music clip of the day

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Category: saxophone

Wednesday, April 20th

More.

Henry Threadgill’s Society Situation Dance Band
Live, Germany (Hamburg), 1988

#1


#2


#3


*****

Henry Threadgill and His Very Very Circus
“Too Much Sugar for a Dime,” live, New York, 1995


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lagniappe

random sights

this morning, Oak Park, Ill.

FullSizeRender (66)

Tuesday, April 19th

MCOTD Hall of Famer—and, as of yesterday, Pulitzer Prize Winner.

Henry Threadgill’s Zooid

Live, Poland (Warsaw), 2011


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Live, New York, 2013


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Live, Washington, D.C., 2013


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lagniappe

musical thoughts

All music is classical music, you know. I don’t put up boundaries on music.

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Of course I started out in an ethnic community, with the blues and church music and jazz. But that was just one place to start. You read fiction then you start reading nonfiction! You start reading biographies and scientific accounts. It doesn’t change where you came from. It just broadens it. That’s what we do, we keep building on the foundation where we come from. You don’t lose it, you just keep building on it.

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I think we’ve gotten used to the dissonant, so it’s not even dissonant any more.

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[W]e have no control over anything but what we do. I just try to stay hopeful: I don’t want to get too pessimistic about anything.

—Henry Threadgill, The Guardian, 4/18/16

*****

the beat goes on

2,300 posts—and counting.

Friday, April 15th

voices I miss

Von Freeman (1923-2012, MCOTD Hall of Fame), “Dig” (J. McLean), live (with Mike Allemana, guitar), Chicago, 2002


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lagniappe

reading table

Von Freeman
By John Koethe (The Swimmer)

I was a rock and roll child. I saw Elvis
Truncated by Ed Sullivan, listened to Fats Domino
Sing “Blueberry Hill” and loved “Sixteen Tons,”
Which was proto-rock and roll. I still love it,
But since you can’t remain a child forever,
I cast my net wider, and thanks to my Japanese
Integrated amp, saxophones wash over me each night.
It started with Paul Desmond, who aspired to sound
“Like a dry martini,” and went on to bring to life
The celebrated and the obscure alike: Spike Robinson,
Whom I heard at the Jazz Estate a few blocks away
In 1992; Frank Morgan, who had Milwaukee ties
And whom I wanted to nominate for an honorary degree,
A scam set up for local businessmen; and Coltrane
Of course, that endless aural rope that curls upon itself
And then uncoils. And it wasn’t simply saxophones: Chet
Baker’s trumpet, plangent and permanent as he fell from
Young and beautiful to wrecked and toothless; and Bill Evans,
Still perfecting “Autumn Leaves” at Top of the Gate,
While downstairs in the streets the ’60s boiled. Von Freeman
Died last week at 88. I hadn’t heard of him until he died,
And now here he is, filling up my room with “Time after Time.”
He believed in roughness, and on leaving imperfections in
So his songs wouldn’t lose their souls, which is how I think of poems.
Philip Larkin loved jazz too—a great poet, though disagreeable—
But I don’t know if many other poets on my radar do. Perhaps they
Think it’s easy, I say to myself as I put on a record of Mal Waldron’s,
To whom Billie Holiday once whispered a song along a keyboard
In the 5 Spot and Frank O’Hara and everyone there stopped breathing.

Thursday, April 14th

more

Getatchew Mekurya (1935-2016), c. 1972


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“Tezeta,” “Muziqa heywete,”

Wednesday, April 13th

passings

Getatchew Mekurya, saxophonist, March 14, 1935-April 4, 2016

Live with The Ex (music begins at 2:25), Netherlands (Nijmegen), 2011

Wednesday, April 6th

sounds of New York

Oliver Lake and the FLUX String Quartet, live, New York, 2014

Monday, April 4th

sounds of New York

Vijay Iyer Sextet,* live, New York, 2015


*****

lagniappe

art beat

Bruce Davidson (1933-), Palisades, N.J., 1958

circus004 (1)

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*VI, piano, compositions; Graham Haynes, cornet; Steve Lehman, alto saxophone; Mark Shim, tenor saxophone; Matt Brewer, bass; Marcus Gilmore, drums.

Saturday, April 2nd

American in Paris

Steve Lacy Trio, live, Paris, 1982


*****

lagniappe

musical thoughts

‘Make the drummer sound good.’

—Steve Lacy, recalling Thelonious Monk’s advice (Robin D. G. Kelly, Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original [2009]])

Saturday, March 19th

like nobody else

Cecil Taylor Unit (CT, piano, vocal, percussion; Jimmy Lyons, alto saxophone, percussion; William Parker, bass, percussion; Rashid Bakr, percussion; Andre Martinez, percussion; Brenda Bakr, vocal) with dancers (Doretha Davidson, Leon Brown, Ron McKay, Pauline Zaguhei), live, Germany (Berlin), 1983

Wednesday, March 16th

sounds of joy

Instant Composers Pool (ICP) Orchestra, “Lavoro” (S. Bergin, borrowing from “Moten Swing”), live, Amsterdam, 2013


Joyful? Yes. But sad, too. Pianist (and cofounder) Misha Mengelberg’s encroaching dementia, which has since sidelined him altogether, provides a poignant counterpoint.