Monday, 25 February 2008

2005_03_01_archive



Reject #5. And, while we're at it, #6.

Crown passed on Destination Out!, as did (o my lord) Billboard Books,

publishers of Freebirds: The Lynyrd Skynyrd Story. We're down to a few

majors now, and a sad string of farm teams that are just on this side

of being vanity presses. Seems the audience for free jazz, in most

editors' minds, is miniscule. (It is, isn't it. Don't tell me.) And it

seems that we haven't been especially convincing when it comes to the

overlap we claim exists between fans of out jazz, and, say, jam bands.

Also, most editors have mentioned that a narrative history, rather

than a record-centered approach, would appeal more, though whether

this is simply a hollow, face-saving gesture is anybody's guess.

Anyway, here's more of what they're politely saying No to, for your

trouble:

1978

Arthur Blythe

Lenox Avenue Breakdown

Columbia

Arthur Blythe, as; Bob Stewart, tuba; James Newton, fl; James Blood

Ulmer, g; Cecil McBee, b; Jack DeJohnette, ds.

Dexter Gordon ended his self-imposed exile in Europe with a series

of ecstatically received gigs in New York, followed by the release

of the disappointing and predictably named album The Homecoming.

Viewed at the time as a sign of jazz's reemergence as a relevant

artistic force, in retrospect it signals the spot at which jazz

turned in on itself, shedding new influences in favor of a

museum-grade worship of the past. A much less heralded moment of

jazz transformation came when NYC loft veteran Arthur Blythe signed

to Columbia in 1978. After a week of rehearsals with bandmates,

Blythe created Lenox Avenue Breakdown. A bracing amalgam of the new

and traditional, the album balances melody and free play, cohesive

group dynamics and wild fights of fancy, in creating an ode to

urban life in all its contrasts. Ranging from noirish nocturnes to

vampy blues wails, the album brought the influences that had been

incubating in the hot-house of loft jazz earlier in the decade into

the mainstream, however briefly. The first track in particular, the

carnivalesque "Down San Diego Way," is as breezy as its name, with

all players contributing equally to the lightly free funk. It

stands as a high point in the careers of all involved, particularly

Stewart, who put down here one of the great tuba statements in

modern jazz. Once loosed on the world, the world took little

notice. But sometimes it's important to step out of the museum and

into the light of day.

posted by Prof. Drew LeDrew at 4:33 PM 1 comments

Sad-eyed gentleman of the Low Life.

The wonderfully erudite Luc Sante gives Dylan's Chronicles, volume

one, the New York Review of Books treatment in their March 10 issue.

The multi-part essay also folds in a look at the complete Lyrics;

Studio A: The Bob Dylan Reader; and the recently re-released astral

emission that is Tarantula. It's a great review, the best of

Chronicles I've seen, as Sante finds a way to place the book into some

kind of context ("young man arrives in the City, wide-eyed but

nobody's fool"), while also allowing for its weirder, sui generis

aspects --- the non-peak moments described in chapters devoted to the

making of middling efforts New Morning and Oh Mercy.

Sante also looks closely at Dylan's lyric writing process, how he made

an art out of marrying "the folk-lyric tradition and Western

modernism," his linking of trad./arr. and his own Dada-fueled

unconscious. Some of this is just Sante conjecturing, but he does a

fine job of picking over the tidbits related to Dylan's creative

process that litter the four books under discussion. And, as a bonus,

he (too gently) puts Sleater-Kinney PR flak Rick Moody in his place

regarding the overall importance and merit of Blood on the Tracks.

Dylan bonus #2: The Independent (UK) recently posted a chunk from Sam

Shepard's Rolling Thunder diaries, on the occasion of the publication

of Shepard's Rolling Thunder Logbook in the UK this month. The book

was re-released in the US back in December.

Dylan bonus #3: TMFTML recently linked to this amazing story by Ian


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