Monday, August 18, 2014

REPORTS ON DISSIDENT ARTS FESTIVAL 2014: THE VIEW FROM INSIDE

 The Dissident Arts Orchestra playing a live improvised score to 'Battleship Potemkin' at the Dissident Arts Festival 2014 (photo by Andrea Wolper)

 

REPORTS ON DISSIDENT ARTS FESTIVAL 2014

 
My report on this year's DISSIDENT ARTS FESTIVAL came in the form of a group email to everyone involved. A love letter. And then a series of email replies followed. I am including some of that here to expand on my own description. One thing that is obvious to all in the room: this was one hell of a special Festival!
 
 
Dearest Dissident Compadres,

I woke up at 8:45 with a headache, a sore back and a stuffed nose. Rolled over to try to get more sleep and "L'Internationale" kept rolling through my head! And then I'm hearing "Blue Monk" like mad. Can't stop that. This was only followed by the swarm of mental pictures of the entire evening running through my mind, like a montage section of an early 30s Soviet film! This all going on as the gentleman in the upstairs apartment's television bellows out Sunday morning service. Halleluiah just don't work with Monk and dissidence. Time for a coffee and some head-clearing....

My greatest thanks goes out to each and every one of you for staging what must be the finest of the nine thus far Dissident Arts Festivals. The evening quickly moved into the dark of late-night and then Battleship Potemkin took us to about 1:30. I don't know, I stopped counting. But the overwhelming positive vibes from everyone in the room prevented any of this from feeling like it went on too long!

First off, hats off to Anthony and Mark and the other guys of El Taller for not only hosting this event but keeping everything running so smooth. Anthony I cannot find Mark's email address so please pass this on to him. His sound work was exemplary, as it always is, but in the frantic pace of trying to adjust sound for each act, run the computer for the live feed, shoot photos, all I can say is "wow". In the thick of madness, everything went so smoothly and at one point as I was sitting down next to Laurie, trying to catch my breath between acts, he was running by but stopped long enough to reach out and ask how I was doing. Anthony, too, was always available for any and everything. Gentlemen, this is a partnership I hope to keep active for many years.

And a very special thank you to Denise Iacovone, out tireless artist. She created a powerful piece in honor of the sounds, the faces, the energy before her and reflected it all back at us with such expression, such an artful eye. And did this from the stage, yet another great Fest performer. I look forward to posting a photo of this on the Dissident Arts Festival FB wall. What a thing of pride!

Now to the musicians, poets, performance artist. What can I say? Most of you showed up early and stayed for a long time, some just not leaving after their gig was over. At one point I noticed Lou Grassi still sitting in the back long after his set (as the drummer of Upsurge!) was past. Lou is an amazing drummer that I played with for a year or so every Monday night at the Stone, when Karl Berger's Improvisers Orchestra first came together. I wasn't going to pass this opportunity up, so asked him if he wanted to play drumset for the last segment, the score for "Battleship Potemkin". What a wonderful outcome! THat's the kind of night it was. But I am getting ahead of myself...

The show opened up with a beautiful set by Truth to Power! - Juan Quinones, Michael Bisio, Michael Wimberly. Juan I must ask you to please send this to Mike W - I neglected to save his address. But as the set started I was so moved by this strong, personal, radical poem that spoke of the police brutality and crimes that are so easily overlooked when they are institutionalized. Juan's blue harmonica wailed mournfully--but not complacently. These were blues to march on a picket by! And the rest of the set followed with a mélange of emotions, from gentle swaying to thick crunches of Downtown sounds. What an opener.

Chris Butters' poetry was so strong that even after that amazing trio, no one thought the room was too quiet, to static. Not possible. The first piece, all about John Coltrane (one of my own greatest musical heroes--probably all of yours too) moved into a series of others that took us along on the social justice train. Thank you Chris. Comrade.

Bernardo Palombo's set was truly neo-nueva cancion. Threading stories through song, bringing us a Spanish language version of an amazing song like Woody Guthrie's "Plan Wreck at Los Gatos". And of course shaking the house with one of the great anthems of the peace and progressive movement "Guantanamera". Bernardo, I am so glad that you chose to come out of performance retirement right about this time.

My brothers of the Red Microphone never fails to move me into contortions of new sounds I didn't think I could play---the inspiration is only rivaled by the great time we have together. With all due respect to modesty, I must say that we played one hell of a set last night. It just gets better. Every time we perform as a unit, it just gets stronger so I say, let's just keep going with this mission. We can adapt many more Leftie anthems to our sound. I have about 100 more in mind. Thank you Ras, Rocco and Phil.

Sana Shabazz' s poetry is more like the output of a story teller, a griot, than the average spoken word artist. Sana lived in Beacon NY during the same period as Laurie and I did (we were there 2005-10) and I was sure to book her to read her work several times on that stage at the Howland Cultural Center. We stayed in contact after Laurie and I got back to Brooklyn and was surprised to learn that she'd moved back to uptown Manhattan. So Sana was with us to celebrate number 9 and was also there last year for 8 and also performed with the Dissident Arts Orchestra a couple of years ago at a spot in Ditmas Park Brooklyn. My thanks Sana for your socially conscious words and beautiful spirit.

Upsurge! is another entity that brings politically radical words to the stage, albeit woven into an amazing fabric of jazz. LAst night Raymond Nat Turner and Zigi Lowenberg stood side by side with Ras Moshe, Ken Filiano and Lou Grassi to produce a set that was more akin to modern theatre than anything else. This is the kind of theatre that I would pay Broadway prices for. And we got to enjoy it as a part of this Festival. Thank you all for something so special.

 Sadhana featured the great compositions of Will Connell, a gentleman of jazz whom I have come to know and love. But to know Will is to love him. Here's a man that should have all of the attention given to other folks who came through some of the tumult of the 60s and shined in the Black Arts Movement. His work with Horace Tapscott alone should put him in the incredible history of the music, let alone his own jazz compositions that take us on a chase through 20th century classical music and back to free improv. Last night's set was exemplary. And having Vincent Chancey miss the gig, with all of his own cache, might have been a problem if Will sought to get a mere mortal to replace him. Instead he found Marshall Sealy, whom I had not met before. OMG this combo of he and Will, in tandem with the youthful rhythm section of Max Johnson and Jeremy Carlstedt, was a jewel. I have had the honor of performing with Will at one of his large ensemble sessions at Arts for Art and we are going to work together again in the winter. I am there---but glad I got to enjoy all of that from the audience last night.

Crystal Shipp's performance art digs into the soul. I first met Crystal in 2002 when I began working as a rep at District Council 1707 AFSCME. Most union reps tend to be activists and some have a certain flair that tells me that they are also artists. Usually they are writers and the flair is a kind of bookish one, more like John Reed. But Crystal walked over to say hello on my first day at that job and I made her immediately as some sort of actress. I was basically right. She has brought her performance art, poetry and paintings to many such gatherings and was a performer on an event I organized as a fundraiser for United for Peace and Justice around 2003. It was the night before that first big anti-war march that took back the street. Well for a while at least. She also was a part of this fest a couple of years ago. Thank you Crystal for doing it. Again.

Andrea Wolper and Ken Filiano. THANK YOU BOTH. Shit, they never fail to simply nail it. Married couples are expected to be in sync but watching these two create together is a treat. Ken's bass playing is a magic carpet ride---the night was dedicated to Charlie Haden and Fred Ho and Ken's presence throughout so much of it made it clear that Haden was being celebrated. Even in a room full of incredible bassists! And Andrea carries her vocal training with her wherever she goes, but so easily wraps that around avant pops, clicks and yowels, cabaret song, free jazz excursions, serious story telling and more traditional poetry too. And there's not only art in all this but also humor. New York Stories. Yeah. Keep 'em coming, Andrea. All that and she curates a series of her own, down at the Why Not? Jazz Room in the West Village that has scored so many great musicians. Matt Lavelle and I will be there in Oct.....

Harmolodic Monk is the duet of Matt and I. It has been in existence for about 14 months now after being debuted at Ras' series Music Now! at the Brecht Forum (we all continue to mourn the loss of that incredible venue and institution). We have a unique duo in pairing Matt's trumpets and alto clarinet with my vibes and percussion---constructing a bridge between Thelonious Monk and Ornette Coleman. Or something like that. We are told it works and that's about right. Jack DeSalvo, the brilliant guitarist, runs the Unseen Rain record label. He recorded us in January in his studio and the download version is available now---disc come out in a few months. We are very proud of this work and I have been loving creating so much good music with Matt. He also put me in his 12 Houses band and around this time we must be up to like 15 or 16 houses, but what the hell. The music carries it all. Muchos gracias Matt for HM and for bringing it all together last night.

The Dissident Arts Orchestra has been a part of this event for several years now, though some of the players keep changing around. Nora McCarthy-vocals, Cheryl Pyle-flute, Will Connell-flute, Rocco John Iacovone-reeds, Ras Moshe-reeds/flute, Matt Lavelle-trumpet, Gil Selinger-cello, Ken Filiano-upright bass, Laurie Towers-electric bass, Lou Grassi-drums. Such an aggregation! Nora has been on every DAO gig save for the first, and we never want her to leave. The drama added with voice--one which combines a free and trained voice, poetry and more. She was also a special guest on the Red Microphone's album--turning L'Internationale into a faraway place anthem for all time. Cheryl Pyle was a mainstay and then missed the last one but she is back. The icy, sinewy sound of her flute always reminds me of that cool theme music for 'The Open Mind' television show. Yeah. Gil Selinger, cello monster and a hell of a photographer. Before the DAO performance Gil was that guy in the cap running around shooting pics of everyone. So we have not only documentation but some very special shots as his angles are always the one we wished we took when we have a camera in hand. Great stuff and great cello playing. How many cellists have revolutionary themes off the top of their head?

My much better half Laurie Towers is such a powerful electric bassist; she brings bits of James Jamerson and Carol Kaye and a swath of colors into these gigs and so I always insist she be there. Laurie's work schedule (running two businesses of her own, stressfully but so positively and increasingly successful!) has kept her from playing as often as she once did---but there's always an electric bass chair for her ion DAO And in my life. So much gratitude, baby. And then there's Ken again. We had tandem basses as I always like to have and to include you in this line-up on the acoustic side was a treat. I should say that I walked over to Ken and whispered in his ear that during the Odessa steps scene I would call on him to play some heavy solo sections---I am sure all agree that this was the best depiction ever. And having Will join in---man. And last minute addition Lou Grassi---thank you Lou! Not only as a soloist but as an accompanist this was a bubbling brew of hip sounds.

And of course my mainstays Ras (explosive, Ayler-esque inner anguish/soft breezy and beguiling. At the damned same time. Pure art. ---that's Ras), Rocco (long-held tones that soar above it all, funky bar-room vibes, West Coast Konitz meets Eastern religion meet the West and East Villages. In style), Matt (trumpet calls to herald in the revolution, the spirit of Louis rolled into Don Cherry, barks, blasts, high-flying birds, mellow soul, ahhhhhh). What a band. What a night.

Be on the alert, all. Next year is the 10th anniversary of the Dissident Arts Festival. Anthony: if possible I would like to split this panoply of rad artists into two--a Sat night and a Sunday afternoon. This way everyone has a good audience and we don't need to run into OT. Especially when we have no funding and I cannot pay folks union rates. These folks deserve extra time to perform in and I hope to at least give them that. Let's talk as we get closer to next year, okay??

Much peace and love to everyone who made this possible. I SURE AS HELL HOPE I DIDN'T LEAVE ANYONE OUT OF THIS.....YOU all are why there is a Festival.

Keep the art burning with passion for social change.
jp
******************

 

 

ANDREA WOLPER:

Aug 17, 2014 11:43 AM




John, first, of all . . .  WHAT ARE YOU DOING UP??!   You were supposed to be sleeping in this morning. 

Next, you beat me to it: I was just about to write to thank you. Seriously. And I can't believe your mind is clear enough to have written this beautiful recap. I was so inspired last night by your vision and commitment (not to mention your organizational skills), and, now, even more so ('cause you're coherent this morning, ha!).

I'm cc'ing this to everyone, because: thank you to everyone. Damn, that was a long evening, but in the very best way -- long and strong! I'm still a bit high from the great music, words, performances, energy, love, strength, beauty.
 
Thank you so much, John, for doing this, and for inviting me to be part of it. And thank you to all the artists, Taller, and everyone involved!


Love, Andrea
******************
CHERYL PYLE:
 Aug 17, 2014 12:06 PM

thank you John , and all the musicians.

I love playing  the films - the orchestra was really  some amazing music for the film last night
and what a  great festival with amazing groups ! thank you for including me in the creativity.
I  posted a few pictures , 

 
peacelovemusic, Cheryl
***************************
NORA MCCARTHY: Aug 17, 2014 2:34 PM
First of all John, Much thanks to you for putting this amazing festival together again......and for including me, I love being a part of the DAO, there's nothing like it, and to all the great artists that contributed to the positive energy and beauty of this annual event and important musical movement. To carry off something of this magnitude is not an easy feat and I reiterate your accolades to all involved, my hat is off to you! Secondly, how did you manage to write such an extensive and eloquent recap of the evening so early in the day, that in and of itself is pretty spectacular as I'm just enjoying my first cup of coffee, (smile.)  Just want to say it was great for me to commune with my favorite people and artists last night, very inspiring, very joyous.
Looking forward to more.
Again,
THANK YOU!!!!
********************
MATT LAVELLE: Aug 17, 2014 3:32 PM

It was deep how many people stayed through it,musicians and listeners alike. Deep listening abound. A powerful night. What I felt about halfway through and wanted to say but did not was this:
 
The wall of negativity that has held back the human race, that giant massive wall of darkness, has at last have some cracks in it. One reason is the tireless and tenacious artists in the world who refuse to give up and continue to believe in what we CAN be. Last night I looked around and witnessed soldiers of the highest order testify to a truth that one day we shall all witness come to pass.

 
*************************
LOU GRASSI:  Aug 17, 2014 4:26 PM

What a night! I just couldn’t leave. So much great music and poetry. What a pleasure to see and hear so many old friends and meet, hear, and play with so many new ones.
Thanks John for the amazing job you did organizing this, and for inviting me to play with the orchestra, and for the beautiful summary of the evening. Hoping to see you all again soon! Lou

*****************************
ROCCO JOHN IACOVONE: Aug 17, 2014 11:14 PM

Friends and Fellow Creative Artists.....

Just look at all the love going around. I mean check out ALL the LOVE going around these e mails! 

Wow. It just keeps flowing and pouring out ..the same way the music, the poetry, the Perfomance art, the comments, the smiles, the feelings, the hugs, the audience,  the glances, the stories, the art work, the audience, the venue itself....just at it felt last night. 

It was a night filled with the absence of negativity! Think about that! AND in NYC. This defines what a miracle really is. I mean during the entire night, I did not feel one neg vibe nor did I feel any big egos taking the stage pounding their chests saying " hey all, look at what I do!"

Instead I felt positive vibes, I felt everyone was there to contribute to a cause... I felt support for all...artists complimenting each other on their work.... I felt I was among friends and we shared a commonality.

I felt at home.
 
Out of this comes the real thing. The real Art. And I think we all got to that last night. It's evident in the Art, spoken, played, and painted that was produced.
We have John Pietaro to thank for this. He really does a tireless job. We all know what it takes to put anything together and to put something this size together is really a tremendous feat. Thank you John!!!
And thank you to all who documented this evening. It's very important to do this. 
You know, driving Will Connell home last night, he commented that "It harkened back to the old days when things went on throught he night sometimes while everyone hung out" ...And you know he's right
Thank you all
I'm ready for the next one .....like soon. Maybe twice a year?
Peace 
Rocco
*********************
RAYMOND NAT TURNER: Aug 18, 2014 1:47 AM

THANK YOU John for having the vision & courage 9 years ago to follow your dream! CONGRATULATIONS, I hope that it looks like what you had in mind a decade ago...perhaps even bigger & better?
 
We've participated in nearly 1/2 of them.  It's always a great feeling to produce art that is not for the titillation and enrichment of the 1%, but rather the entertainment, enlightenment and uplifting  of ordinary working-class folks and other cultural workers. The current conditions in our country demand the Dissident Arts Festival's existence.
 
If you're open to it, I'm certain that there are others like myself who are willing to step forward and help shoulder some of the workload in producing the event as well as presenting/performing. I hail from the San Francisco Bay Area with several years experience in successfully producing Bay Area Jazzpoetry Festivals and Frederick Douglass Days/Alternative 4th of Julys. 
 
Respectfully,
Raymond
PS I'm hoping that one day  there will be Dissident Arts Festivals in the South, Southwest, Midwest, CA and Pacific Northwest to provide outlets for marginalized or silenced progressive and revolutionary artists and their audiences in those regions...
*********************
LAURIE TOWERS: Aug 18, 2014 5:48 AM

To all...
I have to say I have been SOOO moved by the outpouring of glowing praises and positive vibes about .saturday night , so I just want to take the last dance and give a bit of a sidebar .
About John.
The man I have been with for almost all my adult life , is just what you have come to know. Talented, thoughtful , madly intelligent and full of passion . The size of the cause bears no weight. Small or big it gets his undivided attention . He cares deeply and truly. Loud or soft and the texture never wears.
I hope he has been basking in some of the wonderful words bouncing off everyone's emails as I have . You are a truly wonderful man darling ..and of course I love you.
Heres  looking at you kid..
Cheers!
**********************************
KEN FILIANO: Aug 18, 2014 11:06 AM

hi john,
as attested to by all that everyone has written, your wide open (generous) and determined efforts are herculean! thank you for starting this wave that the rest of us followed and contributed to and made even larger .... an evening of generous expression. that's real dissidence -- offerings and actions of generosity.  thank you, john and thank you, everyone who was there - audience and performers = all are artists. -------

"....in the power of the odd and unexpected to startle the senses and surprise the mind out of their ruts of habit, to compel us into a reawakened awareness of the wonderful -- that which is full of wonder." (edward abbey, "desert solitaire"
thank you , thank you, thank you.
ken
****************************************
RAS MOSHE: Aug 18, 2014 1:25 PM

Oh YEAH!
Serious fun.
All the music/words/art was off the hook.
Peace.
Right on.
Ras
*********************************************
MY OWN RESPONSE TO EVERYONE:
I really appreciate everyone's responses to this. I meant it when I spoke of this amazing community of progressive improvisational musicians out there. And not only those performing but all of those in the audience, lending support. I am just sorry that I never got to greet a lot of the audience personally. So many out there.  I am glad I now have your ears:  I have been shouting about the need to have a serious coalition of musicians and other artists who are also activists---or in the least who have radical and/or progressive values they understand can benefit via their artform. I often look to collectives of cultural workers that I admire, such as the Composers Collective of New York (that which was founded by Charles Louis Seeger in the 1932 and included the likes of Copland and Cowell), or the Black Arts Movement and its various local components. Some of these art-activist associations were founded for a singular purpose, like the Hollywood Anti-Nazi League of the late 30s or Rock Against Racism 40-some years after. Others were intended as permanent fixtures which ended up burning out only after years of hardcore activism, such as the League of American Writers or the John Reed Club.
 
There is a new need for a creative Left coalition in this country. Some of us already have our own titular organizations for cultural work. They make an impact via specific events but aren't really organizations as there aren't actual "members". I count my own Dissident Arts in this category and also Ras' Music Now!. I am sure there are more out there, all operating independently and possibly successfully, but without the ability to really reach out and make the kind of impact WE need to make. So I will use this moment to propose once again  that we of the creative community who would dare use our "product" not necessarily as an end in itself but as a means to greater ends, found a collective we can commit to. Yes, this need be a membership organization. Yes, it needs to have regular communication and at least some kind of meetings, even if only to keep ourselves remembering that we are a "we" after all. This must be an umbrella that folds the Music Nows and the Dissident Arts and others into its whole. Not to steal the identity of those already wonderful things but to enliven them and allow their resources to feed the whole---and allow those separate organizations to finally be, after all, actual coalitions. Via the umbrella group we found.
 
This umbrella group should be named something appropriate that will allow for the various levels of activism, indeed, Leftism, each of the members subscribe to. I am a Marxist but someone else who is a liberal might be just as strong and proud and outgoing in actions. There must be room for all visions as long as they are progressive. Some may be specific to the peace cause or women's rights or labor or civil rights. Some may dedicate their lives to sustaining the planet. We must respect all of these issues and support one another's beliefs as credible areas for us to create around. And to create for.
 
I see this organization as being one that should have not-for-profit status so we can apply for grants. But being a miserable realist, I also know that it will be very tough for an out Left organization to get funding. So we will shoot for the grants but recognize our own means to have concerts such as we were all a part of last night. But, shit, we live I NYC--the greatest city in the world with the hardest-living artists in it. If we could survive Bloomberg's sanitizing and selling us out, we can be strong enough to stand as one. And create concerts and series and venues that can bear the title of this umbrella organization. We can use this to have a louder, prouder, outer voice to become a force within and beyond the rest of the activist community. That activist community has been splintered since at least the late 60s and so its artists have been just as splintered. No more---if we don't want it to be. At least not for the radicals and progressives of NYC. We can become that unified creative voice, that arts arm of activism. And--no---this need not be the only commitment. I won't stop playing improvisational music which is simply abstract or dedicated to this composer or that. This kind of activism and belief hasn't dimmed my practice time or learning standard. But if there is also a strong collective of cultural workers, particularly those who speak the language of new music and free jazz---an art as radical as our politics as I like to say---we can make music which cuts to the core. That which emanates from the stage will be visceral: our message about equality and social change will be visceral.
 
We can do this. We really can. Imagine how strong this or similar festivals of sound would be then. We can do this, sisters and brothers.
 
peace,
jp

The Red Microphone performing at this year's Dissident Arts Festival. Photo by Vi An Diep

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 

 
 
 
 
 



Sunday, August 3, 2014

The Who, What & Where of DISSIDENT ARTS FESTIVAL 2014

The dog days of August haven't begun to heat up here in NYC yet---just wait'll the 16th! In two weeks the NINTH ANNUAL DISSIDENT ARTS FESTIVAL will boil over on the Upper West Side of Manhattan: this year we partner with El Taller Latino Americano as that wonderful cultural/activist organization and performance space celebrates its 35th year. All of the details are below but suffice to say that we have an outstanding list of performers including headliner "Sadhana", the quartet of multi-reedist WILL CONNELL and French Horn phenom VINCENT CHANCEY. The band will present free improvisation as well as scores by the leaders (a Lefty note: Will has an amazing radical pedigree due to associations with Horace Tapscott, David Murray and the Black Arts Movement). See the full schedule below: it all happens on Saturday Aug 16 from 6PM till 11:30PM. The closing act will be the hand-selected improvisers of The Dissident Arts Orchestra playing a live score to the silent, revolutionary classic film  'BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN'. In between will be a plethora of NYC musicians, poets, and performance artists who recognize the need to embrace politics as revolutionary as their creativity.
DISSIDENT ARTS:



Saturday, August 16th, 2014 - 6PM - 11:30 PM

El Taller Latino Americano

DISSIDENT ARTS FESTIVAL 2014! 

2710 Broadway at 104th Street
New York New York 10025
212-665-9460
Price: $15.
New York, NY : The 9th annual Dissident Arts Festival, a celebration of revolutionary Free Jazz, New Music, World Sounds and radical Poetry, Performance Art and Film, moves uptown to the celebrated cultural space El Taller Latino Americano as it celebrates its 35th anniversary .
THIS YEAR’S FESTIVAL IS DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF
CHARLIE HADEN AND FRED HO
 
The Dissident Arts Festival serves as a showcase of radical arts commemorating the rich heritage of movement culture. The 2014 edition encompasses a tapestry of liberation jazz and new sounds including Festival headliner WILL CONNELL and VINCENT CHANCEY’S SADHANA Quartet, THE ANDREA WOLPER/KEN FILIANO DUO, THE RED MICROPHON E, BERNARDO PALOMBO, TRUTH TO POWER!, HARMOLODIC MONK, UPSURGE!, performance artist CRYSTAL SHIPP, poets SANA SHABAZZ and CHRIS BUTTERS, and Festival house band, THE DISSIDENT ARTS ORCHESTRA, performing an improvised score to “BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN” (Sergei Eisenstein, 1926).
 
The Dissident Arts Festival 2014 is produced by Dissident Arts and El Taller. Curator/host: John Pietaro.
 
DATE : Saturday August 16, 6pm – 11:30pm
SITE : El Taller Latino Americano 2710 Broadway at 104th Street, New York NY,  212-665-9460
ADMISSION: $15.00
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: www.DissidentArts.com
 
FESTIVAL SCHEDULE:
6:00-6:30 TRUTH TO POWER! (Juan Quinonez-guitar, Michael Bisio-bass, Michael Wimberly-drumset)
6:30-6:40  CHRIS BUTTERS (poetry)
6:45 – 7:15 BERNARDO PALOMBO (Bernard Palombo-vocals/guitar, others TBA)
7:20-7:50 THE RED MICROPHONE (John Pietaro-vibraphone/percussion, Ras Moshe- reeds/flute, Rocco John Iacovone-reeds, Philip Sirois-bass)
7:50-8:00 SANA SHABAZZ (Sana Shabazz-poetry, Laurie Towers- electric bass)
8:00-8:30 UPSURGE! (Raymond Nat Turner-poetry, Ras Moshe-reeds/flute, Ken Filiano-bass)
8:35-9:05 SADHANA (Will Connell-reeds/flute, Vincent Chancey-French horn, Max Johnson-bass, Jeremy Carlstedt-drumset)
9:05-9:20  CRYSTAL SHIPP (performance art)
9:20-9:50 ANDREA WOLPER/KEN FILIANO DUO (Andrea Wolper-vocals, Ken Filiano-bass)
9:50-10:20 HARMOLODIC MONK (Matt Lavelle-trumpet/alto clarinet, John Pietaro-vibraphone/percussion)
10:25-11:30 THE DISSIDENT ARTS ORCHESTRA/“Battleship Potemkin” (John Pietaro-vibraphone/percussion/conduction, Nora McCarthy-vocals, Cheryl Pyle-flute, Rocco John Iacovone-reeds, Ras Moshe-reeds/flute, Matt Lavelle-trumpet, Gil Selinger-cello, Ken Filiano-upright bass, Laurie Towers-electric bass, others TBA)
 
HISTORY:
The Dissident Arts Festival began life in 2006 in Beacon NY, where it remained for the first four years before moving to NYC in 2010. The Festival’s primary goal was the establishment of an annual showcase of radical protest music, poetry and performance art--perhaps the only such annual fest in the nation. The concept of an art as daring and bold as the participants’ world views soon shaped the Festival’s philosophy and the focus on liberation through free improvisation and post-modern sounds commanded the stage.  Increasingly the Dissident Arts Festival has presented the New Music and Free Jazz statements it remains embedded in now, along with similarly outspoken arts of other disciplines. Over the years, performers and speakers included downtown jazz idol Roy Campbell, folk legend Pete Seeger, celebrated raconteur Malachy McCourt, world jazz icon Karl Berger, latter day Beat poet Steve Dalachinsky, spoken word artist Louis Reyes Rivera, political activist/satirist Randy Credico, free music mainstay Ras Moshe, international poet Erika Dagnino, noted filmmaker Kevin Keating as well as revolutionary hip-hop and rock artists, balladeers and many more. Festival house band the Dissident Arts Orchestra performs live, improvised scores to silent film classics. The Festival has also showcased sessions of free improv, militant poetry, punk-jazz, contemporary composition and tributes to Bertolt Brecht, Paul Robeson, Woody Guthrie, and Phil Ochs along the way. We have also screened relevant films including 'Salt of the Earth', 'Giuliani Time', ‘Cultures of Resistance’, ‘Battleship Potemkin’ and ‘Metropolis’. The Dissident Arts Festival has offered voice to labor legend Henry Foner, progressive political candidates of independent parties, IWW organizers, and social justice organizations such as Occupy Musicians and Local 802 AFM’s Justice for Jazz Artists. Now, in the midst of right-wing fear-mongering and teabag hysteria, radical artists continue to speak out for social change—and creative liberation!

Saturday, July 26, 2014

The Sounds of Liberation: Modernists, Dissidents and the Music

I was very pleased when, several weeks ago, I was contacted by "The New York City Jazz Record" and asked to write a piece for the paper's Megaphone column. I had submitted several record reviews to the editor over the past couple of years but not a one ever ever saw publication; I assumed that my writings would not end up in this, the one music periodical I religiously read each month. However, when I got word that the proposed writer of the August column had fallen through and that the issue was soon to go to print, I was happy to comply. From the top I knew I had to submit the kind of piece I always wanted to write in such a paper: one which sought out the revolutionary heart in this music.

The death of Charlie Haden occurred shortly before my invite from "The Jazz Record". The news was heavy for many of us in this community, it seemed to hang in the air like a pall. As WKCR-FM played non-stop Haden in celebration of his life, there was a beleaguered sadness in the listeners. I was inspired to write and considered crafting an obit of this great musician and activist, but knew immediately that many others were already busy at this task. Still, the idea stayed with me and so when I got the call from the paper's editor to submit a piece, I knew that it had to speak of Charlie Haden, not simply as an individual, a "jazz great", but as a symbol of liberation in music. As music. Haden's legacy is around me each day, but one doesn't have to look far to recognize that he was in the tradition of many before him. Inherent in this music is the blood spilled in the Middle Passage and on the streets of Birmingham---and most recently in Staten Island at the hands of the NYPD. The music contains  the call of unity and pride and beauty. It holds the history of endless uprisings, swathed in the blues, free improvisation and through-composed music too. It is of the streets, the clubs, the road, the galleries, the concert halls and the universities. Since the 20th century--at least--the musician has been armed with musical-instrument-as-weapon, and at times a rolled fist as well...


 
The Sounds of Liberation: Modernists, Dissidents and the Music
By John Pietaro

The recent loss of Charlie Haden, a figure at once revolutionary as an artist and as a cultural worker, has rekindled fond recollections of the Liberation Music Orchestra. The LMO united radically progressive forces in music, celebrating revolutions past as it sought to inspire the populace toward profound change. Haden organized this ensemble as not only a vehicle of performance but a living example of community: its ranks were an array of peoples and its co-founder was Carla Bley; this in a time when people of color and women were daily fighting for social justice. The band’s repertoire included daring, improvisational arrangements of songs that held a visceral importance to earlier generations of revolutionaries. And while Spanish Civil War ballads and Hanns Eisler’s “Song of the United Front” acted as educational metaphors, other titles like his own “Song for Che” spoke of struggle more immediately in our midst. Charlie Haden viewed this music called jazz as “rebellion”. The LMO’s music was as radical as its politics.

Still, the causes go on and activist music remains a necessity. Art cannot help but be political--and art at its most fearless was always a Left-wing thing. The conscience of the revolutionary artist, the cultural worker, engages in actions within creativity. We see evidence of this in historic uprisings: the Industrial Workers of the World had songwriters, poets and painters as organizers and some, like Joe Hill, are renowned for their work and sacrifice. The Socialist Party counted such literary giants as Jack London and Carl Sandburg in its ranks. And the Communist Party maintained an amazing list of artists including Paul Robeson, Woody Guthrie, John Reed, Langston Hughes, Rose Pastor Stokes, Richard Wright, Isadora Duncan, Pete Seeger, Aaron Copland and countless others, many of whom became blacklisted for their convictions. And beyond this, when artists pushed back against the conservative reins of academia, when the need for an avant garde to fight the confines of structure and tonality and verse arose, the political Left nurtured it. Modernism was the voice of a new age---an age of daring, change, awareness. Revolution.

And so Charlie Haden’s sentiment that jazz is rebellion music: you might ask yourself how it could not be. Here’s an artform that was born of a people taken forcefully from their homeland, stripped of name and language, and sold into bondage. Families were separated, children and women victimized and men were forced into brutal submission or braved death. The white capitalist structure attempted to disappear the Africans’ sense of self and culture. And yet, early jazz, collective improvisation over marches and blues and shouts, rose from the ordeal and thrived. A testament of the strength of an oppressed nation. The music that developed in and around New Orleans was in itself fight-back in light of the atrocities that went on after Reconstruction. Especially in the Deep South.  

In the Modern age jazz grew from the visions of Louis Armstrong into the brilliance of Duke Ellington and it became a popular music and a wildly commercial industry. For some. As Paul Whiteman was unjustly crowned ‘King of Jazz’, radio broadcasted a sanitized vision of the blood and toil that begat the music. But the actual artform grew in spite of this racist aberration. And as it did, Billie Holiday sang “Strange Fruit”, a song composed by a sympathetic white communist, to a hushed crowd at Café Society. Ellington’s “Black, Brown and Beige” rocked concert halls. The Harlem Renaissance changed the world. Be-bop took it back.

The music soared on the wings of improvisation and advanced forms as the struggles against lynching and for Civil Rights morphed into Black Liberation: ‘Freedom Now Suite’, “Alabama”, “Fables of Faupus”, “Malcolm, Malcolm Semper Malcolm”, “Attica Blues”. Indeed, a Free Jazz. The movement required a music that reflected the intensity of the times.  A New Thing.  Liberation of sound and mind along with the People. The avant garde enraptured. Though the independence of the African American artist was central to this boldest of protest musics, it often included and celebrated all cultures—like the LMO.

This striving for a music of liberation in every sense of the word continues. This writer’s musical performances consistently feature socio-political content and there is an active circle here in NYC of like-minded others. Some of the most outspoken will gather on August 16 for the ninth annual Dissident Arts Festival. The revolution may not be televised but strains of it can be heard in the heat of this summer.
-THIS PIECE WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN "THE NEW YORK CITY JAZZ RECORD", AUGUST, 2014

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Another Year, Another DISSIDENT ARTS FESTIVAL: DAF Uptown


THE DISSIDENT ARTS FESTIVAL 2014
 
 
 
In its nine year history, the Dissident Arts Festival has demonstrated a strong creative growth and has also made significant statements about a variety of socio-political issues. For a concise history on the Fest's development, see the lower section of the press release which follows this brief essay. But suffice to say that this annual event--initially a forum for cultural workers to speak out against the Bush Administration--has thrived through changes of region and venue: from the Howland Cultural Center up in Beacon NY to the Brecht Forum in Greenwich Village and now to El Taller on the Upper West Side. The loss of the Brecht Forum, a radical political and arts center downtown since the 1970s, hit the entire community very hard and it left me frantically trying to figure out which venue would be the best to continue this work in. While playing one of many gigs with Karl Berger's Improvisers Orchestra at El Taller it hit me that this space shared the Brecht Forum's commitment to the Left as well as the arts and did serious community work too--there could be no other choice.
 
This year's Dissident Arts Festival takes us uptown to El Taller during that space's 35th anniversary. The music will continue to be cutting edge free jazz, new music, radical song, protest poetry and a very outspoken kind of performance art too. Our headliner will be a powerhouse quartet co-led by multi-reedist Will Connell and French horn player Vincent Chancey: Will's history includes years of close work with the legendary Horace Tapscott. He was active with various components of the Black Arts Movement on the West Coast and has shared the stage with countless masters of this forward-looking improvisational music. Will was also the music copyist for the premiere of Ornette Coleman's 'Skies of America'. Vincent is internationally renowned as the leading French horn player in all of jazz and has performed with some of the most important exponents of contemporary music. Their quartet is rounded out by a monster rhythm section of Max Johnson and Jeremy Carlstedt, two young lions that have proven their importance in this sphere and who have yet amazing careers ahead of them.
 
Also on hand will be El Taller's founder and artistic director, Bernardo Palombo, a celebrated writer and performer of neo-Nueva Cancion music. We are thrilled to pull Bernardo out of semi-retirement to play for the public again! Other acts on the bill is vocalist Andrea Wolper and bassist Ken Filiano in duet (this pair needs NO introduction to creative music audiences) and experimental guitarist and activist Juan Quinonez' trio Truth to Power! (with bassist Michael Bisio), socio-political jazz poet Raymond Nat Turner's ensemble Upsurge! (featuring reeds heavy Ras Moshe and bassist Ken Filiano). I am excited to not only present my liberation jazz quartet The Red Microphone but also my duet with trumpeter/alto clarinetist Matt Lavelle, Harmolodic Monk. HM will be using our performance spot to celebrate the official release of our debut recording, "Harmolodic Monk" (Unseen Rain Records, 2014). Also, the Festival will welcome rad performance artist Crystal Shipp back to our ranks and poet Sana Shabazz; the latter will be accompanied by my much better half Laurie Towers on electric bass :) And poet and union activist Chris Butters joins the list of Festival performers for the first time.
 
As we have done for the past couple of years, the event will close off with a screening of a revolutionary silent film and its live improvised score will be provided by Festival house band, the Dissident Arts Orchestra. This year, like last, we present Sergei Eisenstein's 1926 masterpiece 'Battleship Potemkin'. As the Dissident Arts Festival is much more tan an amalgam of its parts---it is in itself a concerted statement about social justice, we hope to make this a real community event. Come to NYC's beautiful Upper West Side for a great later afternoon meal, an early evening stroll and then at 6PM head up the stairs to El Taller Latino Americano to engage in a 51/2 hour immersion into revolutionary cultural work!
 
All details follow.....
 
peace,
john

New York, NY: The 9th annual Dissident Arts Festival, a celebration of revolutionary Free Jazz, New Music, World Sounds and radical Poetry, Performance Art and Film, moves uptown to the celebrated cultural space El Taller Latino Americano as it celebrates its 35th anniversary.

The Dissident Arts Festival serves as a showcase of radical arts commemorating the rich heritage of movement culture. The 2014 edition encompasses a tapestry of liberation jazz and new sounds including Festival headliner WILL CONNELL and VINCENT CHANCEY’S SADHANA Quartet, THE ANDREA WOLPER PROJECT, THE RED MICROPHONE, BERNARDO PALOMBO, TRUTH TO POWER!, HARMOLODIC MONK (celebrating the release of their debut recording), UPSURGE!, performance artist CRYSTAL SHIPP, poets SANA SHABAZZ and CHRIS BUTTERS, and Festival house band, THE DISSIDENT ARTS ORCHESTRA, performing an improvised score to “BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN” (Sergei Eisenstein, 1926)

The Dissident Arts Festival 2014 is produced by Dissident Arts and El Taller.            
Curator/host: John Pietaro.

 DATE: Saturday August 16, 6pm – 11:30pm
SITE: El Taller Latino Americano 2710 Broadway at 104th Street, New York NY,  212-665-9460
ADMISSION: $15.00
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: www.DissidentArts.com
FESTIVAL SCHEDULE:
6:00-6:30 TRUTH TO POWER! (Juan Quinonez-guitar, Michael Bisio-bass, others TBA)
6:30-6:40  CHRIS BUTTERS (poetry)
6:45 – 7:15 BERNARDO PALOMBO (Bernard Palombo-vocals/guitar, others TBA)
7:20-7:50 THE RED MICROPHONE (John Pietaro-vibraphone/percussion, Ras Moshe- reeds/flute, Rocco John Iacovone-reeds, Philip Sirois-bass)
7:50-8:00 SANA SHABAZZ (Sana Shabazz-poetry, Laurie Towers- electric bass)
8:00-8:30 UPSURGE! (Raymond Nat Turner-poetry, Ras Moshe-reeds/flute, Ken Filiano-bass)
8:35-9:05 SADHANA (Will Connell-reeds/flute, Vincent Chancey-French horn, Max Johnson-bass, Jeremy Carlstedt-drumset)
9:05-9:20  CRYSTAL SHIPP (performance art)
9:20-9:50 ANDREA WOLPER PROJECT (Andrea Wolper-vocals, Ken Filiano-bass)
9:50-10:20 HARMOLODIC MONK (Matt Lavelle-trumpet/alto clarinet, John Pietaro-vibraphone/percussion)
10:25-11:30 THE DISSIDENT ARTS ORCHESTRA/“Battleship Potemkin” (John Pietaro-vibraphone/percussion/conduction, Nora McCarthy-vocals, Cheryl Pyle-flute, Rocco John Iacovone-reeds, Ras Moshe-reeds/flute, Matt Lavelle-trumpet, Gil Selinger-cello, Ken Filiano-upright bass, Laurie Towers-electric bass, others TBA)
HISTORY:
The Dissident Arts Festival began life in 2006 in Beacon NY, where it remained for the first four years before moving to NYC in 2010. The Festival’s primary goal was the establishment of an annual showcase of radical protest music, poetry and performance art--perhaps the only such annual fest in the nation. The concept of an art as daring and bold as the participants’ world views soon shaped the Festival’s philosophy and the focus on liberation through free improvisation and post-modern sounds commanded the stage.  Increasingly the Dissident Arts Festival has presented the New Music and Free Jazz statements it remains embedded in now, along with similarly outspoken arts of other disciplines. Over the years, performers and speakers included downtown jazz idol Roy Campbell, folk legend Pete Seeger, celebrated raconteur Malachy McCourt, world jazz icon Karl Berger, latter day Beat poet Steve Dalachinsky, spoken word artist Louis Reyes Rivera, political activist/satirist Randy Credico, free music mainstay Ras Moshe, international poet Erika Dagnino, noted filmmaker Kevin Keating as well as revolutionary hip-hop and rock artists, balladeers and many more. Festival house band the Dissident Arts Orchestra performs live, improvised scores to silent film classics. The Festival has also showcased sessions of free improv, militant poetry, punk-jazz, contemporary composition and tributes to Bertolt Brecht, Paul Robeson, Woody Guthrie, and Phil Ochs along the way. We have also screened relevant films including 'Salt of the Earth', 'Giuliani Time', ‘Cultures of Resistance’, ‘Battleship Potemkin’ and ‘Metropolis’. The Dissident Arts Festival has offered voice to labor legend Henry Foner, progressive political candidates of independent parties, IWW organizers, and social justice organizations such as Occupy Musicians and Local 802 AFM’s Justice for Jazz Artists. Now, in the midst of right-wing fear-mongering and teabag hysteria, radical artists continue to speak out for social change—and creative liberation!

Saturday, May 31, 2014

"New York Eye & Ear Control" at 50---Looking Back and Forward in One Fell Swoop

"New York Eye & Ear Control" at 50:
Looking Back and Forward in One Fell Swoop


by John Pietaro

I type this piece as a rage of thoughts race through me; this is no time to be writing and so this is all the more reason I feel the need to do so. Tomorrow, June 1, is the concert I organized  in honor of a very special album of the Free Jazz canon. Here comes the hit; all of the PR has been done and every step is nuanced as far as I can see. Some 24 hours from now I will know for certain, but my manic flow is carrying me to that point. This is the same  surge of intensity I have been experiencing for a couple of days now. The energy level is cool but the headache is far from appreciated.

Over these past few months in which I was anticipating the golden anniversary the Albert Ayler-led earth-shaking album "New York Eye and Ear Control", the idea for this special event came to me. I can only imagine how this music was received back in '64: I mean, the Beatles' first American singles were still dominating the charts, the Stones came along a little later, and of course the popular music that emanated from AM radios made this British Invasion sound seem, well, radical. Mainstream Jazz had progressed: the Getz/Gilberto album emerged this same year. And Broadway shows like "Hello Dolly" provided founding fathers like Louis Armstrong with hit material too. But the experimental sound that accompanied the rising sense of revolution in the early-mid 1960s, shouted through the lack of attention. '64 also gave us Dolphy's "Out To Lunch" and of course John Coltrane's classic quartet, with each turn, were kicking out the walls of what one could expect in the music. Toward year's end they would record "A Love Supreme". At this point, Ornette  had disbanded his quartet and was doubling on trumpet and violin in a bare-bones trio that never stopped searching for the next step, if indeed there was one to be found.

But the indie label ESP-Disk  invited the furthest outside artists into their studios to record statements that inspired responses ranging from fury to awe. And it was all grassroots, anticipating the DIY record movement by more than a generation. Rather than trying to keep up with the Coltranes, ESP debuted musicians that few had previously heard of---and the results stand among the most potent examples of the New Thing.  Albert Ayler's first ESP recordings offered something bold, even in a time in which so much adventure was to be had for those who bothered to seek the new music out---surely you wouldn't find the furthest out stuff on Impulse or Atlantic in the racks alongside Jack Jones  and Pearl Baily. And if those records could be elusive, the ESP-Disk titles could seem like contraband. Who could have guessed that 'Ghosts' or 'Spirits' would be on vinyl? ESP believed in Ayler and during this year of '64 brought him into record several times and released all of it. Ornette and Ayler had become friends and many were drawn to his music. The emulsion of raw jazz, country blues and an inside-out vision of early European folk song filtered through his melodies and so one was left wondering if they'd maybe heard it all before in a dream. But, no, this was simply Albert Ayler. Not so simply, he weaved these odd little songs into screaming improvisatory statement and back, allowing saxophonic field hollers of Ornette to enjoy a new persona, sitting on top of marches, quadrilles and jigs from a land that never was. In an era groaning from the rigors of forced segregation. The music was primal scream as much as it was prideful fight-back and a leap beyond all that had come before it.

In July of  1964 Albert Ayler gathered Don Cherry, John Tchicai, Roswell Rudd, Gary Peacock and Sunny Murray in a studio to record the legendary album ‘NEW YORK EYE AND EAR CONTROL’, the free score to the film of the same name by Michael Snow, creating a hallmark of the avant garde. 'Don's Dawn' offers a brief repose as the album's opener, a laid-back introduction that is no indication of what's to come. The remaining two cuts, lengthy free pieces are a sleigh ride into the furthest reaches of creativity, but a creativity in which no rule of harmony is featured. While Trane was seeking out a higher truth and Ornette was philosophizing Harmolodics, Ayler's trio plus Cherry, Tchicai and Rudd dropped bombshells into the grooves of this LP adorned with the shadowy figure of Snow's "walking woman" figure (actually the profile of a rather healthily-shaped Carla Bley, already a part of this exciting new scene). The music told us that there is no tomorrow, there is only the moment and it offered a soundtrack to the crush of NYC as much as it did the times of the musicians' lives. And the listeners'. Though the focus was on the moment at hand, the product is quite timeless. It breathed too hard to not contain enough air to last through the decades. Five decades. Its awful to consider that as these musicians went into the studio in July, they were acutely aware of not only the social changes in their midst but the loss of a guiding force; Eric Dolphy died suddenly at the end of June in this year. Perhaps the cries of the instrumental voices were laments for Dolphy--or a celebration of the  passage of the Civil Rights Act which came to be the same month as "New York Eye and Ear". Some would argue that Free Jazz is not necessarily political, not specifically revolutionary. I would counter that the music cannot help but reflect the years in which it was born and raised---the tumult about the framers led to and commented on the times. Even when the statements remain focused on the music itself, the very radicalism of any avant garde stands as defiance against a comfortable, bourgeois institutional art vogue. And this particular avant garde scared the shit out of many experimentalists in other genres. This was the real thing, not just a New Thing. Its independence and rebel yell led the way for the Downtown sound to come---and birthed the development of the many improvisers today.

So, this particular summer of 2014, the jazz concert season kicks off to an early start with a rousing tribute to this celebrated recording as it hits its golden anniversary. A half century hence, a wide swath of New York Jazz underground instrumentalists fete it with four sets of contemporary fire music. The headliners are a one-time only assemblage dubbed here as The Veterans of Free, a combo of artists who were vital parts of the scene during Free Jazz’s development and still stand now as leading figures. And the opening attraction is celebrated downtown poet Steve Dalachinsky whose mix of spoken word and improv crosses the decades. The other artists performing represent the improvisational new music sounds of the past thirty+ years heard in Manhattan and Brooklyn performance spaces right into today.


 Dissident Arts and the Firehouse Space present
A TRIBUTE TO "NEW YORK EYE AND EAR CONTROL" The 50th Anniversary of the Free Jazz Classic!
-'VETERANS OF FREE' ALL-STAR ENSEMBLE:
Daniel Carter- saxophones, trumpet. Karl Berger- vibes, piano. Warren Smith- drumkit, percussion. Will Connell- saxophone, flute, bass clarinet. Ingrid Sertso- voice. And with Ken Filiano on bass.

-STEVE DALACHINSKY:
Steve Dalachinsky- poetry. Rocco John Iacovone- alto saxophone. Plus guests.

-THE RAS MOSHE UNIT:
Ras Moshe- saxophones, flute, bells. Dave Ross- electric guitar. John Pietaro- vibes, percussion. Andrew Drury- drum set, percussion.
-MATT LAVELLE’S 12 HOUSES ORCHESTRA:
Matt Lavelle- trumpet, alto clarinet, musical direction. Anais- voice. Mary Cherney- flute, alto flute. Claire de Brunner- bassoon. Lee Odom- clarinet, soprano saxophone, bass clarinet. Charles Waters- alto saxophone, clarinet. Ras Moshe- tenor and soprano saxophones, flute. Tim Stocker- baritone saxophone. Gil Selinger-cello. Chris Forbes- piano. John Pietaro- vibraphone, percussion. Anders Nilsson- guitar. Jack DeSalvo- mandolin, banjo. Francois Grillot- bass. Reggie Sylvester- drums

Date: Sunday, June 1st 2014
Time: 3PM – 6:30PM –
Steve Dalachinsky (3PM)
Ras Moshe Unit (3:30)
The Veterans of Free (4:30)
12 Houses (5:30)
Location: The Firehouse Space   246 Frost Street, Brooklyn New York 11211
Curated by John Pietaro -  For more information please see www.DissidentArts.com

Sunday, May 11, 2014

CD Review: Dave Ross Quartet


 
CD Review by John Pietaro:
DAVE ROSS QUARTET: ‘BYE-BYE BROOKLYN, HELLO EVERYWHERE’ (Nacht Records, 2014 – www.nachtrecords.com )
Michael Monhart - Tenor Saxophone
Michael Bisio -  Bass, Vocal
Jay Rosen - Drums
Dave Ross - Guitar, Vocal

Recorded at the Blue Room,Brooklyn, NY, April 8th, 2008

Recording engineer - Robert O'Haire
Mixed by - Dave Ross at Orange Music Sound Studios, Orange, NJ
Mix engineer - James Dellatacoma
Mastered at Sound Mirror by "Magic" Mark Donahue
Produced by - Dave Ross and Robert O'Haire

Let it be said that Dave Ross is one of the most Harmolodic guitarists performing in improvisational music today. That he is not more widely known as a leader in this sphere is to every listener’s detriment. The wealth of imagery Ross conjures out of a guitar transports the instrument beyond mere orchestral pallet – here is where the truly unorthodox sits in a happy emulsion with impeccable technique. Ross’ approach to the guitar is refreshingly unique, inspired by visionary saxophonists much more than any other guitar player; he projects linear, spiraling sounds from deep within that emerge with jewels of melodies, barks, growls and motifs that are evocative of….something else. In true Harmolodic fashion, melody, counter-point, harmony and rhythm are interchangeable and excitedly feed off one another each time he puts fingers to fret board.

As a musician active in the NYC free jazz/new music scene myself---but as one who also writes about it---I would be remiss if I didn’t state here that I know Dave through mutual performance, but this in no way compels me to write in hyperbole, would that even be possible. In fact, my performances with this guitarist allow me something of a special insight into his conceptions and I look forward to the rolling sonic sky he creates as he both locks into the rest of the band’s moment, and then carefully rejects it all to bring us into new terrain. As I said, this is one of the most Harmolodic guitarists out there. Ornette would have to dig this music.

‘Bye-Bye Brooklyn, Hello Everywhere’ opens with  the halted breath of “Love at First Feel”, with the four musicians engaging in a group improvisation, dancing about one another as would a young couple in the moments leading up to intimacy. Beckoning, retreating, advancing in hot pursuit. Or was that “feel” simply about the good vibes that grew in the session itself? Either way, the interactions are true and you can tell these musicians enjoy one another’s work. There is a real sense of unity and the collective improv is a moment in time that is as gripping as it is joyous. Bell-like guitar trades the lead with whispering saxophone and the searching commentary of upright bass and drums. And then the dance picks up speed and pulsations are going off in every direction. Michael Monhart’s powerful tenor is ever-present in this four-way discussion but, for this cut, maintains more of a section-man role than that of the front of the band. A lengthy solo by Michael Bisio reveals a fluid, multi-dimensional bassist who establishes a groundwork that is as much about rhythmic drive as it is extended techniques and gorgeous melodic statements. It is far too easy to get lost in the reality Bisio brings forth. As his solo diminishes, drummer Jay Rosen takes us back to the moment with gently piercing metals and the brattle of fills on his tom-tom and snare rims. The quartet resumes its collective improvisation until Ross’ own solo section emerges. Lightning-fast runs, percussive fret assaults, bluesy wailing and atonal quests pour out of your speakers, with the bass chasing down every move until the two, engaging in call-and-response, slow to a sudden, unresolved halt.

The next cut, “All Roads Lead to Universe”, is a Ross composition which offers an imaginary landscape into a horizon somewhere far away. One sees an endless desert, a barren mountainside, with a red sun beating down on a small caravan of believers that move along determinedly over miles of the mind. Wheezing saxophone, the reed sounding as dry as the imagery this produced for me, slowly brings a melody to the forefront. By the time this somewhat Arabic piece comes into being, the saxophone is now full-bodied, perhaps even one part bar-honker in addition to the obvious world music and post-modern jazz influence. Ross’ guitar, now feeling strangely like some sort of electric sehtar, opens the pathway for Bisio’s bowed bass which, cello-like, guides the rear of the caravan beneath Rosen’s white-hot cymbal rolls.

“This is Was” kicks off with a clipped walking bass which builds into the free jazz comp of the old school shimmering rhythm section  a la Haden and Higgins, creating a swathe in which all else is built upon. The first leading voice one encounters in this brief piece, traditionally enough, is the tenor, here spewing out a blurring improv that screams out Ayler’s name while reminding us that for at least one classic album Ornette played tenor too. The inventive, dominant performance of Monhart is quite classic and yet is unafraid to look well beyond his favorite memories of the Atlantic and Impulse records in his collection. Behind him, Ross drops in a chordal structure, bouncing off of the gallop of bass and drums. The guitarist takes over in a solo which includes a tap dancing duet with snare rim-shots, and then Bisio is featured as the sounds around him slowly come apart, decrescendoing into an abrupt false ending. The piece returns in an explosion that feels like a Sun Ra orchestral climax but also recalls early King Crimson. It’s all over quickly, leaving you wanting much more. The title’s Was seems to not only comment on the past of improvisational music but the blink of the track itself.

“In the Key of D” may have been a general idea in the instructions when this piece was first presented, but the irony of the title is apparent; the work opens with a drum solo. Drummer Rosen offers a world of sounds in his frenetic but quite musical feature. Even as the other instrumentalists enter the scene, Rosen remains out front. The inventiveness is germane to the standard of the contemporary free drummer’s language. The approach is far different from the “traditional” free jazz drumming of the music’s first period, as heard in the prior piece. In this case, the showcase is of the drumming conceived by stalwarts such as Rashid Ali and Milford Graves and then developed further through percussionists like Charles Downs (Rashid Bakr), Ronald Shannon Jackson and Jamie Muir. Just as the music had to develop to a point where the elements could break the chains of their conservatory roles, so did the New Thing drummer have to develop a vision of his or her instrument. The ride cymbal is not specific to time-keeping, perhaps nothing is. And why need it be? The constantly shifting terra firma offers a natural contrapuntal voice to lead lines which have moved well beyond any work’s specific harmonic structure let alone key signature. It’s a new day and it has been, progressively, since at least 1956. The artists of the underground claimed it as the Year One in their quest for the next philosophy, but have forged on ahead steadily. Nothing can stop this progression. The full breadth of it can be heard in many pockets of this album. But in the world of Dave Ross, the full breadth can sometimes be a detailed close-up of only one or two voices of the whole.

Case in point, “So Nice 2 Be…” closes off this album with the leader and bassist sitting out, apparently enjoying the gripping tenor/drumkit duet carrying on wonderfully about them. This is a concise selection that never falls into the trappings some extended duets have, where the players’ inspiration runs out well after the listener’s interest. Here is a rapid-fire excursion that invites us along for the ride and then ends with mutual satisfaction---like our younger selves had hoped for in First Feel encounters gone by. Love is never having to say ‘you are out of tune’…

The utter modesty that would allow a leader to end an album with his own tacit speaks volumes. Even more than these darkly adventurous, magical cuts can. Dave Ross never turns down the spotlight, and once in it he is a master magician of free, yet he is just as inspired in playing behind another soloist, dropping in just the right chords, spikes of sound, languid lines—or basking in silence. But Ross BECOMES the guitar when he is in the moment, and this cannot be learned through any tutelage. You have to experience it for yourself. ‘Bye-Bye Brooklyn, Hello Everywhere’ offers at least a glimpse into that special place.

 -John Pietaro is a musician, writer and cultural organizer from Brooklyn NY. His website is www.DissidentArts.com and blog http://TheCulturalWorker.blogspot.com

 

 

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

HORACE TAPSCOTT CELEBRATED: performance review from the inside

HORACE TAPSCOTT CELEBRATED in NYC: The Jazz of Liberation Recalled and Re-lived


HORACE TAPSCOTT BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION, 4-7-14, Clemente Soto Velez Center, NYC. Part of the ensemble, left to right: Vincent Chancey, Ras Moshe, John Pietaro, Rosi Hertlein, Rob Brown, Matt Lavelle, Will Connell (photo courtesy of Arts for Art)
 
 
by John Pietaro

I am typing this as I listen to Horace Tapscott's 'The Giant Has Awakened', recorded in 1969. I am on something of a Tapscott mission, still coming down off of a wonderful gig last night where I was among the performers of an Arts for Art-produced Horace Tapscott Birthday Celebration at the LES space, Clemente Soto Velez Center. The event was led by the woefully under-recorded Will Connell, a serious veteran of the New Thing. We played several of Connell's compositions including "Inkata" which had been performed by the Tapscott aggregation in its heyday.  On Will: now here's a man who not only played in Tapscott's Pan-African People's Arkestra but was its librarian and music copyist and aided with most every facet of this ensemble. He worked closely with Tapscott--who was a close associate of Eric Dolphy and Don Cherry--absorbing not only the man's music, and his theories but his unrepentant activism. Thankfully. It was in the period when the Civil Rights Movement grew into Black Power and the identification for peoples of color to recognize their own heritage and culture was vital.

The tumult of the late 1960s shook the inner-city areas with the scent of revolution in response to eons of oppressive racism, Jim Crow politics and coldly opportunistic capitalism. For the Black community that meant taking back the streets in their own name. This was reflected in dress, stance, speech, attitude and, most importantly the arts: indie theatre and dance companies sprang up as did filmmakers, painters, poets, journalists and of course musicians. And while the music exploded in various directions with funk, reggae, and soul, jazz---itself born of African musicians forcefully transplanted into this nation's hymns, wars, brass bands and folksongs---further decentralized. The jazz musicians of the day split in multiple fragments, creating a multitude of fusions and some took the music to its next radical level. The so-called avant garde of jazz expounded upon the music's origins in collective improvisation, offering up interwoven voicings of powerful instrumentalists at once rapturous, celebratory, explosive. But it also engaged in new music practices in composition and concepts coming out of the universities; the same colleges that once openly kept African American artists out had now begun courting them as professors, following legislative change and the need for Black Studies departments to become realized. So suddenly the bold pilgrimage into sound that Ornette and Sun Ra and Trane and Dolphy and then Shepp  had forged, was now expanded further. And in a time of Black-identification into both the Black community and the culture at large, there is a need for special focus in education.

Horace Tapscott was just one of the visionary musicians who sought to create a school of sorts. Regional arts centers, all a part of the widespread Black Arts Movement, were found in many cities: most famous was Chicago's Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), but there was also the Black Arts Group (BAG) in St. Louis and of course the cultural work flourished in Harlem under the leadership of Amiri Baraka and with musical activities by Bill Dixon and Archie Shepp, among others. Yet before these cultural institutions were fully founded, Tapscott developed his own Union of God's Musicians and Artists' Ascension (UGMAA) in Los Angeles. In 1961. Wow. Amiri was still LeRoi Jones and was years away from writing Blues People. Coltrane released 'My Favorite Things' that year. On the other hand, Ornette was several albums into his career and grabbed everyone's attention with his 'Free Jazz opus, and Sun Ra was busy with multiple records and the resultant furor over this New Thing was beginning to boil again. Tapscott saw the writing on the wall and recognized the need to carefully guide this new art of liberation. His bold activism led to years of blacklisting as a touring artist: the need to stay in one place was both thrust upon him and grew from his own desire to create a base from which to have his teachings develop.

The ensemble Tapscott developed was the principal voice of all of this, the Pan-Afrikan People's Arkestra. With the inclusion of traditional African music into his compositional textures, as well as unfettered free improvisation, statements of pride and protest and larger and larger ensembles, the Arkestra allowed for the creative, spiritual growth of many in the L.A. area. Various editions of this band ran for decades and Tapscott, ever the teacher, a philosophic force for upcoming generations, stayed home to make this his mission.  But the band and Tapscott's tutelage produced noted figures in the music including Arthur Blythe. And of course Will, who has lived in New York City for many years following his tenure with Tapscott and stands as an important link in this town's heritage of revolutionary arts. Son of a violin prodigy held back from a professional career as a concert musician, Will Connell Jr is a saxophonist, bass clarinetist and flutist who wears his influences well. This writer, back in the guise of percussionist in the current 'new jazz' scene has enjoyed a few interactions with the man, talking as much as playing. I have told Will he needs to write a book for his tales of Tapscott, the US Army, years of club gigs around the country, as well as his work with David Murray, Chico Hamilton, Philly Joe Jones and a pantheon of greats would be worthwhile reading. But its hard to fit lengthy projects into life in the face of music performance and a day job too (I know this all too well).

Last night's event in honor of Horace Tapscott's birth anniversary was some 15 years after the man's passing but the revolutionary energy extended well beyond any individual's lifetime. Music of militancy cannot fade away, not as long as we struggle against any repressive force. One could easily hear and see the effects of this music on the large ensemble Will Connell had gathered for the occasion: Will conducting and on reeds and flute, Rob Brown, alto saxophone, Ras Moshe on soprano saxophone and flute, Rosi Hertlein on violin and voice, Vincent Chancey, French horn, Matt Lavelle, flugelhorn and alto clarinet, Steve Swell on trombone, Jesse Dulman, tuba, Larry Rolland on bass (and poetry), Jeremy Carlstadt, drums, while I played vibes and percussion. It was a powerful event which easily bridged the grainy pictures of 1961 to right now. And oh do we need more of this right now. This music, forged under fight-back, must again be a vehicle to awaken the sleepers, the complacent who have been fed the lies of manipulative cast system and a steady diet of 'reality' television, calories and beer. And if every radical artist begins with those immediately around him or her, we can see the concept of a revolutionary creativity grow again. To that end, Tapscott wrote just one year before he died:

"It is important that an artist living in the community recognizes that community with their art...But if you stayed in your community, lived with the people and became part of that just think how much more you got to carry, how much more power has been given to you by the community. That’s what gives you the power to do what you do as well as you do.

"Now for me, by being raised in segregated society I’m used to this cuz we all lived together, artists and all, cuz there wasn’t no place else we could live. And it really is true that I get my inspiration and strength from the people.… I still say the heart of what I do is for the people who aspire to freedom"


Michael Foster and the Queer Free Jazz Movement

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