, I did a lot of stuff with Ravi. We did some stuff with Tisziji Munoz [There should be a '~' mark over the 'n.'], and every time we get together we play. So, he's an incredible player.

AAJ: Are you currently composing music?

RA: Well, you know, I haven't really written anything in a long time because, for one thing, a lot of the stuff that I've already written hasn't really been played yet as far as I'm concerned. 

But I sit at the piano sometimes, and I get ideas; and I did run across something that I might be doing on my next record. I wrote a couple of ballads. I don't know how I got with two of them; I must have been in kind of a melancholy mode because I am going through certain kinds of weird things in my life right now in my life. I'm having difficulties in certain things, and, thank God [knocks on wood], I'm healthy. I'm just going through different changes and stuff. 

So I sat at the piano, and I did some stuff the other night, and I was smart enough to put a tape recorder on so I won't forget it. But then there's a few things I wrote back in the day that I want to record, and I think that's what I'm going to do on my next album. I think I'm going to write all the tunes...

AAJ: Do you listen to other styles of music?

RA: Yeah, man, I like all music. I'm a music freak. I like it all, man, and if I don't like it, it must be bad... You know, I like the cats that's really doing it, and the cats that's bullshitting, hey! [laughs]

AAJ: Are you a teacher?

RA:...There used to be a time back in Philly when I used to teach cats just basics, but actually, man, I teach from the bandstand. Cats come and hear me, and they see what I'm doing. When they do come to my house, I do stress out the fact that you need to try to extend your time. I say, 'If you're playing, you need to extend [time] over the whole set instead of trying to concentrate on beats. Concentrate on what you hear.' 

That's how I get it, man. I can play a time, and then I can just take that time and turn it into nothing. The time will still be there, but you won't hear it; you can feel it. I can demonstrate that for you. I can do it right now... [Ali sits down at drums and demonstrates- What a treat!] 

And that's what John called 'multi-directional rhythms. He named it; he told me, 'Rashied, what you're playing is multi-directional rhythms.' That's what he put on it, so I just left it there. I guess it means everything going on at once. He said, 'I can pick whatever I want to; I can play as slow as I want, or as fast as I want on the rhythm that you're playing.' And that was some heavy shit when he told me that... 

That's the only reason I was [with Coltrane], man. I used to be playing gigs, and Coltrane used to be in the audience watching me. I was playing with Albert Ayler, Archie Shepp, Marion Brown, Chris Capers, George Coleman ' whoever it was I was playing sessions with. And I would look out sometimes in the audience, and Albert would go, [whispers] 'Hey man, Coltrane!' So he used to scope us out. 

But that's not it either. I used to go to his gig and beg, and he'd let me sit in with him; I sat in with the quartet. They had this place, it used to be called the Half Note, it was on Hudson and Spring, and Trane used to play there- if he was off he'd play there for a month, two months, and I would go over there and sit down on the bandstand ... ask them to let me play every day. But I came in there one day when Elvin [Jones] wasn't there, and everybody wanted to play, and [John] said, 'Come on, man,' and that started it. After that, I was playing all the time. I was sitting in on Elvin's drums, and pretty soon I started working with Elvin, two drummers. 

But from the beginning, I would just go over there and sit in and just play with the band. And other people would sit in too. I'd bring people like Pharaoh [Sanders]; we'd come together, and we'd both sit in with Trane. And then [John] started changing his band around. 

[Playing in tandem with Elvin Jones] was an incredible experience, man; I'll never forget that. Although, it was kind of rough at first, but, whew, man, that was something. I learned a lot from it. That was great. Too bad it didn't last long, but it lasted long enough for me to understand what it was all about.

AAJ: It seems like there has been a resurgence of interest in avant-garde jazz in the past few years. Do you feel like people are starting to come around to your music?

RA: I really do... Trane left us, and that was a big blow to the avant-garde because he was the biggest name, and he had more clout to get it out there than anybody else... And when Trane actually left that music, and Miles Davis and Teo Macero and those cats got the music moved into a different direction with the fusion thing, that just sort of put the dampers on the avant-garde; that just sort of put it out. And I guess that's what prompted me to try to get a record label, get a club because we needed a place to play, we needed a place to record, and all that shit. 

But I think now that the music is starting to resurface again. I mean, just like I said, you can't go but so far in it man; you've got to do something else. You just can't sit around and say, 'Ok, let's go to Louis Armstrong; let's play Louis Armstrong for awhile; let's play some Bird for awhile; let's play some Coltrane of the sixties for awhile or some Coltrane of the fifties for awhile.' After awhile, you've got to make a stand, man, and start playing yourself. 

And that's what the avant-garde is; it's a very personal kind of a thing; it's stuff that you can do after you learn how to do everything else. You've got to first know where it's all coming from before you can take something- I always call the avant-garde taking absolutely nothing and turning it into something; in other words, just going for it, just start playing... You know, just start! Just do that, and keep turning it over and turning over until it starts making sense. That's the shit man; that's the stuff, man, to be able to play like that. 

And I feel like the music is making that kind of a thing because I get with young kids from the New School, from Julliard, and I don't even want to name these kids, but when they come down here to my studio, they don't want to play no 'Scrapple from the Apple;' they want to play some different stuff. They don't just want to hear no time; they just want to play. I'll say, 'What do you want to play?' and they'll say, 'Let's just play! Let's just hit.' 

And so I'm feeling like that's where the music is, and it's cool to hear young people wanting to play like that. That's not putting anything on anything because I stress the fact that, hey man, if you don't know how to play 'But Not for Me,' if you don't know how to play 'Cherokee,' or if you don't know how to play 'Giant Steps' ... then you can't play avant-garde because you've got to play that first. You've got to know where that shit's coming from before you can play this. 

And that's what motivates me, man, is they learn that shit. I call anything I want to call, and they can play it, ... and if they don't know how to play it, they go learn it. And, hey, that's where the music is to me.

Source: http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=243

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A Fireside Chat With Rashied Ali

I was really into Elvin because he was the featured drummer on A Love Supreme. I still am to some degree (having spent a hundred and fifty bucks on his Mosaic Blue Note box), but when it comes to Trane drummers, I appreciate what Rashied Ali brought to the table. I can't imagine another drummer being able to duel with Trane on Interstellar Space. Or how killer is the practically hour long "My Favorite Things" on the Live in Japan record? I get the best of both worlds on Meditations (both Ali and Jones play). Ali continues to pay tribute to Trane's legacy. A classic Touchin' on Trane (Charles Gayle and William Parker), a fine In the Spirit of John Coltrane (Sonny Fortune), and a rendition of Meditations with his Prima Materia band. The force is strong in this one my friends. I sat down with Rashied and the drummer spoke about his respect for Trane and his efforts to be the standard bearer, as always, unedited and in his own words.

FRED JUNG: Let's start from the beginning

RASHIED ALI: Well, actually my family was a very musical kind of a family. My mother and her four sisters were all piano players and then my grandmother was a minister and she had a Baptist church, sort of a little, small corner church. Her daughters sang and played at the church. And my father, he's a music lover. He's a jazz buff. He likes music. His first cousins, which were the Rices, Charlie Rice and Bernard Rice, they were both drummers. Charlie Rice was more professional. He played with people like Dizzy Gillespie and John Coltrane, people like that in Philadelphia years ago. I just was around music all my life and so it was just natural that I would be a musician I guess. I started with piano, but I didn't really get that far. I learned enough just to read music and play the piano. Then I wanted to be a trombone player, but I never got that. I wanted to play the trumpet. I was going through a lot of different changes. Actually, the drums just really took over being around my cousins and friends that I knew. My aunt married a drummer also. I just sort of gravitated towards the drum set. But actually, I started playing congas and hand percussion instruments before I really became sort of professional in drums.

FJ: How did you come to play with Trane?

RASHIED ALI: Actually, I was born and raised in Philadelphia and John Coltrane lived in Philadelphia all of his young life. He moved from North Carolina as a kid up to Philly. So actually, I first met John in Philadelphia back in '59, '58, while he was still playing with Miles Davis, but I wasn't considering myself as really good enough to play with John Coltrane in those days. I admired the man so much and I would go hear him play when he was working with Miles Davis and he lived about four blocks, five blocks away from me and I used to go sit on his porch and listen to him practice because Mrs. Alice Coltrane wouldn't let us go upstairs, that's his mom, while he was practicing and stuff like that and so we would just sit outside and listen to him and then we would leave. When I really got enough experience to try and play with him, he was down in Philadelphia and I asked him a couple of times if I could sit in with him, but he said, "Not right now." He encouraged me to go to New York and stuff like that and so I did. I came to New York and then I got a chance to sit and play with him in New York and the rest is history. That is when I joined the band in 1965.

FJ: Was it competitive between Rashied Ali and Elvin Jones?

RASHIED ALI: Not at all, Fred. In those days, things were kind of different and I was an upstart. I was just trying to get my rhythm off and so there was a few misunderstandings between the old band and the new band. Elvin was one of my heroes. He was one of the guys that really got me started to play something different. By listening to Elvin Jones, I was able to find Rashied Ali.

FJ: Many who document the music have cheapened the innovations of Coltrane's lessening the impact or in some circumstances, ignoring the heavyweight's later years entirely.

RASHIED ALI: Yeah, that's a shame too, Fred, because that is a stepping stone to what is going on right now. Well, actually, I wouldn't say it was ignored that much. At the time, I would like to also think of myself as really working with John and helping him create that sound. It was just that John was really instrumental in that kind of music because even with his former quartet with Elvin. They were playing very avant-garde kind of music and the people dug it because he had this thing going with Miles Davis and with his band. When he really, really decided that he wanted to get out of chord changes and get out of time, rhythm, and meters, that is when things started changing as far as the public is concerned. That went on for a while, but it was actually embraced by a lot of musicians while John was alive because when he was alive, I played with a lot of people like Sonny Rollins and Grachan Moncur and Don Byas and they were embracing the free kind of music, Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor. That stuff was really happening in the Sixties and when John left us here, that is when the music made a change. Miles Davis went to Bitches Brew and they got into a fusion thing and all kinds of different things happened and it just sort of kind of dropped out of the public's eye, but not for me because I stayed in the game and I'm still in it now, Fred. Right now, I see the music is resurging again. It is starting to come up a little bit more because I've been doing a lot of playing lately and it is not that I don't play conventional jazz because I do enjoy playing it, but I'd much rather play more experimental stuff than conventional stuff. I think when John was here, the music was hanging in there, but a lot of people were so used to him playing certain kind of things. I think if he had stayed here, it would be the music hat we'd be playing today. It is actually because I'm still here and the music right now, a lot of youngsters are embracing this music and I've been doing pretty well with it right now.

FJ: Did you continue to legacy with Alice?

RASHIED ALI: For a little while. I played with Alice for about a year or so after, maybe a couple of years after Coltrane passed. I did most of the stuff with my own band. I had a lot of different bands in those times and not only did I have different bands, I also had a club that I opened in New York called Ali's Alley. That club lasted for about five or six years and that way, I was able to play a lot with my band and different bands that I put together and getting other avant-garde bands to play because it was at a point in the early Seventies where there wasn't too many places out here that an avant-garde band could play. So Ali's Alley was one of those places. That went from 1973 to 1979. It was a great club and the club got a lot of props. People from Europe, Japan, all over the world came to hear the club and so Ali's Alley produced a lot of avant-garde music in those days.

FJ: The music being documented on Survival Records.

RASHIED ALI: Yes, it is. It exactly is.

FJ: So titles reissued on CD by Knit Media.

RASHIED ALI: Yes.

FJ: A session with a practically unknown Frank Lowe.

RASHIED ALI: Yes, and in fact, Fred, I just recorded something with Frank Lowe earlier this year that I am going to put out. That is the second time that we've recorded since the very first time I recorded with him as a duo on Survival Records.

FJ: And James Blood Ulmer.

RASHIED ALI: Oh, yeah, James Blood is another one. In fact, we've got a band now we call the New York Art Quartet with James Blood, Reggie Workman, and John Hicks. We were just out in Seattle, Washington with that band a couple of times. I had Leroy Jenkins and Hamiet Bluiett on a couple of things that I did and Sonny Murray. He played at Ali's Alley. Clifford Jordan's quintet played at Ali's Alley. There was a lot of good things happening at that club.

FJ: With Ulmer, you formed Phalanx.

RASHIED ALI: Blood Ulmer, George Adams, and Sirone on bass. We did two records with that group. George passed and so we didn't really find a replacement for George and so that band sort of disbanded.

FJ: You still have the Prima Materia band?

RASHIED ALI: Well, you know, we've got a new record coming out with Prima Materia. We did Configurations, which is all Coltrane's music from his album Stellar Regions. We just did that, which will be coming out right after Christmas, around the first of the year on Survival Records as well. Survival Records is coming out with three brand new releases and I just did one, the latest one that just came out, I have Ravi Coltrane.

FJ: No One in Particular.

RASHIED ALI: Yeah, you have that already. I have Ravi and Matthew Garrison, which is Jimmy Garrison's son. So I got both of the kids there and that is ironic because I knew those kids before they knew themselves. I knew their mothers when they were pregnant with them guys. Alice used to play with Ravi still yet to be born and so I got Matthew and Ravi on No One in Particular. Since I'm not one of those record companies with the power of good distributing, it is pretty hard to find my records, but they are in some companies, but I don't know exactly which stores to find them in. I suggest that they mail, they would just send to the company and we will mail the stuff out to them. They can order it from Survival Records. They can get it at Survival Records, 77 Green Street, New York, New York 10012. The stuff that we did over at the Knitting Factory is the stuff that we did live a Ali's Alley and Knitting Factory in conjunction with Survival Records will put out more of those records that were done live at Ali's Alley. Most of that is from the period of 1974 to 1975. That is the stuff that Knit Media and Survival Records is going to jointly release. We've got something coming out right now, which is Rashied Ali with voices. The players is Hamiet Bluiett, Benny Wilson, Jimmy Vass, and Charles Eubanks. Then I have another one coming out. This is all voices with the late Eddie Jefferson, Eddie Jefferson with the Rashied Ali Quartet. We're trying to talk to Knitting Factory, well, actually, we are going to do it and put out those two as another wave of coming from that era of 1974 to 1979.

FJ: The Prima band did a faithful rendition of Meditations.

RASHIED ALI: Oh, thank you, Fred. We tried to keep it as close to the way Trane did it as we possibly could. In fact, I really want to do a lot of that music over again because at that time, I was really younger and I wasn't quite sure of how much I was into what I was into in the music. I was still trying to put it together. That is one reason why I jumped at the chance to do that again. So we did Meditations. We also did, the first record we did of Coltrane's music and we did one of Albert Ayler's music as well.

FJ: Bells.

RASHIED ALI: Bells, yeah. Well, you know, Albert, he was an incredible musician and it is too bad that a lot of people don't know too much about Albert Ayler because he was a tremendous musician. I remember a time when we played at Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center and it was called Jazz Titans and it was Sonny Rollins, Yusef Lateef, and John Coltrane were the featured artists. John Coltrane got Albert and his brother Donny Ayler to play with us and that was really cool. Coltrane was that kind of a guy, Fred. He was always searching and looking for different things to play and he was always open to the younger musicians. He really was a guru to all of us.

FJ: And the future?

RASHIED ALI: I've got three more Survival Records that should come out the first of the year. Right now, I am working tomorrow night. I've been doing things with my own band as well as doing things with Sonny Fortune. Sonny Fortune and I, we go all the way back to Philadelphia. We were both born there and raised there and got our music together there and we're completely Trane fanatics. So we're doing a lot of duo work now. In fact, we are working at this club in New York called Sweet Basil, well, it is not Sweet Basil anymore, it is called Sweet Rhythm. We're starting a month of Tuesday nights in November and we will be playing there for the month of November on Tuesday nights, just a duo. I think it is a pretty exciting duo. I'm very active now. In fact, I am playing more now than I did in the Eighties and the Nineties was a pretty good decade for the stuff. I am really looking forward to doing a lot of stuff, Fred. It is definitely not over.

FJ: Thank God.

RASHIED ALI: It was hard, a long hard road, but I think it is all coming back around because I have so many young kids interested in what I'm doing. I've got a bunch of kids from Julliard Music School and Manhattan Music School, a lot of kids that are into jazz now are looking for something different to play and naturally, they just go right to that. That is the thing that gets them all excited, the avant-garde music, the free form music is what is exciting most of the younger players now and that is pretty cool.

Source: http://www.jazzweekly.com/interviews/rali.htm

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Discography

As leader

1971 - New Directions In Modern Music (Knit Classics) with Carlos Ward, Fred Simmons, Stafford James
1972 - Duo Exchange (Knit Classics) with Frank Lowe
1973 - Swift Are The Winds Of Life (Knit Classics) with Leroy Jenkins
1973 - Rashied Ali Quintet (Knit Classics) with James Blood Ulmer
1974 - Moon Flight (Knitting Factory)
1975 - N.Y. Ain't So Bad (Knit Classics)
1994 - Peace On Earth (Knitting Factory) with John Zorn, Allan Chase
1995 - Medeitations (Knitting Factory) with Greg Murphy
1995 - Bells (Knitting Factory)
1999 - Rings of Saturn (Knitting Factory)
2000 - Live At Tonic (DIW) with Wilber Morris

As sideman

With John Coltrane

Meditations (1965)
Live in Japan (1965) (1966)
Live at the Village Vanguard Again! (1966)
Interstellar Space (1967)
Stellar Regions (1967)
Expression (1967)
The Olatunji Concert: The Last Live Recording (1967)
Cosmic Music (1968)

With Alan Shorter

Orgasm (1968)

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