The Independent Ear

A Jazz/Cultural beachhead in Brooklyn: Sista’s Place (Part One)

Some weeks back an invigorating, spirited Saturday evening was spent at Sista’s Place, a cooperative black enterprise at 456 Nostrand Avenue (corner of Jefferson Avenue; by subway take A or C train to Nostrand Ave. stop) in Brooklyn. The occasion was an all-star band including trumpeter Ahmed Abdullah, baritone saxophonist Hamiet Bluiett, violinist Billy Bang, pianist D.D. Jackson, tubist Bob Stewart, and drummer Andrew Cyrille. Needless to say, with such fire breathers onstage the action was ferocious. And this was an audience that fed the fire in equal turns. Though comfortably mixed, the audience was decidedly African American, and a constant amen corner further stoked the musicians; their delight at playing for such an encouraging audience was palpable on the artists’ faces and in their playing. There’s nothing quite like a thoroughly engaged audience to coax high caliber performances.

Then on a recent Sunday afternoon we had a return visit to Sista’s Place for a book signing with Randy Weston for our book African Rhythms, the autobiography of Randy Weston (Composed by Randy Weston, Arranged by Willard Jenkins; Duke University Press). Once again the Sista’s Place audience was thoroughly engaged, delighting in Weston’s vivid recounting of his life in Brooklyn and in his quest of the spirits of our ancestors.

Located in a very pleasant and spotless corner storefront, with adjacent food cooperative, Sista’s Place can comfortably accommodate about 75 patrons at small tables; that close proximity lending further credence to the amen corner. The walls are adorned with many of the jazz masters who’ve performed at Sista’s, and looming over all is the patron saint, John Coltrane. At Sista’s Place the philosophy of “Jazz, a music of the spirit” is blessedly alive and well. Jazz has a true home at Sista’s Place, a vibrant community center, cultural gathering place, and political pow-wow of sorts where the jazz series runs on Saturday nights. Sista’s Place officially opened for jazz, in its nearby former incarnation, on September 23, 1995 — John Coltrane’s birthday, another reason for Trane’s honored position in the Sista’s pantheon.

As part of our ongoing Brooklyn jazz archives project for the Weeksville Heritage Center (www.weeksvillesociety.org), we had the enlightening pleasure of conducting separate interviews with three Sista’s Place principles — founders community activist Viola Plummer and attorney Roger Wareham, and Sista’s artistic director of jazz programming, trumpeter-bandleader and Sun Ra alum Ahmed Abdullah. This is part one of their commentary on the development of this increasingly rare venue — a black-operated and oriented community house for jazz music. I had previously interviewed Wareham for the former IAJE Journal back in the 90s, at the behest of the former BET Jazz major domo and current BET executive Paxton Baker who had funded Sista’s, so I was familiar with their first locale. Bringing Viola Plummer and Ahmed Abdullah’s voices into the commentary along with Wareham shed much further light.

The whole feel and philosophy behind Sista’s Place recalls the former Brooklyn cultural edifice known as the East, the life of which was detailed in a previous Independent Ear interview with Jitu Weusi, also part of our Weeksville project (check the IE archives). As was the case with the East, Sista’s Place was developed on a political foundation, in this case known as the December 12th movement. We begin with the mother of Sista’s Place, Viola Plummer.

Why is your organization known as the December 12th movement?
Viola Plummer: Some years ago there was an incident in upstate New York where the guards in the Orange County Jail house put on Ku Klux Klan outfits and abused two African American and one Latino prisoner. At that time three of our brothers were on trial in Goshen for weapons’ possession and we had a judge that was from hell. So when we went to court for our three brothers, the mother of one of the victims in the county jail heard us take on the judge. After that she said to us “You know, these young men were brutalized… and nothing has happened… This was in Newburg, NY in ’87 and we need some of your spirit up here.” So we began to talk to her about how we take on the county jail apparatus in Orange County. We had a subsequent date for our three brothers [who were on trial].

Talk about the December 12 movement in terms of arts & culture.
VP: One of the things is that we — because of our politics — we understand that culture is the transmission belt of struggle, of understanding who you are, what the value of it was. Our advent into needing to have somewhere musicians could play is that we had a series in Harlem called “Jazz Comes to Fight Back,” and the first person we [presented], at the old Music & Arts High School, was Wynton Marsalis when he first came [onto the scene]. Because we understood that jazz expressed who we were, and talked about our humanity and our values; it was in the music, it was in the rhythms, it was in the melody and the riffs. For December 12th it was the way in which we could say to the people that struggle is for liberation and that there is no struggle for struggle’s sake; art is that expression, and the music… sister Thulani always says, and it’s so true, that music saved our lives. From the blues to the gospel, to jazz, to R&B… it really saved our lives. And for the December 12th movement people heard our politics better [as a result of the music]. From Africa, to Brooklyn, to Harlem, to Goshen… it was always the music, it was always the dance…

In the whole development of your efforts through the December 12th movement, what have been your activities in the area of arts & culture?
Roger Wareham: Politically one of our slogans or mantras is that “culture is a weapon.” For every struggle for liberation one of the most important components, if not the most important component, is culture. And that takes many forms. I always remember a lecture that Amilcar Cabral, who led the liberation struggle in Guinea-Bissau, gave in the Cape Verde Islands. He started off the discussion talking about [Nazi commander Herman] Goebbels, and how whenever the Nazis had a discussion and the issue of culture came up, Goebbels took out his gun and put it on the table because he was really clear that if you were going to suppress a people, to conquer them you had to destroy their culture. We always saw culture as a key component for our struggle for liberation. So the theme of Sista’s Place is “culture is a weapon.”

We opened on September 23, 1995 on John Coltrane’s birthday; we start our season around then and we’ve always had artists who reflect some degree of consciousness of the nature of our struggle. So we’ve never separated the art from the culture. It’s been mainly music, but we also have poetry; Luis Reyes Rivera conducts poetry workshops and we’ve had different people producing plays. But we’ve never separated — and we don’t want those who enjoy the culture to separate culture from the history and the struggle that created it, it’s a part of it and it also feeds and energizes it.

What was the decision behind determining that Sista’s Place was going to have a jazz presence?

VP: We thought that in this community, after the East was gone, after all the music places were gone… and remember, we had started [the jazz policy] in Harlem [with] “Jazz Comes to Fight Back” because we feel that it is jazz that really expresses, at least for us old people, our culture; it’s the music that grew out of struggle, that got interpreted, and that some of the brothers and sisters [jazz musicians] that are still alive didn’t play in our community, because there were no places to play [jazz in the black community of Brooklyn] when we started. I said the music I like best is jazz, so they called me the jazz policeman; I thought that was the music that was needed in our community.

When we were in the former location down the street, there was a brother who worked for the railroad who had three boys and he would bring them every [jazz] night. Then there was another lady who has passed away, her nephew would come and they would be awestruck at how these brothers had conquered their instruments, and they would listen… they HEARD the music!

RW: I’m from Harlem [laughs]… When you say you’re from Harlem you don’t deal with Brooklyn; Brooklyn was like you needed a passport to come to Brooklyn back in the day. I don’t know chapter and verse, but I understand the richness of Brooklyn’s contribution to jazz, and maybe more so than Harlem because a lot of folks who played there weren’t indigenous to Harlem, whereas a lot of folks emerged out of Brooklyn. Our first [Sista’s Place] spot was on the corner of Jefferson and Nostrand. Jefferson begins at Claver Place, and Claver Place is where the East was, at 10 Claver Place. So you just walked from the East right up to Sista’s Place; so it’s almost a geographic and physical part of that [East] legacy.

Ahmed Abdullah, when you moved to Brooklyn in 1970, what was it like for jazz in Brooklyn at that time?

Ahmed Abdullah: I came in on the decline of the golden era. I’ve talked to other people who were involved in the earlier jazz in Brooklyn when all the other clubs were around. During that time [1970] we had the Blue Coronet, there was the Muse on Bedford Avenue near Lincoln Place; people like [saxophonist and late brother of Kenny Barron] Bill Barron, [bassist] Reggie Workman, [saxophonist] Roland Alexander, and [poet] Louis Reyes Rivera were all at The Muse. Bill Barron ran jam sessions there and it was one of the places that I got my roots in music because he was very gracious in allowing musicians to come and play. There were some great musicians who played there; [pianist] Danny Mixon, for example, would come and play there all the time; all of the cats that were part of the [Muse] staff would also come and perform in these jam sessions. So the Muse was a very important cultural institution, and Reggie Workman was in fact the administrator of Muse at that time.

In the 1970s many of the musicians lived around Williamsburg, around Broadway and Bedford. Rashied Ali had a group there called the Melodic Art-Tet, and the group actually consisted of [saxophonist] Charles Brackeen, [bassist] Ronnie Boykins, and Roger Blank, and we used to rehearse at Rashied Ali‘s place; he had a loft in Brooklyn. This was before he got his loft in Soho that became Ali’s Alley in the mid-70s.

Would you say those enclaves of musicians and subsequent performances in such spaces were kind of an outgrowth of the Black Arts Movement?

A.A.: Oh definitely, because there was a lot of cultural awareness happening in the 1970s and we were definitely picking up on what had happened in the 1960s and in fact instituting some of those actions in institutions. The 70s was a realization of the activities of the 1960s in many ways. The East certainly was that, and certainly what we were doing at 1310 Atlantic Avenue was that; it was a very rich time. I played the East a number of different times; I played the East with a group called the Brotherhood of Sound, with a group called the Master Brotherhood, with the Melodic Art-Tet, and I played there with Sun Ra. My very first performance with Sun Ra was at the East, in April 1975. This is a very [ironic] thing, playing at the East; I’m now teaching a block away from the East at PS3, and a block away from that is Sista’s Place! So there is a spiritual connection. I came to the East in 1975, to Sista’s Place in 1998, and I started teaching at PS3 in 2005. All of these things are stacked up in a row on that avenue.

Info & complete performance schedule for the Saturday Night jazz series: www.sistasplace.org

Stay tuned to the Independent Ear for Part Two on the development of Sista’s Place.

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Tri-C JazzFest 2011 Schedule of events

JazzFest schedule
JazzFest preview for the Community
April 27, 2011
Wednesday, April 27, 2011 – Karamu House – 8:00 PM – FREE
The Eddie Baccus Organ Summit with Special Guest Bobby Floyd, Karamu House

Cleveland’s legendary Hammond B-3 virtuoso Eddie Baccus, Sr. returns to Karamu House with special guest Columbus B-3 wiz Bobby Floyd.

Kick Off Day: Mardi Gras Parade
April 28, 2011
Thursday, April 28, 2011 – Tower City Center – 5:00 PM
FREE
From New Orleans, the Stooges Brass Band performing a genuine New Orleans “second line”, and…
Voted “Best Marching Band” by Cleveland Magazine in 2009, The Shaw High School Mighty Cardinals piled on the acolades in 2010.

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
April 28, 2011
Thursday, April 28, 2011

House of Blues – 7:00 PM
Tickets $25; call 216-987-4444.
New Orleans legend Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews and his band Orleans Avenue mix rock, funk, jazz, hip-hop and soul to create their signature “Supafunkrock” sound.

A Tribute to Ella Fitzgerald with Dee Dee Bridgewater and the Cleveland Orchestra
April 29, 2011
Friday, April 29, 2011 – Severance Hall – 8:00 PM
Tickets $63/$82; call 216-231-1111 or 800-686-1141.

Two-time Grammy Award winner Dee Dee Bridgewater and The Cleveland Orchestra pay tribute to the First Lady of Song Ella Fitzgerald.

Orchestre National de Jazz: The Robert Wyatt Project
April 29, 2011
Friday, April 29, 2011 – Rock and Roll Hall of Fame – 7:00 PM
Tickets $10; call 216-987-4444.
Created by the French Ministry of Culture in 1986, Orchestre National de Jazz (ONJ) is a collaborative laboratory.

Women In Jazz: A Tribute to Betty Carter
April 30, 2011

Betty Carter “Jazz Ahead” alum Charenee Wade will be among those paying homage to Betty
Saturday, April 30, 2011 – 1:00 PM – Olivet Baptist Church – Free
With its unique sound, Betty Carter‘s voice is thought of as more a musical instrument than just a set of vocal cords.

Smooth Jazz All-Stars
April 30, 2011
Saturday, April 30, 2011 – PlayhouseSquare – 8:00 PM
Tickets: $45/$35/$25; call 216-241-6000 or 1-866-546-1353
Smooth Jazz All-Stars Featuring Mindi Abair, Rick Braun, Dave Koz, Kenny Lattimore, Ray Parker, Jr. and Brian Simpson
This all-star gig, featuring multi-Grammy nominee Dave Koz.

Debut Series: Maurice Brown
May 1, 2011

Sunday, May 1, 2011 – Nighttown – 8:00 PM – FREE
Chicago-bred trumpet virtuoso Maurice Brown has shared the stage with numerous jazz legends, including Clark Terry, Johnny Griffin, Curtis Fuller and Ellis Marsalis.

Debut Series: The Ambrose Akinmusire Quintet and The Tia Fuller Quartet
May 1, 2011

Sunday, May 1, 2011 – 4:00 PM – East Cleveland Library – FREE
FREE DOUBLE BILL CONCERT – The Ambrose Akinmusire Quintet and The Tia Fuller Quartet
Before he was 18, Oakland native Ambrose Akinmusire had already played with jazz giants. He went on to win the 207 Thelonious Monk Institute International Jazz Competition. Ambrose’s Blue Note debut record, scheduled for Spring release, is eagerly awaited. Tia Fuller’s ferocious jazz chops will be in vivid display on our stage; additionally she served as Beyonce’s saxophonist for the last three years.

“Celebrating the Music of Tito Puente” with Sammy DeLeon y su Orquesta
May 2, 2011
Monday, May 2, 2011 – PlayhouseSquare – 6:30 PM
Tickets: $14; call 216-241-6000 or 866-546-1353.
The International Children’s Festival and Tri-C JazzFest are teaming up to present Sammy DeLeon y su Orquesta, celebrating the music of Tito Puente, the King […]

The Dave Sterner Quintet and the Tri-C Jazz Studies Performance Combo
May 2, 2011

Monday, May 2, 2011 – Brothers Lounge – 7:00 PM
Tickets: $10; call 216-987-4444.
Projecting the uncontainable enthusiasm of Cannonball Adderly, Cleveland native saxophonist Dave Sterner channels those be-bop roots with the modern accessibility of Joshua Redman.

Ernie Krivda’s “Thunder from the Heartland”
May 3, 2011
Tuesday, May 3, 2011 – The Hermit Club – 7:00 PM

Tickets: $20, call 216-987-4444.
In a career that spans almost 50 years, tenor saxophonist and Cleveland legend Ernie Krivda has played with the best in the business, including Cannonball Adderley and Quincy Jones.

The Robert Glasper Trio
May 4, 2011

Wednesday, May 4, 2011 – MOCA – 8:00 PM
Tickets: $25, call 216-987-4444
Houston-born pianist Robert Glasper impressed critics and audiences when he burst onto the jazz scene with his first two Blue Note albums. He’s also knee-deep in contemporary sounds as music director for both Maxwell and Mos’ Def.

“Miles & Trane @ 85 – Re-Imagined” TCJF Soundworks with special guests NEA Jazz Master Benny Golson and drummer Ndugu Chancler
May 5, 2011
Thursday, May 5, 2011 – Tri-C Metro Auditorium – 8:00 PM – FREE

Now in its third year, TCJF SoundWorks, under the direction of saxophonist Howie Smith and bassist Glenn Holmes, welcomes John Coltrane boyhood friend and NEA Jazz Master Benny Golson and drummer Ndugu Chancler, a Miles Davis alum.

“Tri-C JamFest” – Medeski, Martin & Wood, Dr. Lonnie Smith, Will Bernard
May 6, 2011

Friday, May 6, 2011 – PlayhouseSquare – 7:00 PM
Tickets: $45/35/25; call 216-241-6000 or 1-866-546-1353
Formed in Brooklyn in 1991, jazz trio Medeski, Martin & Wood (MMW) draws on influences from a number of musical traditions. Dr. Lonnie Smith is the reigning master of the Hammond B-3 organ.

DownBeat Invitational – The Tri-C JazzFest High School All-Stars
May 6, 2011
Music of Benny Golson and Bobby Watson

Friday, May 6 – Tri-C Metro Theatre – 6:00 p.m. – FREE
Tri-C Metro Theatre
2809 Woodland Aveune
Cleveland, OH 44115
Under the direction of Steve Enos, Director of Tri-C Jazz Studies, […]

Jazz for Kids – 2:00pm
May 7, 2011
Saturday, May 7, 2011 – 2PM
Children’s Museum
Call for tickets 216-791-KIDS
Now in its fifth year, the “Jazz for Kids” concert is an entertaining and educational performance for families with young children led by pianist Joe Hunter. Cleveland […]

Jazz For Kids – 11:00 AM
May 7, 2011
Saturday, May 7, 2011 – 11 AM
Children’s Museum
Call for tickets 216-791-KIDS
Now in its fifth year, the “Jazz for Kids” concert is an entertaining and educational performance for families with young children led by pianist Joe Hunter.

Smokey Robinson
May 7, 2011

Saturday, May 7, 2011 – State Theatre at PlayhouseSquare – 8:00 PM
Tickets: $50/$40/$30; call 216-241-6000 or 866-546-1353.
Iconic R&B singer, songwriter and producer Smokey Robinson is one of the primary figures associated with Motown Records.

Gospel Jazz with Present Day and special guest Sean Jones
May 7, 2011
Saturday, May 7, 2011 – Antioch Baptist Church – 3:00 PM – FREE

Under the direction of Chris Anderson and Theron Brown, the group Present Day explores the richness of American culture through gospel and jazz music with a fresh […]

Oikos Ensemble – Jazz Vespers
May 8, 2011
Sunday, May 8, 2011 – 10:30 AM
FREE
Named after a Greek New Testament word meaning “spiritual dwelling place,” the Oikos Ensemble is a highly acclaimed jazz and world music group that has performed at venues coast to coast. […]

Regina Carter’s “Reverse Thread”
May 8, 2011

Sunday, May 8, 2011 – 3:00 PM – Cleveland Museum of Art
Tickets: $30, call 216-987-4444.
In her relatively short career, multi-talented jazz violinist and MacArthur Foundation “genius” recipient Regina Carter has spanned fusion, avant-garde and mainstream jazz, and returned to her classical upbringing. Her latest project, “Reverse Thread”, is a rich evocation of African string traditions.

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Morocco Festival tour postponed due to current unrest in North Africa

NEWS RELEASE

It is with regret that we have to inform you that the “Gnaoua World & Music Festival – Morocco 2011” Tour had to be cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances. The political unrest and instability in North Africa create risks and liabilities that are too substantial for us to attempt a program at this time. We are greatly disappointed but are helpless to influence or control events.

Once again, we are extremely sorry for the cancellation of this tour but hope things change favorably and we have the opportunity to re-schedule in the future.

Thank you for your support.

YourWorld Consultant Group, Inc.

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John Santos: Breaking down barriers in the Latin music continuum

Bay Area based percussionist-bandleader-educator John Santos is one of the most authoritative musicians I know when it comes to multiple facets of the Afro-Cuban and Latino-Hispanic music continuum. Equally versed in the Latin-jazz vein, salsa and the historic implications of music from the Afro-Caribbean diaspora, Santos’ latest recording is the exciting folkloric La Esperanza. We sought John out for some wisdom on this latest, thoroughly researched and beautifully executed chapter in the folklore side of his recorded pursuits.

As a percussionist-bandleader who is well-versed in what is referred to as “Latin-jazz” and myriad other forms of the Latin music language, this is either your 2nd or 3rd release in what might be characterized as a folkloric vein. Please detail the theme of this recording and how you see the compositions representing that theme.

This is the fourth full-length recording by my folklore project (the last two garnered Grammy nominations). The theme is Afro-Caribbean, mainly Afro-Cuban, and has always been intended to represent the study, documentation, and sharing of the musical/spiritual roots of the music we love and call Salsa and Latin Jazz. This folkloric music called me to the drum at a very young age and truly represents the identity and history of the Caribbean heart of the Americas. Jazz, of course, comes largely from this same Caribbean environment, which creates a huge overlap and relevance for much contemporary music that we and many others delve in. All the compositions strongly reflect and represent the theme, as they are either traditional, spiritual based chants and rhythms that honor and praise the ancestors, or they are original compositions with traditional musical accompaniment sometimes combined in experimental ways. The themes of the original compositions deal with life from a Caribbean perspective – homage to the departed, celebration of the drum, elaboration of African-based mythology, affirmation of cultural traditions, etc. And literally, the title of the CD, La Esperanza (Hope), refers to traditional, universal values around love, peace, family and human rights. For the vast majority of people of color, our music, dance, and other artistic expressions are intimately connected to and reflect our socio-political reality, so “art for art’s sake” is not our central concept.

What is your process for developing thematic material for your recordings?

I try to remain open to seeing and hearing all that surrounds me. To me that means making a conscious effort to make focused observation and listening, second nature. In attempting to develop this, I find an endless source of thematic, spiritual, and practical inspiration. I also like to develop themes and concepts from different perspectives, such as actual and imagined stories, specific rhythms, melodies, lyrics, instrumentation, etc. Because of my theoretical deficiency, particularly in terms of harmony, I do a lot of singing into a portable recording device and then elaborating on the themes later. It’s not so much an issue with this folkloric ensemble, because we mainly work within the voice and percussion parameters, but when I’m writing for my Sextet, I usually bring my lyrics, concepts, forms, instrumentation, rhythms, breaks, etc, to an arranger. I have been very fortunate to have wonderful arrangers in my groups over the years. Currently and for the past several years, I’ve been working closely in my group with Dr. John Calloway (flute, piano), Saul Sierra (bass), and Marco Diaz (piano, trumpet), all of whom are excellent arrangers.

I used that somewhat controversial term “Latin-jazz” as a descriptor in question #1; how do you feel about that term and do you think there are more apt descriptors for at least that part of your music?

I’ve come to terms with the term, so to speak. The essence of music is so much not about categories and names and all about breaking down barriers, borders and stereotypes. But in this society, the music has to be marketed, promoted, distributed and sold, and so descriptive titles are required. I think Latin Jazz is as good a general description as any. We just have to remember and remind folks that the music goes way beyond any such name or title. It’s an intentionally vague term that can mean myriad things. In the case of my Sextet, we include jazz, funk, folklore and a wide variety of popular dance idioms under that heading of Latin Jazz.

What have been some of your more fruitful collaborations down through the years?

Firstly, my collaborations with John Calloway have been highly productive, as we began working together in 1976 and have never stopped. He’s come up with some absolutely beautiful arrangements and ideas for many of my compositions over that stretch of time. Currently, in addition to John, Saul Sierra has also stepped up with several wonderful arrangements for me. On the playing side, My long association with the legendary Cuban percussionist, Orestes Vilató, was an intense learning experience every moment. Our collaboration began in 1981 and also continues. Our collaborations with some of our out-of-town colleagues in the studio and on stage have also been quite fruitful – some of those respected artists are Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Joe Henderson, Omar Sosa, Steve Turre, Andy Gonzalez, Pedrito Martinez, Armando Peraza, Francisco Aguabella, Nelson Gonzalez, Jose Clausell, Little Johnny Rivero, Carlos Santana, Cachao, Tito Puente, Chocolate Armenteros, Giovanni Hidalgo, Anthony Carrillo, and many others. I feel that my current Sextet is in a special place musically due to a lot of work and getting to know each other so well over the years – we’ve been having a lot of fun lately breaking new ground in our live interaction and our current commissioned project, Filosofíia Caribeña, has been an exciting work-in-progress for a year and a half and will have its World Premiere on April 2nd, 2011 at the San Francisco Jazz Festival. We’re also coming to the Smithsonian (April 15, and to Tanglewood (Sep 3), after a long absence from the East Coast.

You’ve engaged a large cast of musicians to fulfill your mission with “La Esperanza.” What went into the selection process as far as the musicians you chose to make this music?

They are all exceptional colleagues and friends – extended family – who share my love and respect for the roots or our music and pour their love and considerable experience into such a project. Because of my limited financial resources, it generally takes several years to complete a project like this. So from time to time, I am able to take advantage of when some of them are passing through town while on the road. I’ll bring them into the studio and our affinity with the language of the traditional forms gives us the common denominator necessary to produce some inspirational moments, many of which have been permanently captured in the recordings. As for my local colleagues, they are simply some of the best in the field and were chosen for their hearts, skill, and availability, in that order.

WWW.JOHNSANTOS.COM

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T.K. Blue goes Latin Bird hunting on his latest

Saxophonist-flutist-educator-bandleader T.K Blue, longtime music director for Randy Weston‘s African Rhythms ensembles, will soon release Latin Bird, his Latin treatments of the music of the immortal Charlie Parker. T.K. is of Caribbean descent and has extensive experience in island grooves, Latin music, and a thorough immersion in African rhythms — not only from his two decades plus traveling the byways with Randy, but also from spending several years in France, where he worked with many African artists and bands. We recently sought out the affable Mr. Blue for some words on his new release, his first for the Motema label.

Besides his well-noted experience and obvious expertise in playing with Latin rhythms himself, what is it about Charlie Parker’s music that you felt would lend itself to such a “Latinization”?

Bird and Diz were at the forefront of the great amalgamation and marriage of jazz, more specifically Bebop, with Afro-Cuban music and their collaborations with Chico O’Farrill and Machito are well documented. Moreover, Bird recorded many songs whose origins point south of the boarder. His style of improvisation and penchant for melodic articulation blended quite well with the rhythms of Africa via Cuba. It’s the spirit of Bird with the Afro-Cuban rhythms as a backdrop that has always attracted me…the way he phrases and weaves in and out of this rhythmic underpinning steeped in the “clave” vernacular. Therefore any further scrutiny in this direction seems quite logical to me.

How did you go about formulating the band context and personnel that would explore Bird in your Latin vein?

The first thing is always to hire musicians who are capable of helping you bring your ideas and concepts to fruition. In this case it requires folks who have an in-depth knowledge of the Afro-Cuban musical genre. All of the musicians on this date have great experience playing in this style: Willie Martinez, Roland Guerrero, Steve Turre, Lewis Nash, and Essiet Essiet.

Given your nearly 30-year immersion in Randy Weston’s African textures as a member of his African Rhythms bands, how has that experience informed your work on this record date?

It’s a beautiful thing to work with someone who is truly a master musician and elder. You learn so much through osmosis. Randy Weston as afforded me the opportunity to learn so much about the rich musical heritage of Africa as well as the connections between the continent of Africa and the varied musical genres one finds transplanted through out the planet. Mr. Weston is a true “Griot” and willingly disseminates his knowledge and wisdom to those eager to learn. His spirit has always helped me in many of my recording projects.

As an alto saxophonist how would you characterize Charlie Parker’s influence on your development as a musician?

Bird is most certainly a strong influence on me. A day does not go by without me playing something from his vast reservoir of musical expressions. I must thank my teacher Jimmy Heath for “pulling my coat-tail” and encouraging me to know more about the innovations of Bird’s creative musical out-pouring.

What’s next for T.K. Blue?

Next up for T.K.Blue is the music for my next recording..I may revisit a ballad project abandoned a few years ago..or an entire flute project( I started on flute before saxophone)…or a project involving some incredible vocalists..

WWW.TKBLUE.COM

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