Author

rich

August 23, 2009

underground: redux

This summer’s New Trumpet Underground had a lot of great music.
We’ll be posting highlights from each set over the next few months at our MySpace page as we also get ready for October’s “In Honor of Bobby Bradford” at The Jazz Standard.

Let’s start at the beginning.
First night, first set.
Greg Bobulinski G-Men: Greg Bobulinski (trumpet & flugelhorn), Daniel A. Weiss (organ), Tom Kirchmer (bass), Ed Balsamo (drums)
Back at the Chicken Shack



www.bagofjazz.com

All recording and photos by Scott Friedlander.

August 15, 2009

LES MAÎTRES FOUS

Nice post on this summers New Trumpet Underground at LES MAÎTRES FOUS.

Durant mon séjour à New York, j’aurai eu la chance d’assister à la dernière soirée du Festival of New Trumpet de cette année. Le FONT est fondé en 2003 par les trompettistes Roy Campbell Jr. et Dave Douglas avec pour mission la promotion des musiques et musiciens actuels privilégiant l’usage de la trompette dans une démarche créative. Outre l’organisation d’un festival annuel (dont la première édition a eu lieu au Tonic, club mythique désormais fermé, en août 2003) et de concerts ponctuels, cette plate-forme s’investit également dans la commande d’oeuvres, par exemple à Peter Evans ou à la formation de Laura Andel, Taylor Ho Bynum et Gamelan Son of Lion (un Cd à venir sur l’excellent label Creative Sources). On doit aussi au FONT le retour sur la scène new-yorkaise de l’immense Bill Dixon.

Read the rest ici

August 13, 2009

James Newton on Bobby Bradford

We’re all looking forward to Octobers celebration of Bobby Bradford at the Jazz Standard. I’ve been digging into his recordings in anticipation and Dave Douglas just posted this at Greenleaf Music Blog:

Point of Departure hosts James Newton’s appreciation of Bobby Bradford on the occasion of his 75th birthday. This is really worth a read. Newton sets Bradford’s work in the larger context, and also demonstrates how important a figure Bradford has been — both globally and on the LA scene.

New York’s Festival of New Trumpet Music will host Bobby Bradford and present concerts in his honor from October 1 – 4 at New York’s Jazz Standard. Bobby will be joined by long-time colleagues David Murray, Marty Ehrlich, Mark Dresser, Andrew Cyrille, Baikida Carroll, Benny Powell and others. He will also receive FONT’s Award of Recognition for his decades of creative accomplishment.

August 13, 2009

in honor of bobby bradford

Jazz Standard is proud to host the Seventh Annual Festival of New Trumpet Music series, “In Honor of Bobby Bradford” from October 1 through October 4, 2009.

The FONT series exposes a broad array of today’s creative trumpeters, including Bobby Bradford, who celebrates his 75th birthday this year, as well as Eddie Henderson, Baikida Carroll, Jeremy Pelt, Ambrose Akinmusire, Avishai Cohen, and David Weiss.

The Festival of New Trumpet Music, a nonprofit that encourages creative brass music, will present its second Award of Recognition to Bradford during the week’s run. As part of this celebration, Bobby Bradford will convene a Quintet and Octet of long-time associates including David Murray, Marty Ehrlich, Mark Dresser, and Andrew Cyrille.

Each series presented by FONT commissions new work from brilliant emerging trumpeter/composers. This season, award-winning trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire will compose a work honoring Bradford for his Quartet plus special guest trumpeter Avishai Cohen.

In addition, FONT board member Jeremy Pelt has convened an all-star group in honor of Bradford. The legendary trumpeter Eddie Henderson will join in a performance of original work and pieces by Bradford that will also include James Zollar on trumpet, and the rhythm section of Marc Cary, Vicente Archer, and Gerald Cleaver.

Jazz Standard is located in NYC at E. 27th Street (b/w Park and Lex)
www.jazzstandard.net/

OCT 1-4: FESTIVAL OF NEW TRUMPET MUSIC (FONT)
“IN HONOR OF BOBBY BRADFORD”

OCT 1: AMBROSE AKINMUSIRE QUARTET plus special guest Avishai Cohen
Ambrose Akinmusire – trumpet
Vijay Iyer – piano
Chris Tordini – bass
Marcus Gilmore – drums
Special Guest – Avishai Cohen
TICKETS: SET 1, 7:30
SET 2, 9:30

OCT 2: JEREMY PELT plus special guests Eddie Henderson and James Zollar
Jeremy Pelt – trumpet
Marc Cary – piano
Vicente Archer – bass
Gerald Cleaver – drums
Special Guest – David Weiss (trumpet)
Special Guest – Eddie Henderson (trumpet)
TICKETS: SET 1, 7:30
SET 2, 9:30
SET 3, 11:30

OCT 3: BOBBY BRADFORD QUINTET featuring DAVID MURRAY
Bobby Bradford – trumpet
Marty Ehrlich – alto saxophone, clarinet
Mark Dresser – bass
Andrew Cyrille – drums
Special Guest – David Murray (tenor saxophone, bass clarinet)
TICKETS: SET 1, 7:30
SET 2, 9:30
SET 3, 11:30

OCT 4: BOBBY BRADFORD OCTET featuring DAVID MURRAY
Bobby Bradford – trumpet
Marty Ehrlich – alto saxophones, clarinet
Benny Powell – trombone
Baikida Carroll – trumpet
James Weidman – piano
Mark Helias – bass
Andrew Cyrille – drums
Special Guest – David Murray (tenor saxophone, bass clarinet)
TICKETS: SET 1, 7:30
SET 2, 9:30

July 6, 2009

Underground Revisited

If you’ve been to the FONT website site recently you’ve probably noticed a few changes in the last couple of weeks. We’ve entered the blog-o-sphere and will be posting often on all things we see and hear happening in the New Trumpet World.

We’d also like to hear from you. If you have a blog, a recording, new composition, or just heard a great gig, let us know. We’ll help spread the word.

As the tapes come in from last weekends New Trumpet Underground, we’ll be posting some of the music and photos in our soon to be unveiled media portion of the site.

Here’s a sneak peak at this years FONT commission by Nadje Noordhuis for those of you that couldn’t make it. I’m looking forward to hearing it a second time.

Nadje Noordhuis’ FONT Commission is entitled “Transistor”, which celebrates the parallels of cultural diversity and musical cross-pollination in Australia and USA. The compositions will encompass a variety of styles, including Argentinean tango, energy-driven swing, European chamber jazz, tabla grooves and contemporary tone poems.

July 3, 2009

Solo Tubes : A post by Dave Douglas at Destination: out

June 30th, 2009

photo by Bruno Bollaert

We at D:O are incredibly honored to be able to present the following guest post from composer, trumpeter, blogger, label magnate, and all-around brass advocate Dave Douglas. If you like what you read and hear here, be sure to check out Dave’s own wonderful recent work. Enjoy.

* * *

It’s an unusual breed, the solo trumpet recording. Surprisingly, the music is not really for specialists (not that there are many specialists anyway). More to the point, so much of the music goes beyond specifically instrumental interests. Though it is extremely demanding physically, the challenge is really compositional.

The demands are akin to an event like the Iron Man, a 2-mile swim, 120-mile bike, 26-mile run. It requires lots of different skills, enormous reserves of stamina, and a basic belief in one’s ability to pull it off. Preparation is never-ending. Persistence is indispensable, as well as a compulsive desire to see it through. It’s a commitment.

In addition, it requires a point of view. After all that’s been done with these instruments, solo pieces can’t be achieved with chops alone. Solo trumpeting is different from solo piano, for example, because all you’ve got is a metal tube, air, and three valves. Any counterpoint has to be an illusion. It takes a lot of ingenuity to create harmony from a single line. All of the tracks here attack these problems in one way or another.

There is one advantage to the trumpet: because a vibrating lip creates the main body of sound, there is infinite variety to the timbral and textural resources. Though two people may play the same horn, no two people have the same lip. That’s what makes each of these tracks come alive with the creator’s intention.

These are some favorites, limiting it to acoustic – horn only – and leaving out many greats. The short list of missing links would be Luciano Berio’s Sequenza X, Natsuke Tamura, Kenny Wheeler, Axel Doerner, Peter Evans, Mauricio Kagel’s Atem, and Lucia Dluogszewski’s Space Is A Diamond. Feel free to enlighten as to others.

D:O agreed to bend from their usual out-of-print rule, but we did get permission from all the musicians whose work is in print. Thanks to Jeff and Jeff for doing what they do here.

* * *

Aye, aye!

CAPTAIN COURAGEOUS
Lester Bowie
African Children
Horo : 1978

With “Captain Courageous” Lester Bowie creates a solo that seems both off-the-cuff-relaxed and extremely well conceived from a formal perspective. It was most likely conceived intuitively (although what, really, IS intuition but deeply developed perception?). This is a solo not so much about extended technique, though there is that, as about pleasure and narrative. The flutter-tonguing intro, mysteriously arising and ear-friendly, is immediately followed by a “Here I Am!” set of pedal tones below the normal range of the horn.

(Trumpeters are usually crest-fallen to find out that most listeners think pedal tones sound like flatulence. Ditto, annoyingly, screeching air-blowing effects – to the non-trumpeter – often sound like kissing. It’s akin to the poor drummer who uses small bell percussion and the band responds by playing “Jingle Bells.” “Dashing through the snow….” Enough! Let our sounds be simply sounds!)

(Fortunately trumpeters are rarely deterred by what people think. And there’s nothing like the sound of a gracefully executed pedal tone.)

The first “real” notes in “Captain Courageous” are all smeared by half-valving. Bluesy, sing-songy, but marred, like the pope in a Francis Bacon painting. This is followed by a series of airy wind effects, followed finally by cleanly executed almost martial trumpet calls.

Two things unite all this: Lester’s ability to take his time as it unfolds, and the very personal complexity in his tone. Musicians are often afraid of silence, and even sans fear the usual response to silence is to quickly do something to fill it up. Hear the absence of sound as equal in weight to the presence of sound, and it’s clear that this piece makes perfect use of both. That is one of the hallmarks of Lester’s playing, demonstrated well here: a general comfortableness with sound and lack of sound. It’s what makes the pacing so remarkable. It’s one of the elements that make Lester so identifiable. Because of his awareness of emptiness and his willful use of it, the notes he does play are sculpted in relief. His unusual technical treatment of every note is that much more meaningful.

* * *

FUIGO
Toshinori Kondo
Fuigo from a Different Dimension
Bellows : 1979

Toshinori Kondo made a great solo record in the mid-seventies called Fuigo from a Different Dimension. This is one of the first tapes John Zorn passed along when we first started working together, and it’s unlike anything else out there. Composed almost entirely of special effects and unusual use of the instrument, Kondo creates compositions full of density and variety, with astounding twists and turns of texture and timbre. He even manages to use pedal tones without sounding scatological…

Kondo also uses the magnificent sound of the room he’s in as a foil. The whole recording has the same natural resonance, giving the mind’s eye a picture of a human being in a room with a horn and a microphone, some mutes and gubbins. Aside from the innovative extended techniques on the trumpet itself, Kondo weaves a fully conceived compositional tale in this piece, a natural progression from one event to the next. He presages a lot of trumpet sounds that later found prominent use by other players.

* * *

Gaburo's score/poem for Mouth Piece - CLICK TO ENLARGE

MOUTH-PIECE: SEXTET FOR SOLO TRUMPET
Kenneth Gaburo
New Music for Trumpet
Orion : 1972
buy @ Amazon

Jack Logan, trumpet.

“Mouth-Piece: Sextet for Solo Trumpet,” by Kenneth Gaburo, is a composition performed here by Jack Logan. It’s one of those pieces where multiple stories are being told at the same time, like a simultaneous expression of parallel story lines. The playing is simply extraordinary, constantly morphing and developing one timbral idea after another. See score, above. This is one of the most controlled (in a good way) explorations of sound for brass that’s been heard on record. Thanks to trumpeter Rich Johnson for research assistance.

* * *

BEAUTY OF BAMBOOS
Arve Henriksen
Sakuteiki
Rune Grammofon : 2001
buy @ Amazon

Arve Henriksen often plays without a mouthpiece, making this track a perfect counterpoint to the Gaburo. Arve does a lot of work with electronics, but in the case of “Beauty of Bamboos,” the electronics are only a means of capturing the very delicate sounds he coaxes from the horn. This incredibly imaginative player has for years been dreaming up new contexts for the trumpet and inventing new ways of getting sound out of it. Basically what Henriksen is doing here is using the small lead pipe as a mouthpiece, playing with a much smaller part of the lip, and thereby getting a much buzzier, airy tone almost like a shakuhachi. (This is what I think he’s doing, though I could be wrong…). This sound, as well as a precisely controlled manipulation of the valves, creates a serenely concentrated melodic meditation.

* * *

WEBERN
Bill Dixon
November 1981
Soul Note : 1982
buy @ Amazon

Bill Dixon’s “Webern” is a classic of the genre. It’s a highly distilled constellation of gestures that range from the very highest to the very lowest notes on the horn. The dynamics are also arrayed along extremes, in a constant state of organic evolution. Much like in Webern’s miniatures, Dixon says what he has to say within the first ten seconds, develops the ideas quickly, wraps up, and gets out. It couldn’t be any more clearly executed or perfectly complete. Again the technical challenges of the trumpet, daunting as they are, are subservient to the human expression in this piece of music.

* * *

UNTITLED
Greg Kelley
Trumpet
Meniscus : 2000

“Untitled” is the first track on Greg Kelley’s groundbreaking solo trumpet record, Trumpet, recorded in spring 2000. It’s rare you can say someone is creating a radical new way of playing. This is one of those times. Greg’s record really hit with some force, and summed up the work that a few trumpeters around the world have been developing for the past decade or so. Kelley literally reinvents the sound of the horn with pieces like this one, where he covers the front end of the horn with a metal plate, variously exposing and occluding different frequency vibrations with the grinding metal. He’s also developed circular breathing to the point where the listener is forced to reconsider whether it’s still a wind instrument. This track is an absolute winner. Great for parties, too.

* * *

Nate Wooley

YUKIO MISHIMA
Nate Wooley
I Know You By My Wounds
no label : rec. 2004

Nate Wooley is another groundbreaker. Again, as a reminder, this piece is entirely acoustic. No electronic manipulation. Not that there would be anything wrong with electronic manipulation, but in hearing “Yukio Mishima” it’s hard to figure out exactly how he’s getting this done without it. Nate redefines what it means to make a solo trumpet recording. There’s an enigma here. Knowing the force and passion it takes to perform a piece like this rams up against the mysteriously dispassionate demeanor of the materials. Wooley manages to simultaneously torture us with sonic whiplash, but do it in a state of preternatural calm. Most definitely enhanced trumpet techniques.

* * *

LOVE, FOR (SLIGHT BURST IN BEGINNING)
Rob Mazurek
Silver Spines
Delmark : 2002
buy @ Amazon

“Love, For (Slight Burst In Beginning),” by cornetist Rob Mazurek, comes from his Silver Spines recordings, many of which use electronics in addition to the horn. This track finds Rob dismantling the tubes and submerging some of them in (what one can only assume is) water. The result is a warmly rounded set of tones that fit beautifully with the other sounds he gets on the album. “Valves tubes out” is a surprisingly rich sound that Rob uses to maximum effect here. In an entirely acoustic context, Mazurek hearkens to the electronic world by using a “prepared” instrument. This solo is in keeping with his constant search for new sound sources.

* * *

Carroll

THIRD IMAGE
Baikida Carroll
The Spoken Word
hat HUT : 1979

For many years a close colleague of Lester Bowie, Baikida Carroll has long been a leader in the expressive, passionate, preacherly trumpet playing lineage. His 1974 solo on Julius Hemphill’s “Dogon A.D.” alone puts him in the pantheon of the greats. This track comes from his solo record, The Spoken Word. “Third Image” starts with a burst of chromatic line playing and rhythmic ferocity. This sounds like a written “head” in the traditional sense, but it’s a theme with a lot of meat on the bones: lots of material to grab on to. Baikida stays faithful in developing those initial ideas for the better part of fifteen minutes. There is a focus to that development that is unique to Baikida. While allowing for a free-flowing, improvised and conversational feeling, the lines keep coming back to variations of the initial image. As far away as he gets timbrally, Baikida keeps referring to his themes in a naturally developing way.

Of all the tracks here, this is one where one could talk about links to other modern trumpeters, like Freddie Hubbard, Woody Shaw, Charles Tolliver, Nat Adderley, Jimmy Owens, Ted Daniel, or Don Ayler. And yet, one thing you could say about Baikida is that his committed sense of development, like expanding ripples in a pool, is what makes the sound all his own. It’s probably the thing that makes him one of the great composers on the scene, and may have led him into all of the work he currently does in writing for the theater.

* * *

Taken piece by piece, any of these tracks could be ideological ammunition. But as a group they are disordered enough to give equal time to a Babel of voices. The only way to really understand the current environment is to take them all in on equal standing. Solo trumpeting may be an arcane and ascetic activity, but its very nakedness casts the variety of the music in stark relief.

It’s an archaic idea, this playing of brass instruments. Blow into a metal tube; create a frequency by buzzing the lips. Manipulate the sound. Repeat.

It’s not going to stop.

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July 2, 2009

More FONT in 2009-2010

Last weekend’s New Trumpet Underground at Cornelia Street Cafe was just the beginning of a great new season for FONT.

We’ll be updating the schedule soon with October’s Jazz Standard concerts, as well as letting you know what we have planned for January 2010.

We’ll also be here blogging about things that are happening in the new trumpet world. If you have things you want to share – recordings, gigs, a new piece you just heard, great blog post you just read – send us a note.

So check back regularly, or better yet, subsribe to our new RSS feed at the bottom of the page.