The Independent Ear

Darryl Harper “Stories in Real Time”

Mystery Man?  Clarinetist Darryl Harper unveils his action figure/alter-ego with latest release…

 

Amongst the usual blizzard of new releases, one of the more uncommon recent entries is Stories in Real Time (HiPNOTIC Records) from clarinetist-educator Darryl Harper.  First sighting of Darryl Harper, who teaches at Virginia Commonwealth University, came courtesy of a Regina Carter tour a couple of seasons back when the violinist sought to broaden her sonic pallet by adding clarinet.  But Stories in Real Time is a bit far afield from that experience, particularly as regards the instrumentation: 4 clarinets (including bass clarinet), voice and standard piano-bass-drums rhythm section. 

 

The cover and CD booklet graphics give no clue to the uninitiated as to Darryl Harper’s identity, save for  a black action toy figure strolling purposefully across an urban landscape.  Often curious about artist’s intent, wondering aloud about Harper’s coy graphics (a tad unusual for early discographical entries), drew the following details from the clarinetist:

 

The central theme of the album is storytelling.  When thinking of images that would conjure up the sense of storytelling, my graphic designer (Ziddi Msangi) and I were drawn to the use of toys.  We considered how children use toys to create stories, and how provocative those objects can be when juxtaposed against a real-world environment.

 

   Stories in Real Time

 

In framing the socio-political agenda of this record, Ziddi and I deliberately chose a black action figure to compliment the album’s storytelling theme.  In addition, I make significant reference within to the Uptown String Quartet, the World Saxophone Quartet, the Clarinet Summit albums, and the music of James Brown [in David Adler’s liner notes].  I use a composition of Horace Clarence Boyer, and I describe a seminal collaboration with Ethiopian-American filmmaker Salem Mekuria.  This project is firmly rooted in the soil of African American tradition, and I hope I have made that perfectly clear.

 

If you ever get to see any of the live shows, you’ll probably hear an as-yet-unrecorded setting I commissioned from Xavier Davis of a poem by Yusef Komunyakaa called "Blue Light Lounge Sutra."  And when I go into schools, I do a lecture-demonstration using Gwendolyn Brooks’ poem "The Anniad."  I also often give racially charged titles to my presentations: "Sweet and Chocolate" (from the Brooks poem), "Awash in the Third Stream," or "Looking Forward, Looking Black."

 

I do often seek a measure of subtlety in the work (personally, I think an oblique reference is much more powerful than a direct one), but there should be no doubt about who I am or where I am coming from.

 

Darryl Harper

www.darrylharperjazz.com

 

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Ancient Future – the radio program 10/8/09

Ancient Future airs over WPFW 89.3 FM, Pacifica Radio in the Nation’s Capital (www.wpfw.org), as part of WPFW’s M-F Morning Jazz strip; produced & hosted by Willard Jenkins

 

5-6:30 am

Meditations on Jobim

Joe Henderson

Dreamer

Double Rainbow

Verve

 

Jon Hendricks

No More Blues

Antonio Carlos Jobim & Friends

Verve

 

Hugh Masakela

A Felicidade

The Emancipation of Hugh Masakela

Chisa

 

Gal Costa

A Felicidade

Antonio Carlos Jobim & Friends

Verve

 

Grant Green

Corcovado

I Want to Hold Your Hand

Blue Note

 

Andy Bey & the Bey Sisters

Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars (Corcovado)

Andy Bey & The Bey Sisters

Prestige

 

Miles Davis

Corcovado

Miles Davis & Gil Evans

Columbia

 

Elis Regina

Fotografia

Elis & Tom

Universal

 

Milton Nascimento Jobim Trio

Inutil Pasagem

Novas Bossa

Blue Note

 

Stan Getz/Joao Gilberto

Vivo Sohando

Getz/Gilberto

Verve

 

Elis Regina

So Tinha de Ser Com Voce

Elis & Tom

Universal

 

McCoy Tyner

Wave

Super Trios

Milestone

 

Leny Andrade

Wave

Luz Neon

Eldorado

 

Jon Lucien

Dindi

By Request

Shanachie

 

Rosa Passos & Ron Carter

The Girl From Ipanema

Entre Amigos

Chesky

 

Soundviews (feature new release of the week 6:30-7am)

John Surman

Kickback

Brewster’s Rooster

ECM

 

John Surman

Chelsea Bridge

Brewster’s Rooster

ECM

 

John Surman

Brewster’s Rooster

Brewster’s Rooster

ECM

 

New Release Hour & celebrating Amiri Baraka’s 75th (7-8am)

Dave Holland/The Monterey Quartet

Step To It

The Monterey Jazz Festival Quartet

MJF

 

Amiri Baraka

Bang Bang Outishly

Our Souls Have Grown Deep Like the Rivers

Rhino

 

Fly

Dharma Days

Sky & Country

ECM

 

Amiri Baraka

Freedom Suite

Our Souls Have Grown Deep Like the Rivers

Rhino

 

Lulu Fall

If You Could See Me Now

Lulu’s’ Back in Town

 

Donal Fox Quartet

The Scarlatti Jazz Suite Project

Leonellis

 

Amiri Baraka

Shazam Doowah

Our Souls Have Grown Deep Like the Rivers

Rhino

 

Marcus Strickland

She’s Alive

Idiosyncrasies

Strick

 

Gretchen Parlato

Butterfly

In a Dream

Obliq Sound

 

Themes:

Randy Weston "Route of the Nile"

Mike Ellis Bahia Band "Freedom Jazz Dance

Jaco Pastorius "3 Views of a Secret"

 

Contact:

Willard Jenkins

5268-G Nicholson Lane

#281

Kensington, MD 20895

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Jazz Audience development conversation continues

Trumpeter Christian Scott: Impressive!

 

Our editorial last time listed a few things artists should do to tighten up their end of the audience development equation.  That editorial was written purely in the spirit of things we must ALL do to ensure a more robust jazz audience for the future; and in this case I’m speaking of the responsibilities of those who play the music, those who set the stage and present the music, those who record the music, those who educate future musicians — and in this case also most importantly, those jazz educators who teach "lay" people who attend jazz appreciation and jazz history courses sans any tangible desire to play the music — those who represent jazz artists, as well as those of us who consider ourselves fans or enthusiasts, who must subesequently go forth with greater zeal preaching the gospel of jazz to our family, friends, peers and colleagues.

 

But our editorial dealt specifically with musicians’ responsibilities in this equation; and at least one reader took issue, which resulted in a productive email exchange.  Subsequently I had the pleasure of seeing a young artist live a few days ago, someone who has been somewhat highly touted as a fast-rising talent but someone whose records haven’t truly "slayed" me, as one of my radio colleagues likes to say.  I’m speaking of trumpeter Christian Scott, and this wasn’t exactly my first sighting.  I’d seen — and been impressed by his promise — Christian since he was a green youngster, performing with his uncle saxophonist Donald Harrison onstage at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival several times years ago. 

 

Since then Christian has matriculated at Berklee, is rapidly maturing as a trumpet player, bandleader, and composer, as he plys and massages what he characterizes as a musical concept incorporating elements of indie rock, hip hop, and jazz all rolled up into Christian Scott music.  His Concord records have evidenced a young artist in deep evolution but I can’t say they’ve exactly reached out and grabbed me yet.  So it was with a mildly skeptical sense of anticipation; not that I expected the worst or to be bored or disappointed, but one never knows the translation of artistry from disc to stage.

 

Performing a program entirely consisting of originals — save for his personal jazz propers proving ground "Eye of the Hurricane" (and that’s precisely how he introduced the Herbie Hancock burner which they subsequently took at supersonic tempo: as a means of expressing the band’s jazz bonafides) —  Scott and his quintet (which includes guitar instead of a second horn) were full of youthful fire & vinegar, obviously in great enjoyment of each other’s playing, finely communicative & complimentary in their high energy mode.

 

Where Scott’s performance intersected with that audience development editorial on artist responsibility was in Christian’s staging and mannerisms.  In the introduction of his fellow musicians he wove brief, engaging, funny and at points clearly fabricated (which he kiddingly admitted) stories about each band member that had the audience hanging on every word and chuckling along.  With each of his pieces he gave an introductory explanation that further engaged the audience and in some small ways gave them a brief glimpse into his ways & means; in effect demystifying a program of original material that was knotty and complex and might have otherwise flummoxed the audience. 

 

What resulted was an enthusiastic response from an obviously juiced and energized Kennedy Center Jazz Club audience that flocked to his merch table post-set to scoop up his records, and encouraged an autograph line which he patiently and cheerfully accommodated.  On his merch table, even if audience members declined a CD purchase, Scott’s rep pressed business cards with Christian’s photo, web site, Twitter, MySpace, and Facebook links, mini-snapshots of his initial Concord releases, and a "New Album Coming Soon!" graphic in every palm.  And in light of another aspect of that artist-responsibility-for-audience development editorial is the fact that Christian Scott is also clearly… shall we say, a fashion forward young artist.

 

Here was a young artist displaying a healthy measure of the trumpet player’s usual ego and hubris in his playing, but once the horn was removed from his lips he was happy to thoroughly engage his audience.  Later, on the Kennedy Center shuttle bus to the Metro I spied an audience member enthusiastically telling someone from another show about seeing Christian Scott, displaying that business card of someone she obviously did not know prior to seeing him at the KC Club.  That’s what I’m talkin’ about!!!

 

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Ancient Future – the radio program 10/1/09

Ancient Future is broadcast on WPFW 89.3 FM, Pacifica Radio in Washington, DC at 50,000 watts…

 

Wynton Marsalis

Knozz-Moe-King

Live at the Village Vanguard

Columbia

 

Jose James

Spirits Up Above

The Dreamer

Brownwood

 

Bobby Hutcherson

The Kicker

The Kicker

Blue Note

 

Bobby Hutcherson

Hello to the Wind

Now!

Blue Note

 

Bobby Hutcherson

Ummhh

San Francisco

Blue Note

 

Joe Henderson

Power to the People

Power to the People

Milestone

 

Wadud Ahmad

Hard Core

No Additives or Preservatives

Sosa

 

Sabu Martinez/Sahib Shihab

Nus

Winds & Skins

Melloid

 

Miles Davis

TuTu

Complete Miles Davis at Montreux

Warner Bros.

 

Richard Bona

Night Whisper

Tiki

Decca

 

Jazz Warriors

Civilisation

Afropeans

Destin-E

 

Soundviews (weekly extended new release feature)

Nicole Mitchell Black Earth Strings

Renegades

Renegades

Delmark

 

Nicole Mitchell Black Earth Strings

By My Own Grace

Renegades

Delmark

 

Nicole Mitchell Black Earth Strings

What If

Renegades

Delmark

 

Nicole Mitchell Black Earth Strings

Waris Dirie

Renegades

Delmark

 

Nicole Mitchell Black Earth Strings

Waile

Renegades

Delmark

 

Nicole Mitchell Black Earth Strings

Aaya’s Rainbow

Renegades

Delmark

 

New Release Hour

Wayne Wallace Latin Jaz Quintet

Africa

Bien Bien

Patois

 

Anne Drummond

Aguelos Coisas Todas

Like Water

Oblique Sound

 

John Patitucci Trio

Mali

Remembrance

Concord

 

Bobby Floyd

Hip Cake Walk

Notes To and From My Friends

Chicken Coup

 

Chad Carter

Round Midnight

I Got Up!

Jazz Knights

 

Steve Davis

Django

Eloquence

Jazz Knights

 

Phil Woods

When the Sun Comes Up

American Songbook

Kind of Blue

 

Contact:

Willard Jenkins

Open Sky

5268-G Nicholson Lane

#281

Kensington, MD 20895

willard@openskyjazz.com

 

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Ancient Future – the radio program 9/24/09

                            CELEBRATING TRANE

 

opening theme: Randy Weston "Root of the Nile"

 

Thelonious Monk  

Sweet & Lovely 

Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane Live at Carnegie Hall 

Blue Note

 

George Russell (w/John Coltrane)

Manhattan

New York, NY

Impulse!

 

John Coltrane

Blues To Elvin

The Heavyweight Champion

Rhino Atlantic

 

John Coltrane

Central Park West

The Heavyweight Champion

Rhino Atlantic

 

Marc Courtney Johnson

All Because of You (based on Central Park West)

Dream of Sunny Days

 

John Coltrane

Harmonique

The Heavyweight Champion

Rhino Atlantic

 

Duke Ellington & John Coltrane

Take the Coltrane

Duke Ellington & John Coltrane

Impulse!

 

John Coltrane

It’s Easy to Remember

Ballads

Impulse!

 

Kurt Elling

It’s Easy to Remember

Dedicated to You

Concord

 

John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman

Lush Life

John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman

Impulse!

 

John Coltrane

Mr. Syms

The Heavyweight Champion

Impulse!

 

John Coltrane

Tunji

Coltrane

Impulse!

 

Kamau Dauood

Liberator of the Spirit (for John Coltrane)

Leimert Park

Mama

 

John Coltrane

Spiritual

The Complete 1961 Village Vanguard Recordings

Impulse!

 

Soundviews:

Stefon Harris and Blackout

Gone

Urbanus

Concord

 

Stefon Harris and Blackout

Christina

Urbanus

Concord

 

Stefon Harris and Blackout

Minor March

Urbanus

Concord

 

Stefon Harris and Blackout

They Won’t Go

Urbanus

Concord

 

New Release Hour:

Miroslav Vitous

Variations on Lonely Woman

Remembering Weather Report

ECM

 

Steve Coleman and Five Elements

Trad Mutations

Weaving Symbols

Label Bleu

 

Mike LeDonne

Manteca

Five Live

Savant

 

Closing theme: Jaco Pastorius/Weather Report "3 Views of a Secret"

 

Contact:

Willard Jenkins

Open Sky

5268-G Nicholson Lane

#281

Kensington, MD 20895

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