The Independent Ear

NONSENSE: Journal & Collector’s Guide

Nonsense is a hip new glossy periodical published from an African-American and politically progressive perspective that engages art, culture and politics as its three guiding pillars.  Published by Bob Daughtry and Norman Reid, the premier issue of Nonsense features such lead articles as "The Permutations of Miles Davis" and "The Obama Dialogues", and a good deal more rewards.

 

 

Bob Daughtry has been a friend, colleague and fellow WPFW radio broadcaster since I first relocated to DC in ’89.  Right away I admired his knowledge, advanced perspectives, and ability to intelligently blend jazz and related musics from the ancient to the future.  Not to be missed is Daughtry’s annual Jimi Hendrix radio celebration, often featuring rare interviews and recordings, ala the extensive live interview he conducted with Band of Gypsys bassist Billy Cox during his November ’09 Hendrix special.

 

Several months ago when Bob related that he was about to launch a new magazine, the warning bells sounded: Was this really a good time for a hard copy start-up periodical?  Scanning the prototype — with its shades of the very informative, edgy periodical Wax Poetics — I was convinced that indeed here was something a bit different.  So I quickly offered Bob an opportunity to us why and how Nonsense would go about the business of proferring fresh perspectives.  

 

Why Nonsense, and why now?

 

Here is what we say in the premier issue of Nonsense: The Journal & Collector’s Guide about the idea of nonsense, I believe this will strike you as it did me; my partner Norman Reid found this and it appears on the inside cover of our premier issue:

 

 "Nonsense is that which does not fit into the prearranged

  patterns, which we have superimposed on reality.  There

 is no such thing as "nonsense" apart from the judgmental

 intellect, which calls it that.

 

 Nonsense is nonsense only when we have not yet found that

 point of view from which it makes sense."

                   — From The Dancing Wu Li Masters by Gary Zukav 

 

I find that a little something to stimulate one’s thinking and expand one’s horizons.  Norm and I believe that among the more important challenges for any of us to continue to grow as human beings it is vitally important to be open to the infinite number of possibilities that every situation has the potential for.  The danger of course is that complancency is always lurking and it is one of the more difficult conditions to see and overcome.

 

So what are the guiding principles behind your development of Nonsense?

 

We believe in Go for it…  Aim low you’ll hit low…  Aim high you’ll hit high…  Nothing ventured, nothing gained."  Chatter from the sidelines at your own peril and risk becoming irrelevant if you wish.  I’m going to say what I think.  I am going to do my homework and then write it down.  There will be some issues and ideas that my children will be able to say that they definitively know what their dad’s position was.  We hope that we can contribute to the thinking and ideas we encounter in some humble way.

 

    There are so many of our people who have made us all better because they lived and chronicled their thoughts and feelings.  They were compelled to ply their trade, to create art, to play music, to run for political office, to speak out, to take a stand and most importantly to whenever possible directly help others.  It’s my and my partners’ desire to be involved in these kind of high aspirations.  To know that way back in the day there were men and women like Paul Robeson and Marian Anderson who were out on the front lines speaking substantively to the issues of concern for ordinary Black folk when they could easily have given in and become comfortable and well paid house niggas complicit in keeping us confused about this vicious system designed to fully exploit us.  Each issue will cover the areas of Black culture, music, art, and politics… as a starting point.

 

What’s the publishing plan for Nonsense?

 

Our intention is to publish three issues over a one-year period.  We debuted our first issue in mid-July 2009.  The next issue will hit in late January 2010, and our initial plan is for the third issue to be out by July 2010.  We anticipate that by the third issue (possibly the second) we’ll be online at the same time.  The hard copy issues are intended as collector’s items.

 

What’s coming in your next issues?

 

The most likely that I am completely comfortable in mentioning is the "Obama Dialogues."  We are planning features, reviews and interviews with or about people we would like to bring to a wider audience.  Musicians and artists like John Coltrane, Jimi Hendrix, and Thornton Dial.  I’m trying to catch up to the metal sculptor Uzikee.  I hope to interview Tricia Rose who has written extensively on hip-hop culture.  There are so many ‘masters’ past and present that should be featured.  A now departed and very creative [WPFW] music programmer named Jimmy Gray used to say about putting together music shows on the radio ‘Just play the Masters of your time.’  That’s it!  We are looking to bring to ever-widening understanding the ‘Masters’ for all our times.  The Great Greats, known, unknown, and under known… Black Patti, James Baldwin, Chancellor Williams, Howard Thurman…

 

    We are going to feature serious music and musicians, serious art and artists in various parts of those disciplines and the issues of the day from our vantage point.  We are living in an increasingly judgmental world.  In these times real nonsense has become increasingly prevalent.  I say this because no one answers questions directly anymore.  The cause and effect of such deception, duplicity, disingenousness, or whatever you’d like to call it, is that the questions asked are often as stupid or as calculated as the evasive and self-serving answers.

 

    Much of what we see is pre-determined by the so-called ‘experts’, the insiders who want us to think they know everything.  We are not supposed to think.  All we should do, if these ‘experts’ have their way, is listen and regurgitate to others their views verbatim.  So it feels like what passes for discourse, conversation, or whatever you call it is really bullshit.  It’s meaningless and intended for the purpose of dumbing down society.  It is a masquerade that is properly called NONSENSE.

 

Are you interested in submissions from artists or pitches of story ideas?

 

We would love to receive submissions for publication AND we appreciate feedback — positive or negative — but especially constructive, giving us a sense of how we can improve.  We believe in the genius of the public.  We are very interested in having women widely represented in our publication; but please, no rants because we’ll take care of that department.  [I’m grinning as I say this.]

 

How are you going about developing a readership for Nonsense?

 

We are reaching out to get a feel for what people are interested in.  We are looking for strong opinion pieces on the difficult issues of our time, especially from a cultural perspective.  Number one is, and always has been, RACE, the giant elephant in the room!

 

    Other issues of the day need full explication.  There are all manner of perspectives to be considered; e.g. has the larger society altered the dynamics of issues like ‘gay marriage’ within ethnic enclaves where it has always existed and been treated respectfully?  Has the system with its ulterior motives of for profit and its incessant march of commercializing, privatizing, and codifyiing everything in controlling and oppressive ways, created new frictions that have never previously existed or never before had a place in the cultural interactions of the African-American and Hispanic communities?

 

    There is the larger societal issue of individual freedom.  That’s not just an issue for Black people.  I want to highlight The Real ID Act and other very dangerous programs that have been quietly put into law or are currently being seriously considered that impact everyone.  These threats to our freedom are like a fire in a partitioned home.  It does not matter which little piece of a divided setting you live in because fire is an equal opportunity destroyer.  So is Facism.  Nonsense, the Journal & Collector’s Guide, takes the position that the decade of American ignorance, i.e. the first decade of this new century needs to be seen for what it is.  That decade sold us 9/11, that sold us two costly wars and that elevated an idea called Enron, which in our lexicon means Sham from the git go, or ‘white boys gone wild’.

 

    A decade that showed the ugly face of racism again in New Orleans during Katrina, as well as in the Immigration debacle, and both continue.  More shams like derivitaves and credit default swaps.  Racist killers celebrated like Karl Rove and the fat bastartd bionic hearted cheesy SOB ‘tiny [penis envy] Dick Cheney, and his lap dog ‘Junior’ (better known as "Shrub" in Texas ’cause he was never cool enough to be a Bush).  Let’s pause to hear from Big Mama Capon, great Aunt to Mother Goose, who says in her modern urban griot all encompassing way…

                    It’s automatic push button remote control’

                    gentrified ‘genetics command your soul.’  Keep

                    spending your money ’cause that’s how it works.

                    If you think too much we’ll put you with the jerks.

                    Shine Shine I hear you can swim mighty fine

                    But one missed stroke and your ass is mine.’

 

Big Mama Capon says that this language is all the contracts you sign with the Moneychangers.  Remember them?  What happened to the rhythm…? 

 

    On and on the public relations machines and the ‘behind the curtain’ fake-a-trons and their three card Monty mis-direction magic tricks show rolls on, giving us the great ‘Barry’ himself and even the King of the Jungle — all fakes.  It’s time to see our times and the Decade of American Ignorance for what it really is, total and complete Nonsense.  Hotep!

 

Contact: Robert D. Daughtry rddaughtry@yahoo.com

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Jazz, Blackness and Shame

In her second contribution to The Independent Ear, the uncompromising saxophonist-composer and budding music/socio- cultural commentator Matana Roberts details her personal grounding and addresses the issue of the black audience for jazz, music education, coping with judgmental educators and assorted other related matters on her fertile mind.

   Matana Roberts

 

Black folks and Jazz Music?  Why don’t I see black folks at my shows or even on the stage for that matter?  Is there a legacy of shame involved?  Well sure — I’d agree in some small respect that this shame is definitely part of the music’s legacy… the drug culture of the music lent itself to that.  But honestly for me personally that was never really an issue.  I grew up hearing some of the styles of music that I in fact play today and was surrounded by kinfolk that had a certain reverence for art in all it’s forms.  My family loved music and art.  Now does that mean my family encouraged me to be a saxophonist?  Absolutely not, but they never discouraged me either.  I grew up under the assumption that I could be anything I wanted to be.  I grew up in an environment to believe that as long as I enriched my mind, there would be no limitations in how I could enrich my life.

 

    My grandfather, a WWll vet, was a postal worker by day and a philosopher, poet and father of 3 by night.  My grandmother was a secondary school teacher and an avid student of many, many subjects that interested her as well as a  mother of 3 by night.  These day jobs they had represented very respectable professions for people of color in the ’50s.  I don’t get the impression that they or anyone else in my family — on both sides for that matter — looked at the job of a musician as being shameful, but I do suspect they did see it as being within the box of what White AmeriKKKa said was acceptable for black folks — and that would be to ENTERTAIN.  And if there is one common theme I have seen in my family research so far on both sides was a silent fight not to be confined to a box of what white folk deemed acceptable.

 

    If there are black folks discouraging their children from playing this music I think it would have more to do with that legacy than anything about playing so called "devil’s music".  (Though one can argue about all the bling associated with black pop music — but that’s another essay.)  In my opinion there is an economic status thing at play too.  My maternal grandmother pulled me aside every chance she could get to tell me that the kind of presence I had was one that only a high powered lawyer could posses.  I would just smile at this, but frankly sometimes when I’m freaked out about how exactly I’m going to make my rent, I wished I would have listened to her for purely economical reasons; as my last argument with a somewhat nasty student loan collector went something like this:

 

collector: "so ms. roberts, what exactly is it that you are doing with your life?"

 

Me: "Well sir, I’m trying to make a contribution."

 

collector: (insert smirk here) "by playing in a band ms. roberts?"

 

Me: "um… well if you want to put it like that, then sure."

 

collector: "you should be ashamed of yourself…"

 

 That’s basically where my shame has come from so far in this lifetime in relationship to music.  Isn’t that something?  I’m pretty sure my ancestors were not betting on that scenario.  My shame has come in the throes of trying to get a college education in the U.S.  In America, where descendants of the folk that actually helped to build some of these financial empires from the bottom up can’t afford to finance their own education.  Isn’t that sad?

 

    The legacy left in most American black families like mine is a legacy that requires a certain pride in self-sufficiency… you leave the field negro mentality behind and you surpass the house negro mentality by having your very own field and your very own house that you can do with as you please.  I’m pretty sure every black person in this country felt a strong reminder of that watching the Hurricane Katrina disaster on CNN.  It definitely showed that if you ain’t got some extra change stashed somewhere, your "can’twealljustgetalong" black ass might end up floating down a river too…  I know I felt that…

 

    But also a part of that legacy is to strive to surpass innovation, to surpass the standard already set.  In jazz music black folks have already done that in many ways.  We surpassed a standard for musical creativity and made it our own, and I think that some of us are continuing to do that.  My family always encouraged me in very silent ways (by example) to reach and not be afraid to grab and hold on despite the obstacles.  I think because of this past history of what black folks have already done in regards to this music has created an atmosphere of where now most black folk find the music boring — except for those iconic heroes like Coltrane.

 

    I personally think the lack of black folks at my concerts and on the stage has more to do with the legacy of ghetto economics.  And frankly the way jazz has become embraced by educational institutions does not make the ghetto economist leap with joy.  What negro would pay close to 30 thousand dollars a year to essentially learn to be black?  (This is a wide generalization I know, but work with me here please, I’m having fun.)  Well this negro did, and I do regret it to some extent. 

 

    I was able to fund a chunk of it thanks to a few small scholarships and grants, but since I didn’t really fit neatly into any particular musical box where my professors would go "well that Roberts, sounds like Bird!!! — let’s give her some money!!!"  I all but got ignored until towards the end of my institutional music collegiate experience where I finally ran into some teachers who understood the importance of original voices and it’s history in this music.  But regardless, I still have somewhat of a greenpapered bounty on my black ass thanks to my pursuit of knowledge — american style — hence the nasty psychological collector conversations I pretty much experience on the regular; a modern ball and chain if you will.  Something that my family fought hard to free their descendants from, but I guess I took the bait because I felt that getting a college education as a black american was one of my duties and so I did it, and at this point there’s no turning back now.  Life is full of little ironies.

 

    What I mainly see is a lack of diversity in music education institutions  — from the bottom up.  I’ve been on the bottom and I’ve been on the up.  I guess what hurts the most about this stuff sometimes is I actually gave people some money to tell me I wouldn’t be an artist.  (Thank God for the AACM, Chad Taylor, Josh Abrams, and Vonski.)  I had one professor seriously say to me "the only way you are going to get some gigs is if you marry a musician", and another who encouraged me to find another profession as I just wasn’t "getting it" — and this was only two out of a team of nitwits. 

   

    Seeing as no musician in his right mind has stepped forward to bound my finger with a shiny trinket I’d say that professor was projecting some of his own bullshit on me.  [Editor’s note: would that be in the classic "those who can’t…" parlance?  Just wondering aloud…]  And the second guy — well perhaps he just wasn’t getting me.  Though some of these early experiences definitely destroyed my self esteem for a time, I will say, now looking back in retrospect, that my family’s silent way of encouraging me to persevere anything actually helped.  First off by passing me some of the stories that I speak of in my COIN COIN project [details coming in The Independent Ear], showing me that if you fight and stand up for yourself you can survive.

 

    I’m only just beginning to find out what tremendous thing this has done and is contiuing to do for my artistic psyche.  And then in some ways an unspoken guideline in most black households — or at least the ones I was around — was this (and please don’t get your panties or briefs in a bunch over this, it’s just a gross generalization and not necessarily one I proscribe to anymore) treat anything that a white person says that is in any position of power over you as suspect information (especially if it’s commentary on your "ability").  This included teachers.  As a kid I had already been singled out negatively a few times by white teachers and I will always be thankful that my parents immediately sensed the problem was with the teachers and not with me.  My parents, grandparents did not ever come out and say this little credo exactly to me, it was always in the familial air; passed down generations through stories of our kinfolk…  Know what I mean?

 

    I’ve had many white teachers in this music and a good bulk of them I very, very much value.  But in order to deal with some of the idiots — as I described above — who were both white, I think now in retrospect I learned my family history in some ways as a coping mechanism.

 

    Now back to the lack of diversity in jazz education, which feeds jazz performance venues, which feeds jazz record labels, which [fed] the International Association of Jazz Education that [had] to have a "Black Caucus ” — is that not fucked up?  It’s because the music on a purely educational level is not diverse?  That’s so sad.  I’ve taught workshops to audiences that were completely filled with upstanding young white men, no students of color, sometimes not even any women.  It’s crazy.  (But maybe not so crazy since technically according to my last entries I’m white too, which means that possibly some of those upstanding young white men that I have taught have a negro or two dangling in their family trees too… so then that means the workshops were probably diverse… but just secretly diverse!  what?  whoo, my definiton of race is definitely changing…  I’m definitely having some fun here… 

 

    Anyway, I digress again…  I basically can report that on a cultural peer level it’s god awful lonely.  But for me it’s not really about schools anymore, or color, that’s done, now it’s about the work, and for better or for worse my saxophone was a tool given to me to get through all the madness and do the work.  It’s a tool for me to try to make sense of the madness, and perhaps a tool for me to create just a little of my own.  I can gladly report to the ancestors when I make that final transition that I stayed outside the box, maybe not in the way they may have hoped for, but I stayed and that I felt it pertinent to bring them closer to me to make it a little easier to deal.

 

…just some random thoughts.

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Ancient Future radio 1/7/10

Ancient Future radio, produced & hosted by Willard Jenkins, airs on WPFW 89.3 FM, Pacifica Radio for the Washington, DC metro area.

 

Theme: Randy Weston "Route of the Nile"

 

Dupree Bolton

Katanga

Fireball

Uptown

 

Helen Sung

Bye Ya

Helenistique

Fresh Sound

 

Allen Toussaint

Bright Mississippi

The Bright Mississippi

Nonesuch

 

Melissa Walker

Our Love Remains

In The Middle of it All

Sunnyside

 

Langston Hughes (poem)

I’ve Known Rivers

Our Souls Have Grown Deep Like the Rivers

Rhino (compilation)

 

Allen Toussaint

West End Blues

The Bright Mississippi

Nonesuch

 

Cannonball Adderley

Capricorn

Soul Zodiac

Capitol

 

Wynton Marsalis

Sometimes It Goes Like That

Live at the Village Vanguard

Columbia

 

Miles Davis

Fall

Complete Studio Recordings

Columbia/Legacy

 

Fela Kuti

Roforfo Fight

The Best of the Black President

Kalakuta/Knitting Factory

 

Sibongile Khumalo

Sonny Boy

Immortal Secrets

Sony

 

Simphiwe Dana

Injongo

On Bantu Biko Street

Gallo

 

Soundviews (weekly new release spotlight)

Bobby Hutcherson

Spiritual

Wise One

Kind of Blue

 

Bobby Hutcherson

Equinox

Wise One

Kind of Blue

 

Bobby Hutcherson

Nancy with the Laughing Face

Wise One

Kind of Blue

 

Bobby Hutcherson

Like Sonny

Wise One

Kind of Blue

 

What’s New: the new/recent release hour

Kenny Davis

Too High

Kenny Davis

Daken

 

Jacques Schwartz-Bart

Abyss

Abyss

Oblique

 

Mimi Jones

Watch Your Step

A New Day

Hot Tone

 

Uri Caine/Bedrock

Count Duke

Plastic Temptations

Winter & Winter

 

Saltman Knowles

Shesh

Yesterday’s Man

Pacific Coast

 

Etienne Charles

Folklore

Folklore

 

Chelsea Baratz

Water No Get Enemy

In Faith

 

contact:

Open Sky

5268-G Nicholson Lane

#281

Kensington, MD 20895

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Ancient Future: Top 20+ for 2009

2009 Ancient Future Top 20 (in alphabetical order)

Dee Alexander, Wild is the Wind, Blu Jazz

Jane Bunnett, Embracing Voices, Sunnyside

Kurt Elling, Dedicated to You, Concord

Oran Etkin, Kelenia, Motema

Robert Glasper, Double Booked, Blue Note

Stefon Harris & Blackout, Urbanus, Concord

Bobby Hutcherson, Wise One, Kind of Blue

Vijay Iyer, Historicity, ACT

Sean Jones, The Search Within, Mack Avenue

James King, Allen’s Odyssey, Vibrant Tree

Joe Locke/David Hazeltine Quartet, Mutual Admiration Society 2, Sharp Nine

Joe Lovano UsFive, Folk Art, Blue Note

Branford Marsalis, Metamorphosen, Marsalis Music

Nicole Mitchell Black Earth Strings, Renegade, Delmark

David Murray, The Devil Tried to Kill Me, Justin Time

Joshua Redman, Compass, Nonesuch

Marcus Roberts, New Orleans to Harlem, J Master

Jackie Ryan, Doozy, Open Art

Michael Thomas Quintet, Live at Twins Jazz, Jazhead

Miguel Zenon, Esta Plena, Marsalis Music

 

REISSUE of the year:

Fela Kuti, The Best of The Black President, Knitting Factory

 

…And another deserving Baker’s Dozen

JD Allen Trio, Shine, Sunnyside

Burnt Sugar The Arkestra Chamber, Making Love to the Dark Ages,

    Livewired Music

Donald Bailey, Blueprints of Jazz, Talking House

Babatunde Lea Umbo Weti, A Tribute to Leon Thomas, Motema

Marcus Strickland, Idiosyncracies, Strick Muzik

Stanley Clarke Trio, Jazz in the Garden, Heads Up

Tar Baby, Tar Baby, Imani

Pepe Gonzalez, Looking Back, IFP

Aruan Ortiz, Alameda, Fresh Sound

Jack DeJohnette-Danilo Perez-John Patitucci, Music We Are,

    Golden Beams

John Surman, Brewster’s Rooster, ECM

Gerald Clayton, Two-Shade, Artists Share’

Wayne Wallace, Bien Bien!, Patois

 

The Ancient Future radio program, produced & hosted by Willard Jenkins, airs on WPFW 89.3 FM (www.wpfw.org) Pacifica Radio for the Washington, DC metro area.

 

Contact

Willard Jenkins

Open Sky

5268-G Nicholson Lane

#281

Kensington, MD 20895

willard@openskyjazz.com

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Ancient Future radio 12/24/09 Playlist

Ancient Future radio is produced & hosted by Willard Jenkins for WPFW 89.43 FM, Pacifica Radio for the Washington, DC metro area.

Wynton Marsalis
Winter Wonderland
Crescent City Christmas
Columbia

Clairdee
Baby It’s Cold Outside
This Christmas
Clairdee

Joe Williams
Let it Snow, Let it Snow
That Holiday Feelin’
Verve

Moore By Four
Let it Snow, Let it Snow
Red Hot Holidays
MB4

Toninho Horta & Oscar Castro-Neves
Ave Maria
A Brasilian Christmas
Astor Place

(Various)
Silent Night
Bending Towards the Light (A Jazz Nativity)
Milan

Joyce
Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas
A Brasilian Christmas
Astor Place

Carla Bley
Ring Christmas Bells
Carla’s Christmas Caroils
Watt/ECM

Phillip Manuel
Silver Bells
Swingin’ In The Holidays
Glad-Man

Coleman Hawkins
Greensleeves
Christmas Songs
Milestone

The Afro-Semitic Experience
Descarga Ocho Kandelikas
Play For Peace
Reckless DC

Mo’ Rockin’ Project
All Praise
Sahaba
Remarkable

Pops Mohamed
Salaam
Ancestral Healing
M.E.L.T.

Boys Choir of Harlem (w/James Williams)
I Wonder As I Wander
Christmas Carols and Sacred Songs
Blue Note

Grover Washington Jr.
I Wonder as I Wander
Breath of Heaven
Columbia

Tremaine Hawkins
The First Noel
Swing Into Christmas
Columbia

Frank Jackson
What Do I Want For Christmas
Kasis

Clarkwise
The Christ-mas Song
The Christ-mas Song
A Star in the East
Mknific Music

Meredith D’Ambrosio & Hank Jones
Christmas Waltz
(CDR compilation)

Bobby McFerrin
Peace
Bobby McFerrin
Elektra Musician

Duke Ellington
The Nutcracker Suite (complete 9 movements)
Three Suites
Columbia

Randy Weston
Uhuru Kwanza
Mosaic Select
Mosaic

Bill Summers
Umoja
The Essence of Kwanzaa
Monkey Hill

Maia
Kujichagulia
A Power Stronger Than Itself
AACM

Babs Gonzales
Bebop Santa Claus
Cool Whalin’
Babs

CONTACT:
Willard Jenkins (willard@openskyjazz.com)
Open Sky
5268-G Nicholson Lane
#281
Kensington, MD 20895

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