Summer In The City Part 2: John Scofield Proto-Uberjam

It was the summer of 2000. I had just left playing bass in a funk band called Celebrity Hottub (yes, named from a SNL Eddie Murphy skit called James Brown’s Celebrity Hottub) and had decided to take a break from bass playing in general and spend some time concentrating on another of my musical loves: jazz guitar. So with the blessing of my wife (one of the many billlions of reasons why I love her so), I enrolled for a week long jazz guitar seminar at the National Guitar Workshop. The featured event of the seminar was a masterclass by John Scofield. While I was familiar with Scofield’s playing from his days with Miles Davis (I particularly liked the stuff he did on Miles’ Star People) and had heard his mid 80’s records on Gramavision records, I couldn’t say I was a a particular fan of Scofield. I wasn’t yet familiar with the record he had made with Medeski, Martin & Wood (A Go Go on Verve from 1998). His being at the National Guitar Workshop was incidental to my decision to go. So when I saw that Scofield was playing at the Prospect Park bandshell as part of the Celebrate Brooklyn series of concerts just a couple of weeks before the workshop, I figured it would be cool to check him out. One of the better decisions I ever made.

I knew something was up from the beginning when the first thing I heard was these strange sampled sounds that eventually morphed into an almost techno sounding electronic drum groove. Scofield began to solo alone over the drum groove until the bass and rhythm guitar entered and the electronic drums were replaced with regular drums. The music was funky but not in some antiseptic “smooth jazz” manner. There was a down and dirty, almost garage band vibe to it. Scofield’s playing was fluid but with a bluesey edge to it and he wasn’t hesitant about throwing in some dissonant “outside” lines. The music was groove oriented but not in some simplistic manner. The tunes had an interesting asymmetrical quality to them that somehow managed to balance itself out. It was jazz fusion meets jam band meets such EDM (electronic dance music) sub genres as techno, drum and bass and dub. I had never heard anything like it before and immediately knew that it was something  I was waiting to hear even if I didn’t know it. I was smitten.

The secret weapon for this band is Avi Bortnick on rhythm guitar and samples. He is the glue who hold all the music together and provides the rhythmic and harmonic bed over which Scofield can fly over. He also supplies electronic sampled sounds (triggered from a laptop) that give the band unique tone colors that I never heard in a jazz fusion band. In fact, Bortnick provided the moment when I truly fell in love with this band when, at about the ten minute mark, the band drops out, except for Bortnick, who then grooves for several minutes alone. With the help of some delay and a sixteenth notes right hand groove that couldn’t stop and wouldn’t stop, he tore the roof off the sucka!

The last song of the show was one one that Scofield introduced as a new one they just wrote while on tour in Germany called Uberjam. This became the title track for the band’s first album and also became the moniker by which this Scofield project became known. The band released two records, Uberjam in 2002 and Up All Night in 2003 before going on hiatus and then releasing Uberjan Duex in 2013. While I couldn’t find any video from 2000 – 2003, there are several videos from the 2013 tour supporting Duex. The one below is the full set from the All Good Music Festival in Ohio from July, 2013. Enjoy.

John Scofield Uberjam Band – All Good Music Festival 7-19-13 Thornville, OH


When I think about my favorite concerts, the ones that made a truly memorable impact on me, it’s amazing how many of them were free summer concerts in the parks on NYC. This was definitely one of them.

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Posted in Jam Band, Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

Summer In The City Part 1: The Self Promotion Edition

2016 (Designer: Adam McCauley)

It’s summer here in NYC. The weather has yet to become oppressive so it’s a good time to reflect on one of the coolest things about NYC in the summer: the number of great free (or dirt cheap) concerts that are held in NYC parks. In the next few posts I am going to talk about some of the great artists I discovered by seeing them live in a concert in a park.

But first a work from our sponsor (namely me). I will once again be participating in the MakeMusicNY festival. MMNY is a organization that every June 21 (the summer solstice) sponsors concerts on streets, sidewalks, and parks across the five boroughs. This year I am hosting one of the events and as host, I get to program it. So of course I put in my own band, The New Jazz Spasms (it’s good to be king). I am learning that with the decreasing number of of small scale venues for live jazz in the city, one must not only find gigs but make them as well.

In the course of getting players together for this gig, I was reminded of the saying “the best laid plans . . “. The original plan for the gig was a group comprising of myself on the Chapman Stick guitar with bass, percussion and an alto sax sitting in for several tunes. Then the sax player had to drop out. Then our percussionist. Then the Parks Dept. denied our Sound Device permit which rendered the use of the Stick guitar impossible. So now we will be playing as The New Jazz Spasms: The Acoustic Guitar Duet Edition. Playing as an acoustic guitar duet is a format that I imagine to be familiar to most guitarists. I’ve spent many an hour jamming on acoustic guitars with my best friend. There is a definite sense of coming full circle since my duet partner for the gig is the son of that best friend.

So if  by some chance you’re in the vicinity of Stuyvesant Square in Manhattan at Second Avenue and 17th Street (Dvorak Place), the Acoustic Guitar Duet Edition of The New Jazz Spasms will be playing from 6 to 7 PM. Hope it doesn’t get rain out.

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Posted in Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

Between Miles and Mahavishnu: John McLaughlin’s “Devotion”

John McLaughlin, guitarist extraordinaire, came to New York in 1969 at the behest of drummer Tony Williams to join his new group. He immediately found himself playing a record date with Williams’ former employer, Miles Davis on what was to be the seminal record, In A Silent Way.  He went on to play on a series of Miles records including the epic Bitches Brew. Between the Miles Davis recordings and the live reputation that Tony Williams’ group Lifetime was generating (that unfortunately was never captured on record), McLaughlin was making a name for himself as a guitarist to watch on the New York City scene. In 1970, while a member of Lifetime, McLaughlin signed a two record deal with producer Alan Douglas for $2,000 (ouch!). The first of these two records was Devotion, a record that I consider a overlooked landmark album and a personal favorite of mine.

Given McLaughlin’s jazz pedigree and his subsequent groundbreaking work with The Mahavishnu Orchestra, this record would be considered by most to be jazz-fusion but Devotion is McLaughlin’s “acid rock” record. Someone even once described it as jazz-grunge, a term I find apt. Backed by organist Larry Young, bassist Billy Rich and drummer Buddy Miles, the record definitely has a psychedelic vibe with a muddy, reverb heavy mix that won’t win any sound engineering awards. The music also has a messy looseness that would stand in contrast to the cleaner, more tightly constructed sound of The Mahavishnu Orchestra. But it’s that looseness that I find to be a good part of it’s appeal. Playing with rock guitar toys like fuzzboxes and wah-wah pedals, McLaughlin’s playing is less technically precise that his later work but is still on fire. The rhythm section is rock solid and fellow Lifetime bandmate Larry Young on Hammond B-3 organ plays bluesy psychedelic chord clusters that adds atmosphere and provide sonic contrast to McLaughlin. Also of note to fans of McLaughlin’s Mahavishnu Orchestra is the appearance of several melodies that show up on later Mahavishnu records.

Devotion starts off with the title track. The song opens up with an ominous riff played by the guitar and bass in unison before another cool guitar riff enters on top. The tune then morphs into a two chord vamp with McLaughlin overdubbing two intertwining improvisations that weave in and out  with each other before segueing into Larry Young’s beautiful, other worldly organ solo. Also check out Billy Rich’s bass playing which is great throughout the whole record.

John McLaughlin – Devotion

The next two songs are the most riff-oriented. Dragon Song features McLaughlin tearing it up with wah-wah infused soloing over a heavy and hypnotic bass riff for much of the song. There is a definite Hendrix vibe to this which is not surprising since McLaughlin, Young and Buddy Miles had all played with Hendrix around this time.

John McLaughlin – Dragon Song

Marbles starts with 50’s sci-fi movie sounds which then give way to Buddy Miles playing a heavily echoed tribal rhythm. That sets up an absolutely killer riff which the group locks into, providing a groove for McLaughlin to solo over which he does like nobody’s business.

John McLaughlin – Marbles

To this day, McLaughlin is angry about the way former Hendrix producer Alan Douglas mixed this record and it is the one major downside to this album. There are numerous instances where I find McLaughlin’s solos are too buried in the mix and the use of post production tricks like reverb and phase shifting to be a little too much. Apparently, Douglas also spliced bits of music together here and there that were not supposed to be connected. Despite these flaws, this album is an over looked gem of early jazz fusion guitar.

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Posted in Improvisation, Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

Follow Your Bliss – Guitar Shredding Edition: Santana/McLaughlin’s Love Devotion Surrender

A previous post discussed the work of Alice Coltrane, 2nd wife to jazz legend John Coltrane, as an  example of a specific strain of jazz in the late sixties/ early seventies that has been referred to as Spiritual Jazz. The music was often marked by the inclusion of some approximation of ethnic music (usually Indian and/or African) as well as aspects on non Judaeo Christian spirituality.

The root of the Spiritual Jazz genre could be traced back to John Coltrane and in particular, his landmark album, A Love Supreme. The mantle of John Coltrane’s work was subsequently taken up by others such as Alice Coltrane and Pharoah Sanders. The guitarists who most prominently heard the call were John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana and in particular with their collaborative album, Love Devotion Surrender.

Santana’s music was transitioning from rock to fusion. and had been a fan of McLaughlin.  McLaughlin subsequently introduced Santana to Sri Chinmoy, his Indian spiritual master who taught meditation in the West after moving to New York City in 1964. The album was a spiritual tribute to Sri Chinmoy and a musical one to John Coltrane.

Despite the trappings of spiritual inner peace (what with the the pictures and essay by Sri Chinmoy), the music (aside from the two short acoustic pieces) is far from meditative. This here is some serious guitar shredding in the name of the Lord (hallelujah!!!). Santana is panned to the left channel and McLaughlin to the right and to hear these guitar masters go at it is a thing of beauty. Their styles are different yet complementary in what are essentially extended guitar jams.

The album opened up with two Coltrane tunes. The first, titled A Love Supreme, is actually the the Coltrane composition “Acknowledgement” from Coltrane’s 1964 landmark album A Love Supreme (shout out to the music wonks in the house!). Featuring the same bass motif line as the Coltrane version, the melody is played by the great Larry Young on organ and is followed by some fiery exchanges between McLaughlin and Santana (again, McLaughlin on the right, Santana on the left), a musical arrangement device that McLaughlin had used with his band, The Mahavishnu Orchestra. Unfortunately, as on the original Coltrane version, they end with a chant of “a love supreme”. I want to be respectful of an artist’s spiritual beliefs but from a musical perspective, I find it f**king annoying.

Santana & McLaughlin – Love Devotion Surrender – A Love Supreme



The record continues with the classic Coltrane ballad Naima. Played as a quite acoustic guitar duet, it hearkens back to an earlier McLaughlin record, My Goals Beyond, which featured an album side of acoustic guitar duets (with McLaughlin overdubbing himself). It makes you wish the two of them had recorded more material like this.

Santana & McLaughlin – Love Devotion Surrender Naima

 

The record highlight (IMHO) is their version based of the traditional gospel song “Let Us Go Into The House Of The Lord”. The song had been previously recorded by Coltrane collaborator Pharoah Sanders and their take on it is heavily based on the Sanders’ version. After a slow intro, the song goes into a two chord latin groove vamp  that would not be out of place on any number of Santana songs before returning to the slow intro section.

Santana & McLaughlin – Love Devotion Surrender – Let Us Go Into The House Of The Lord

 

The secret weapon of the record is the organist Larry Young, who provides the color and harmonic link between McLaughlin and Santana. Young had worked previously with McLaughlin, first in the landmark fusion band, Tony Williams’ Lifetime, and then on the greatly unappreciated John McLaughlin record, Devotion (definitely the subject of a future post).

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Posted in Improvisation, Jam Band, Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

The Universe Is Messing With Our Heads: Prince (1958-2016)

What is going on here? It seems like the plot of a bad Austin Powers movie (isn’t that redundant?) where some sinister force is killing off all rock stars of a certain generation, leaving the world to the current, younger, more insipid celebrities. Given that thought, maybe we should be looking into possible involvement of the Kardashians.

Joking aside, this one really sucks!

While I have little doubt that Prince’s artistry will be parsed to the nth degree of infinity (?), I want to focus on the the relationship between Prince and Miles Davis.

First off, it was a mutual admiration society. Davis described Prince as a synthesis of James Brown, Marvin Gaye, Jimi Hendrix and compared him people like Sly Stone, Little Richard and Duke Ellington. They both recognized in each other similar traits: the need to go against the grain and to peruse their artistic vision without compromise.

Miles Davis’s 1986 album Tutu was originally intended to feature a Miles/Prince collaboration but Prince withdrew the song, apparently unhappy with the results (for a detailed account of what happened as well as other details about their relationship to each other, click the link http://thelastmiles.com/interviews-alan-leeds.php for a great interview with Alan Leeds who worked with Prince from 1983 to 1992 as tour manager and later, head of Paisley Park Studios).

Listening to Miles’s late 80’s/early 90’s output, it’s apparent that Miles was listening to what Prince was doing. And when Davis played live, notably between 1987 to until he died in 1991, Prince’s Movie Star and Penetration were included in his setlist. The video below is of Miles playing Penetration in Paris, 1991 in what was Miles’s last European concert.

Miles Davis – Paris July 10, 1991 – Penetration

Next we have an audio clip of the only time Prince and Miles actually played together live. It’s from a 1987 New Year’s Eve benefit concert at Paisley Park in which Miles comes out during the encore. The extended encore starts with the Prince tune “It’s Gonna Be A Beautiful Night” and then that proceeds to touch on songs like Housequake, Chain Of Fools, Take The A Train and Cold Sweat (with Prince doing some serious channeling of James Brown) but not before Miles drops in to solo, starting at the 5:40 mark, over the band’s locomotive groove. Miles’s playing starts with him laying out some simple melodic jabs which sets up a really cool extended chromatic line at the 6:50 point. Before long, Prince and Miles are engaging in a back and forth with Prince’s scat singing mimicking Miles’s trumpet.

Prince with Miles Davis – New Year’s Eve 1987

Prince and Miles. Two geniuses (a term I do not use lightly), now gone.

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Posted in Classic Rock, Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

“Follow Your Bliss” . . : From the N.Y. Times to Jazz Harp to Alice Coltrane

It all started with a article in the N.Y. Times, reviewing the album by a young jazz harp player, Brandee Younger. Jazz harp players are not exactly what you would call a dime a dozen. The only one I was really aware of before now was Alice Coltrane (1937 – 2007) who was liberally name checked in the article.
For better or worse, Alice Coltrane will be known primarily for being the second wife of Jazz legend John Coltrane. She also played piano in his group from January, 1966 to John’s death in July, 1967. I am not a fan of later period “free jazz” Coltrane. To my taste, it’s too screechy and too solemn by half. As a result of this guilt by association, I never really bothered to check out the records she made as a leader. I was aware from seeing the occasional review that her music (which was always linked to her spiritual beliefs) was moving towards new age mediation. Again, not something that motivated me to seek out her stuff but the Times article piqued my curiosity so I began checking out the YouTube videos.

I started off with the aforementioned Ms Younger. The most interesting one was something done for NPR (is it just me or do you think it ironic to go to National Public Radio for videos) which was filmed at the Evolution Store in New York. A duet of harp and acoustic bass, nice groove (kudos to the bassist Dezron Douglas). While listening to this I found myself not listening to it as “jazz harp” but as just music. When listening to jazz (or rock or blues for that matter) that features an novel instrument, there is a tendency to fixate on the fact that it’s a strange instrument playing such a music. A test for the music is if you forget that it’s a harp playing jazz (or a flute in a rock band or pedal steel playing blues). This definitely passes the test.

Brandee Younger: NPR Music Field Recordings

Among some of Brandee Younger’s videos were her covering Alice Coltrane’s Blue Nile. Wanting to go to the source, I discovered a gem of an album, “Ptah, The El Daoud”, released in 1970. Featuring Ben Riley on drums, Ron Carter on bass, Alice Coltrane on piano and harp and a formidable double front line of saxophonists/flutists Pharaoh Sanders and Joe Henderson, this record is a great example of type of acoustic modal jazz you would hear in the early 70’s. Very mid period Coltrane sounding (which is to be expected) but with a melodic side that won’t prompt your significant other to ask if you could listen to the stuff on headphones.

Alice Coltrane – Blue Nile

For me, the absolute high point of the record is the cut below, “Turiya And Ramakrishna”. Omitting the horns and featuring Alice Coltrane on piano, this has been on my daily “must listen to” list since I heard it. This is moody, soulful, bluesy jazz piano trio playing at it’s best (IMHO). This song is perfect for the imaginary film noir soundtrack that is my life (or at least how I would direct it). So cool! 

Alice Coltrane – Turiya And Ramakrishna

 It started with an article in the Times and led to the discovery of a great jazz album from the past and one tune in particular that moves me every time I hear it. Follow your bliss.

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The Great What If . . . : A Beatles Alternate History

With the recent passing of George Martin, one’s thoughts inevitably turn to the Beatles and with it, “what if . . .” In previous posts, I have indulged in a bit of alternate history with the Grateful Dead, theorizing about albums that were never made so it’s no surprise that that others have indulged their fan fueled imagination to come up with their own Beatles related “what if’s”.

Below are links to two different blog posts that address the question of what record would The Beatles have made if they kept going a little longer. The first link is to a post on the web site Something Else! The post creates a playlist of a “Beatles” album comprised of songs from the immediate post-breakup 1970 solo albums put out by the former Fab Four. Such a intellectual exercise benefits from the ability to cherry pick the best stuff from four different records but also points out that many of these songs began during the band’s later years such as Harrison’s All Things Must Pass.  If you consider that such a record would have classics like My Sweet Lord, Maybe I’m Amazed and Working Class Hero, you would have an album that would compare favorably to Let It Be. Even the obligatory Ringo song (in this case, It Don’t Come Easy) would be a cut above tracks that served similar roles in later Beatles albums.

http://somethingelsereviews.com/2014/06/04/more-perfect-playlists-the-next-beatles-album-mccartney-plastic-ono-band-all-things-must-pass-1970/

This second link is to a post on the blog Any Major Dude With Half A Heart (I am so jealous for not coming up with that name for my blog). It puts forth a fictional double record made up of solo material written up to 1971. As a result of allowing for a second record and an extra year’s worth of material to pick from, you get the benefit of being able to include songs like Jealous Guy, Instant Karma and Too Many People. It also makes the point of imagining what these songs could have been with John’s harmonies instead of Linda’s.

http://www.halfhearteddude.com/2015/10/beatles-everest/

This final “what if” describes a 2010 “reunion” concert at Wembley Stadium. The concert it describes would have truly been one for the ages. Yet as I read it, a sense of sadness overtakes me knowing that it will never happen.

http://bloggerhythms.blogspot.com/2010/08/beatles-live-at-wembley-stadium-london.html

 

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Posted in Classic Rock, Music Appreciation and Analysis

“Here, There, Everywhere” . . : George Martin (1926 – 2016)

George Martin passed earlier this week. He was undoubtedly best known as the producer of almost all the Beatles records (the exception being Let It Be which was smothered, I mean produced, by Phil Spector). If you think about it, George Martin was indirectly one of the most influential people of the 20th century. Martin signed the Beatles to Parlophone Records in 1962.  The Beatles went on to change the relationships between popular music and high art as well as that of pop music and mainstream culture in general. The world we know today would be different if there were no Beatles and there would be no Beatles if not for George Martin.

George Martin was also essential in developing the concept of the recording studio as an instrument unto itself. When the Beatles decided to stop touring and concentrate their musical efforts on making records, they changed the way in which we thought about music. Before then, records were documents of real time events, the musical performance. But the Beatles, along with other forward looking artists like Phil Spector and Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, abandoned that model and developed a new one.  You can use the studio to manipulate the sound of the vocals, the guitars, the drums. You can use the studio to paint sound pictures that would not be possible by just recording a bunch of musicians in a room together. Simply put, these were records that could not have been made any other way and George Martin was essential to enabling the Beatles to do it. His background in classical music and familiarity with the work of avant-garde electronic composers as well as his experience producing comedy records made his particularly well suited to help the Beatles create their amazing music.

George Martin produced many other great records besides the Beatles and I would like to call your attention to a couple of them.

The Paul Winter Consort were an interesting group that mixed jazz, classical and world musics. Martin produced their fourth album, Icarus (1972). Winter said that Martin taught him “how to use the studio as a tool”, and allowed him to record the album in a relaxed atmosphere, which was different from the pressurized control in a professional studio. The result was a remarkable record that was unlike anything else you were hearing at the time. George Martin once described it as “the finest album I’ve ever made”. Very bold words from the man who was part of the creative process that made Sergent Peppers but Martin is certainly entitled to his own opinion on his own work.

Paul Winter Consort – Icarus

 

Jeff Beck was certainly no unknown quantity in 1974, having already make his mark with The Yardbirds, The Jeff Beck Groups and Beck, Bogert & Appice but I think everyone was unprepared when Beck came out with the all instrumental album Blow By Blow. The record covers a wide range of styles within the context of the instrumental guitar record and really showcases thetalents of both the artist and the producer. This is no better demonstrated than by the tune Diamond Dust, where the George Martin arranged strings work perfectly with Beck’s guitar to create a wonderfully atmospheric guitar piece.

Jeff Beck – Diamond Dust

As I was listening to these two very different records, it occurred to me how much they grew out of creative impulses that can be traced back to George Martin’s amazing groundbreaking work he did with the Beatles. He was one of those rare gifted individuals who really helped change the world.

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Bright Moments: Rahsaan Roland Kirk Live At the Keystone 1973

The very first jazz musician I ever saw live was Rahsaan Roland Kirk at the Village Vanguard. It was December 1973. I was in high school and just getting into straight ahead jazz, transitioning out of my jazz-rock phase. My brother was home from college and a friend of his was coming into New York. My brother thought it would be cool to check out some jazz with his out of town friend and asked I wanted to go. I had already seen Rahsaan on some PBS show and read articles about him in Downbeat magazine so I didn’t hesitate.

Rahsaan, besides being a brilliant tenor saxophonist, was a showman. To see him live was to witness part jazz concert, part history lesson and part  sermon.  He played multiple horns, flutes and clarinets. He would appear with his tenor sax around his neck along with two obscure saxophones, the srtritch and the manzello (similar to the alto and soprano saxophones respectively). He would often play them simultaneously but not in some gimmicky way. He could truly sound like a one man horn section.

Recorded in June, 1973 at the Keystone Korner in San Francisco, the album Bright Moments is a excellent representation of Rahsaan Roland Kirk live. Originally a double album, it shows the vast range of Rahsaan’s talents. The repertoire goes from Coltrane like modal tunes to Ellington to jazz interpretations of pop tunes to New Orleans. Kirk was displaying a stylistic eclecticism well before it became the post modernistic trend it is today. The record also displayed his astounding ability to play multiple horn simultaneously and his innovative flute playing. Add to this are some select examples of Rahsaan’s “talks” and you can really get a sense of seeing Rahsaan Roland Kirk live.


The first clip (please note that all the clips below are audio only) is the album opener and it immediately shows that Rahsaan was there to kick butts and take names. A modal tune, it showcases the aforementioned multiple horn playing. Yes, that him playing all those horns you’re hearing and it’s live. As amazing as it sounds at first, the real tour de force is the extended solo cadenza Kirk plays on his multiple horns. Amazing. Also take note of the kick ass band that Kirk assembled with Ron Burton on piano, Henry Pearson on bass, Robert Shy drums, Todd Barkin on drums and tambourine ( yes, tambourine) and Joe Texidor percussion.

Rahsaan Roland Kirk – Pedal Up

The next clip features the title cut, Bright Moments. It opens with a Rahsaan in preacher mode. It can sound a little jivey at times but it very much captures a big part of the Rahsaan live experience. The song itself is a feature for Kirk’s flute playing in which he would sing or hum though the flute while playing it. Kirk was a major influence on Jetho Tull’s Ian Anderson (who covered Rahsaan’s Serenade For A Cuckoo on Tull’s first album).

Rahsaan Roland Kirk – Bright Moments

For me, the high point of the record is an absolutely amazing version of the Rodgers & Hammerstein tune If I Loved You from the musical Carousel. This is saxophone ballad playing that so soulful that it will just rip your heart out. You can hear the audience respond as he tears into the melody. Kudos to Ron Burton who follows Kirk’s fire breathing tenor sax with a elegantly cool piano solo that is the perfect contrast to Rahsaan’s fire and brimstone. At the end you hear Rahsaan yell out, “That was mean!”. Yes, it was.

Rahsaan Roland Kirk – If I Loved You


That Rahsaan Roland Kirk guy sounds pretty impressive. Did I mention that he was blind? Amazing. In 1975, Kirk suffered a major stroke which led to partial paralysis of one side of his body. However, he continued to perform and record, modifying his instruments to enable him to play with one arm. I saw him once again at the Village Vanguard after the stroke. Needless to say, he did not display the same intensity as before but he was still playing his heart out. Unfortunately, Rahsaan died after suffering a second stroke in1977.

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Posted in Jazz, Music Appreciation and Analysis

Animusic Videos

I first saw some of the music videos produced by Animusic Studios on PBS as short filler pieces to get to the top of the hour. They would immediately put you into a fantastical world populated by other worldly Rube Goldberg-esque musical instruments (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rube_Goldberg). You would never see anyone actually play the instruments. The instruments themselves would play the instruments. I would describe the music as a kind of techno prog-rock and it works well as the soundtrack for these strange worlds.

Animusic is the creation, programmer/composer Wayne Lytle who developed the proprietary, custom-written software, called Animusic Studio, that created these videos. The software takes the MIDI file of the music and generates the animation automatically so that the animated image of the instrument is correlated to the music on a a note by note level instead of appearing to be responding to the music as a result of some non-real time process.
The first video, “Pipe Dreams” features a world where various string and percussion instruments are struck by balls fired from pipe cannons. This video was actually used in a Internet hoax in 2006 when someone sent around an email about a “fantastic machine” (that was usually the subject line) and includes an attachment of the Pipe Dreams video. Claiming to be “built as a collaborative effort between The Robert M. Trammell Music Conservatory and the Sharon Wick School of Engineering at the University of Iowa. Amazingly, 97% of the machines components came from John Deere Industries and Irrigation Equipment of Bancroft Iowa, yes farm equipment!” The University of Iowa purportedly had to take lots of phone calls – and even a few personal visits – from people wanting to see the machine in person.

“Pipe Dream” – Animusic.com

 

The second video features a nine neck guitar being played by delicate robotic hands that resemble claws.

“Resonant Chamber” – Animusic.com

 

These videos and many more are available on DVD. Go to http://www.animusic.com/online-store/index.php to order.

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