Il percorso sensorio effettuato da Gianni Mimmo assieme alla violinista Alison Blunt in “Lasting Ephemerals” si svolge nella cornice della chiesa di S. Leonard, Shoreditch, a Londra, un posto di cui vi ho già parlato a proposito di una registrazione di Francois Carrier: è sicuramente un luogo speciale per vari motivi, ma musicalmente quello più interessante è l’acustica che premia le pause e le risonanze dei musicisti. In “Lasting Ephemerals” i due musicisti ricorrono alla loro minuziosa preparazione di improvvisatori che si riflette sulla natura evolutiva dei suoni, trasmettendo percezioni pienamente risolte attraverso l’ingaggio dualistico. Per Gianni, questa innata capacità espressiva al soprano, non è certo una novità, ma in questo Lp a tiratura limitata fatto di lunghe tracce, forse mai come prima si avverte un fare prezioso, art music con notevole capacità narrativa. Specie nella title track potreste seguire storie letterarie: a me ha fatto venire in mente le vicende di Dorian Gray, sia per le surrogate atmosfere notturne dei rientri in casa, sia per le sorprese (puntellate da una intensità crescente degli strumenti) degli avvenimenti nell’abitazione. Una collaborazione di alto livello e, certamente, uno dei lavori più riusciti del sassofonista italiano di tutta la sua carriera.Il percorso sensorio effettuato da Gianni Mimmo assieme alla violinista Alison Blunt in “Lasting Ephemerals” si svolge nella cornice della chiesa di S. Leonard, Shoreditch, a Londra, un posto di cui vi ho già parlato a proposito di una registrazione di Francois Carrier: è sicuramente un luogo speciale per vari motivi, ma musicalmente quello più interessante è l’acustica che premia le pause e le risonanze dei musicisti. In “Lasting Ephemerals” i due musicisti ricorrono alla loro minuziosa preparazione di improvvisatori che si riflette sulla natura evolutiva dei suoni, trasmettendo percezioni pienamente risolte attraverso l’ingaggio dualistico. Per Gianni, questa innata capacità espressiva al soprano, non è certo una novità, ma in questo Lp a tiratura limitata fatto di lunghe tracce, forse mai come prima si avverte un fare prezioso, art music con notevole capacità narrativa. Specie nella title track potreste seguire storie letterarie: a me ha fatto venire in mente le vicende di Dorian Gray, sia per le surrogate atmosfere notturne dei rientri in casa, sia per le sorprese (puntellate da una intensità crescente degli strumenti) degli avvenimenti nell’abitazione. Una collaborazione di alto livello e, certamente, uno dei lavori più riusciti del sassofonista italiano di tutta la sua carriera.
Archivi autore: dipa
allaboutjazz.com – Lasting Ephemerals
Il trentasettesimo volume edito dall’etichetta indipendente Amirani Records è un LP da 180 grammi, stampato in 250 copie numerate, che documenta un concerto completamente improvvisato, tenuto nella chiesa di St. Leonard’s Shoreditch a Londra da Gianni Mimmo al sax soprano e Alison Blunt al violino.
Il lavoro segue la cifra stilistica della Amirani e dello stesso Mimmo: improvvisazione liberissima, interamente basata sull’interazione, ricca di cambiamenti di scena e di forme espressive estreme—nel caso del sopranista sovracuti e armonici, in quello della violinista risonanze di corde ed effetti rumoristici. Tuttavia nei tre brani in programma—la title track, ventidue minuti, impiega l’intera prima facciata—il percorso dialogico dei due musicisti rimane sempre perfettamente leggibile, su linee spezzate e mutevoli, ma anche sempre dotate di in loro particolarissimo lirismo. Ciò rende eccezionalmente nitido il suono, vero protagonista del lavoro, esaltato dalla location, le peculiarità acustiche della quale sono ben percepibili anche nella registrazione, probabilmente perché volutamente cercate dai due protagonisti.
Sono le note basse del soprano a gonfiarsi e risuonare con colori spettacolari grazie alle eco della chiesa, delle quali si avvalgono anche certi sovracuti sul registro più alto e, più in generale, il contrasto timbrico tra le linee dell’ancia e quelle delle corde del violino.
Il confronto timbrico “tra simili” costituisce un ulteriore elemento di pregio del disco, perché non va dimenticato che il soprano ha nella famiglia dei sassofoni lo stesso statuto del violino in quella degli archi: qui i due interagiscono alla pari, permettendo di apprezzarne affinità e differenze.
Così, pur nella sua astrazione da temi melodici e strutture definite, Lasting Ephemerals si mantiene per tutta la sua durata caldo e suggestivo, matericamente legato al suono, e si palesa come un esempio eminente (e poi non così frequente) di improvvisazione radicale apprezzabile anche su supporto registrato.
DMG – Sauna
Featuring Piero Bittolo Bon on alto sax, contrabass, reed/trumpet & electronics, Peter Evans on trumpet & piccolo trumpet, Simone Massaron on electric & acoustic guitars & lapsteel, Glauco Benedetti on tuba and Tommaso Cappellato on drums. You should be familiar with Mr. Bittolo Bon as he has can be found on a dozen+ discs from the El Gallo Rojo, Clean Feed and Long Song labels with Orange Room, Rollerball and A.I.R.E.. The same can be said for guitarist Simone Massaron, who is also found on several discs on Long Song and El Gallo Rojo. Drummer Cappellato has actually recorded with two Downtown units: the Minus One trio with Michael Blake and in Iron Dog with Sarah Bernstein and Stuart Popejoy. Downtown trumpet great, Peter Evans, gets consistent accolades for the many great situations he places himself within.
This disc is nearly 75 minutes long and I listened to the entire offering the other day: I remain immensely impressed. This disc sounds like it was improvised in the studio and the quintet had a good deal of time to explore different strategies or combinations. The one member I was not familiar with is the tuba player, Mr. Benedetti, who is consistently amazing, whether playing bass parts and interacting creatively with all members throughout. No one here seems to care about genres or styles so we never know which direction any piece will take. Hence, the alto sax, trumpet, guitar, tuba & drums are in constant flux switching combinations and interacting on several levels simultaneously. This is one of those discs that I had to keep reminding myself as to who it was since it keeping changing and ends up in all kinds of unexpected places. Mr. Massaron switches to acoustic guitar on one track, playing some bluesy licks while inserts occasional flurries of notes, speeding up and slowing down to add some equally bluesy refrains. An astonishing amount of surprises are in store for those brave enough to listen this entire lengthy epic. Featuring Piero Bittolo Bon on alto sax, contrabass, reed/trumpet & electronics, Peter Evans on trumpet & piccolo trumpet, Simone Massaron on electric & acoustic guitars & lapsteel, Glauco Benedetti on tuba and Tommaso Cappellato on drums. You should be familiar with Mr. Bittolo Bon as he has can be found on a dozen+ discs from the El Gallo Rojo, Clean Feed and Long Song labels with Orange Room, Rollerball and A.I.R.E.. The same can be said for guitarist Simone Massaron, who is also found on several discs on Long Song and El Gallo Rojo. Drummer Cappellato has actually recorded with two Downtown units: the Minus One trio with Michael Blake and in Iron Dog with Sarah Bernstein and Stuart Popejoy. Downtown trumpet great, Peter Evans, gets consistent accolades for the many great situations he places himself within.
This disc is nearly 75 minutes long and I listened to the entire offering the other day: I remain immensely impressed. This disc sounds like it was improvised in the studio and the quintet had a good deal of time to explore different strategies or combinations. The one member I was not familiar with is the tuba player, Mr. Benedetti, who is consistently amazing, whether playing bass parts and interacting creatively with all members throughout. No one here seems to care about genres or styles so we never know which direction any piece will take. Hence, the alto sax, trumpet, guitar, tuba & drums are in constant flux switching combinations and interacting on several levels simultaneously. This is one of those discs that I had to keep reminding myself as to who it was since it keeping changing and ends up in all kinds of unexpected places. Mr. Massaron switches to acoustic guitar on one track, playing some bluesy licks while inserts occasional flurries of notes, speeding up and slowing down to add some equally bluesy refrains. An astonishing amount of surprises are in store for those brave enough to listen this entire lengthy epic.
Musica Jazz – Sauna Session
The Sauna Session è un disco coraggioso, ironico e sfacciatamente bello. Uno di quei dischi che si divertono a picchiettare sulla spalla dell’ascoltatore e a svanirgli di fronte, di corsa. Al suo interno si trovano libera improvvisazione, amore per il suono e il rumore, echi free e contemporanei, nonché
una vena compositiva totalmente votata alla ricerca. È un disco che sicuramente farebbe sentire a casa Braxton, Threadgill e Zorn.
Tra le cose più belle del lavoro ci sono lo stagnante groove di How To Kill Peter Evans With A Rotating Tube e i contrasti rumoristici di Ballad Of The Martian Rovers. Da riascoltare con attenzione è invece la cavalcata free di The Mighty Cavata Bros, che mostra senza esitazione a che punto sia arrivata la qualità della ricerca improvvisativa di Bittolo Bon e dei suoi compagni. ll tutto è rappresentato a meraviglia dall’ottimo progetto grafico di Lucia D’Errico.The Sauna Session è un disco coraggioso, ironico e sfacciatamente bello. Uno di quei dischi che si divertono a picchiettare sulla spalla dell’ascoltatore e a svanirgli di fronte, di corsa. Al suo interno si trovano libera improvvisazione, amore per il suono e il rumore, echi free e contemporanei, nonché
una vena compositiva totalmente votata alla ricerca. È un disco che sicuramente farebbe sentire a casa Braxton, Threadgill e Zorn.
Tra le cose più belle del lavoro ci sono lo stagnante groove di How To Kill Peter Evans With A Rotating Tube e i contrasti rumoristici di Ballad Of The Martian Rovers. Da riascoltare con attenzione è invece la cavalcata free di The Mighty Cavata Bros, che mostra senza esitazione a che punto sia arrivata la qualità della ricerca improvvisativa di Bittolo Bon e dei suoi compagni. ll tutto è rappresentato a meraviglia dall’ottimo progetto grafico di Lucia D’Errico.
Todd McComb – Sauna Session
The Sauna Session by Piero Bittolo Bon’s Lacus Amoenus featuring Peter Evans is also attracting similar positive attention, even if it seems to be a more obscure release from my perspective. This is an Italian quartet, adding the famous US trumpeter, with a colorful & nicely produced album on the Italian Long Song Records. There is much to enjoy about The Sauna Session — I especially liked the opening track, featuring the tuba (with no string bass in this group) — but I also find the many stylistic references to popular music to be rather literal. This extends from various kinds of rock & metal, as typical of many improvisatory albums these days, even to country music (which is rather literal on track #5), blues & folk. I would tend to favor more of a transfiguration of this material, but here I believe we’re supposed to enjoy the sounds for their own sake, as part of a (somewhat prototypical) postmodern collage. This is another long album (74 minutes), with much lively interaction and a carefree spirit. I found it rather striking, despite some different preferences, and well worth hearing.The Sauna Session by Piero Bittolo Bon’s Lacus Amoenus featuring Peter Evans is also attracting similar positive attention, even if it seems to be a more obscure release from my perspective. This is an Italian quartet, adding the famous US trumpeter, with a colorful & nicely produced album on the Italian Long Song Records. There is much to enjoy about The Sauna Session — I especially liked the opening track, featuring the tuba (with no string bass in this group) — but I also find the many stylistic references to popular music to be rather literal. This extends from various kinds of rock & metal, as typical of many improvisatory albums these days, even to country music (which is rather literal on track #5), blues & folk. I would tend to favor more of a transfiguration of this material, but here I believe we’re supposed to enjoy the sounds for their own sake, as part of a (somewhat prototypical) postmodern collage. This is another long album (74 minutes), with much lively interaction and a carefree spirit. I found it rather striking, despite some different preferences, and well worth hearing.
DMG-Vancouver Tapes
Featuring Tiziano Tononi on drums & percussion, William Parker on acoustic bass and Daniele Cavallanti on tenor & baritone saxes, ney & flute. This was recorded at the Vancouver Jazz Festival on June 28th of 1999 but has not been released until now when Mr. Tononi found it in the bottom of a chest full of rare recordings. It contains music from tow sets and it quite long (76 minutes). Those of you who read the DMG newsletter weekly certainly know who Tononi and Cavallanti are, as they have worked together over many years with more than a dozen discs from different groups: Nexus, Black Hole Quartet and most recently a superb tribute to Don Cherry on the Nubop label reviewed a couple of weeks ago (August, 2014).
The Udu Calls Trio is phenomenal, stripped down to three titans who are/were ready for action! Besides Don Cherry, Cavallanti and/or Tononi have done tributes to John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman and Rahsaan Roland Kirk, each one a jazz legend and influence on hundreds of musicians worldwide. This trio embodies that same strong, searching spirit. Cavallanti plays tenor for the first section, blowing up a storm backed by a full throttle rhythm team. He eventually switches to bari sax and continues to blow up a storm. There is some earthy, groove-like magic going on about midway through the first set that makes me feel so good. The trio sound as if they have been playing together forever since they remain connected on several levels throughout. Building it up and then sailing down to calmer currents. A great way to start the day and help inspire us to new heights.Featuring Tiziano Tononi on drums & percussion, William Parker on acoustic bass and Daniele Cavallanti on tenor & baritone saxes, ney & flute. This was recorded at the Vancouver Jazz Festival on June 28th of 1999 but has not been released until now when Mr. Tononi found it in the bottom of a chest full of rare recordings. It contains music from tow sets and it quite long (76 minutes). Those of you who read the DMG newsletter weekly certainly know who Tononi and Cavallanti are, as they have worked together over many years with more than a dozen discs from different groups: Nexus, Black Hole Quartet and most recently a superb tribute to Don Cherry on the Nubop label reviewed a couple of weeks ago (August, 2014).
The Udu Calls Trio is phenomenal, stripped down to three titans who are/were ready for action! Besides Don Cherry, Cavallanti and/or Tononi have done tributes to John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman and Rahsaan Roland Kirk, each one a jazz legend and influence on hundreds of musicians worldwide. This trio embodies that same strong, searching spirit. Cavallanti plays tenor for the first section, blowing up a storm backed by a full throttle rhythm team. He eventually switches to bari sax and continues to blow up a storm. There is some earthy, groove-like magic going on about midway through the first set that makes me feel so good. The trio sound as if they have been playing together forever since they remain connected on several levels throughout. Building it up and then sailing down to calmer currents. A great way to start the day and help inspire us to new heights.
Sauna Sessions-JazzIt
Energia, fantasia, infiniti incastri timbrici e su tutto, una voracità insaziabile verso l’improvvisazione. L’ensemble, guidato dal polistrumentista Piero Bittolo Bon, fa ascoltare una musica eccitante e ispirata, che sa cambiar pelle in continuazione tanto da passare da ballate dal sapore folk (Ballad OƒThe Martian Rovers) a un certo minimalismo psichedelico (Turtles All The Way Down). Affascinanti le lunghe sezioni dove l^azione collettiva è di travolgente bellezza. (LV)
Energia, fantasia, infiniti incastri timbrici e su tutto, una voracità insaziabile verso l’improvvisazione. L’ensemble, guidato dal polistrumentista Piero Bittolo Bon, fa ascoltare una musica eccitante e ispirata, che sa cambiar pelle in continuazione tanto da passare da ballate dal sapore folk (Ballad OƒThe Martian Rovers) a un certo minimalismo psichedelico (Turtles All The Way Down). Affascinanti le lunghe sezioni dove l^azione collettiva è di travolgente bellezza. (LV)
William Parker
Place of Birth: Bronx, NY
Date of Birth: January 10, 1952
Education: Private studies with Richard Davis, Jimmy Garrison, Wilbur Ware and Paul West.
Fellowships, Prizes, Grants, Honors, Residencies
-New York State Music Fund commission of “Double Sunrise Over Neptune,” performed at Vision Festival XII in June 2007-Named as one of the “50 Greatest New York Musicians of All Time” in Time Out New York, March 2007
-Residency at Luther College’s “A Sense of Vocation” program in Decorah, Iowa, 2007
-Nameless Sound Resounding Vision Award, Houston, TX, 2006
-Residency at Hallwalls in Buffalo, NY, 2006
-Jazz Musician of the Year, Musica Jazz (Italian Magazine), 2005
-Participant in Visiting Artist Program at Haystack in Deer Isle, Maine, 2004
-Other Minds Festival commission of “Spirit Catcher for Four Musicians and Tape,” in San Francisco, CA March 2003
-Residency at the Djerassi Foundation in Woodside, CA, 2003
-Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust Commission of “Universal Tonality,” in 2002
-New York State Council on the Arts Commissioning Award, 2000
-Residency at Bennington College, Bennington, VT, 1991
-Residency at the Rotterdam Conservatory, 1991 and 1994
-New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) Artist Fellowship, 1988
Work, Highlights
2007: Premiered “Double Sunrise Over Neptune,” which was presented at Vision Festival XII and commissioned, recorded and commercially issued by Arts for Art with support from the New York State Music Fund. Recorded Alphaville Suite for double quartet. Premiered multimedia piece, “Expanded Humanity” with students from Humanities Preparatory Academy (NYC) and the Amistad Academy (Hartford, CT).
2006: Premiered “Lakota Chamber Music,” for woodwinds and “Light In The Hall of Whispers,” for string ensemble. Residency at Hallwalls in Buffalo, NY and performed theatre/Dance/Music Piece “Looking For Cookie Gilchrist” in collaboration with Patricia Nicholson.
2005: Played at Tel Aviv Jazz Festival with Roy Campbell’s Pyramid Trio, Voted Jazz musician of the year in Italy by Musica Jazz. Taught at the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music.
2002: “Universal Tonality” premiered at Roulette, commissioned by the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust.
2001: William Parker Quartet formed, recorded “O’Neal’s Porch.” Taught at the Rotterdam Conservatory. Premiered project entitled The Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield.
2000: William Parker Quartet formed, recorded “O’Neal’s Porch, recognized in 2001 by the New York Times as one of the Best Jazz Albums of the Year. “Kaleidoscope” premiered at the Fifth Annual Vision Festival, commissioned by Arts for Art with funds provided by NYSCA and performed by the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. Premiered “Big Orange Mountain,” performed by the Kitchen House Blend Band.
1999: The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra performed at Alice Tully Hall.
1998: The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra and Dance performed “Mass for the Healing of the World” at Verona.
1995: Premiered 10 compositions in an 8-week season with the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra at the Knitting Factory. Composed music for the dance-drama “The Shadow People.”
1994: Founded the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. Composed new music for Czechoslovak-American Marionette Theater, as well as arranging and re-orchestrating music from Dvorak’s opera “Rusalka.”
1993: Founded sextet In Order to Survive, which performed at Roulette and the Knitting Factory.
1991: Participated in Total Music meeting, Berlin, Germany. Composed music for Marcus Dance Theater, “The Generation Table,” performed at PS 122, and for Denis Charles Dance Troupe. Toured Japan, England, France and Germany with Cecil Taylor’s Feel Trio.
1988-89: Co-organized Second Sound Unity Festival, New York City. Presented “Vision on an Ordinary Day,” a composition for large ensemble, with poetry, voice and dance, at Cooper Hewitt Museum.
1986 – 87: Composed and presented “Vision Peace and Battle Cries,” a modern ballet for large orchestra with poetry and voice in collaboration with choreographer Patricia Nicholson at La MaMa. Toured Japan with Billy Bang and Europe with Cecil Taylor.
1985: Composed music for documentary shown on PBS, “Community Dig.”
1984: Co-organized “Sound Unity,” a five day international festival at CUANDO, New York City.
1983: Premiered composition, “Inheritance” for three voices, bassoon, alto flute, double bass and dance in Downtown Music Series at Third Street Music School.
1982: Premiered “A Thousand Cranes,” an opera for orchestra, dance and a chorus of 1000 school children, performed at opening of UN Second Special Session for Disarmament, June 1982.
1981: Concerts for solo bass in Berlin. Composed “Peace Suite” a composition for large ensemble, voices, dance and poetry. Toured Europe with Cecil Taylor Unit.
1980: Composed and performed “Night Skies,” a modern ballet in collaboration with choreographer Patricia Nicholson. Joined Cecil Taylor Unit.
1978: CETA Artist Program with Theatre for Forgotten. Composed for many of theater productions and performed in prisons and hospitals.
1975: Performed at the Five Spot with Don Cherry.
1974: Performed with Cecil Taylor’s big band at Carnegie Hall
William Parker is an improviser, and composer. He plays the bass, shakuhachi, double reeds, tuba, donson ngoni and gembri. He was born in 1952 in the Bronx, New York. He has studied bass with Richard Davis, Art Davis, Milt Hinton, Wilber Ware, and Jimmy Garrison.
William Parker entered the music scene in 1971, playing at Studio We, Studio Rivbea, Hilly’s on The Bowery, the Salt and Pepper club and The Baby Grand, and quickly became a sought after bass player in the New York music scene. He has played with many musicians from the avant-garde such as, Bill Dixon, Sunny Murray, Charles Tyler, Billy Higgins, Charles Brackeen, Alan Silva, Frank Wright, Frank Lowe, Rashid Ali, Donald Ayler, Sonny Simmons, Jeanne Lee, Gunter Hampel, Karl Berger Dave Burrell, Don Cherry, Cecil Taylor, Jimmy Lyons, Milford Graves and with traditionalists like Walter Bishop, Sr. and Maxine Sullivan.
William’s early collaborations with the dancer and choreographer Patricia Nicholson created a large repertoire of composed music for ensembles ranging from solo works to big band projects. Parker played in the Cecil Taylor Unit from 1980 through 1991. He has also performed with musicians from the AACM such as Muhal Richard Abrams, Roscoe Mitchell, Henry Threadgill, Anthony Braxton, Wadada Leo Smith, Ernest Dawkins, and The Art Ensemble of Chicago.
WParLnoonan-1
In addition to his work with artists in the United Stated, William Parker has developed a strong relationship with musicians in the European Improvised Music scene such as Peter Kowald, Peter Brotzmann, Han Bennink, Tony Oxley, Derek Bailey, Franz Hautzinger, Tomasz Stanko, John Tchicai , Louis Sclavis, Conny Bauer, Hannes Bauer, and Louis Moholo.
In 1994 William began leading his own bands, In Order To Survive, and The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. 2001 marked a turn toward a more universal sound by working with drummer Hamid Drake on O’Neal’s Porch. The Raining on the Moon Quintet followed, with addition of vocalist Leena Conquest to the O’Neals Porch quartet. Most notable among many recent projects is the Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield.
William has taught at Bennington College, NYU, The New England Conservatory of Music, Cal Arts, New School and The Rotterdam Conservatory of Music. He has also taught music workshops in cities throughout the world including Paris, Berlin and Tokyo and the Lower East Side of New York.
Parker is also a theorist and author of several books including the Sound Journal (centeringmusic), Document Humanum (centeringmusic) , Music and the Shadow People (centeringmusic) and The Mayor of Punkville (centeringmusic).
Steve Greenlee of the Boston Globe stated in July 2002, “William Parker has emerged as the most important leader of the current avant-garde scene in jazz.” He is working in many of the more important groups in this genre, some of the most prestigious being his own, i.e. The Curtis Mayfield Project, Little Huey Creative Orchestra, In Order to Survive, William Parker’s Quartet and other groups. Mr. Parker is one of the most important composers in our time period, he is also a poet whose words are beginning to be heard in various media: in print, in song and in his theatre piece, “Music and the Shadow People.”s/performances for young people that he has conducted, both in the USA and in Europe. This has been for him amongst some of his most important work and greatest successes.”
In ‘95 the Village Voice characterized William Parker as “the most consistently brilliant free jazz bassist of all time.”
Mr. Parker has released over 20 albums under his leadership. In 1995 after years of obscurity as a leader, he released Flowers Grow In My Room, on the Centering label. This was the first documentation of the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. This CD hit #1 on the CMJ charts and The Little Huey began to tour. They have performed in the Verona Jazz Festival and Banlieues Bleues among others. William Parker’s new Quartet has hit with rave reviews for both albums “O’Neals Porch” and “Raining on the Moon.”
These releases and their success highlight William Parker as an outstanding composer and bandleader. From the beginning of his musical career, William Parker has been prolific, composing music all of the music for his projects. His compositional skills span a range including operas, oratorios, ballets, film scores, and soliloquies for solo instruments. He has also successfully explored diverse concepts in instrumentation for large and small ensembles.
William Parker is a poet, with three volumes published thus far: “Music Is,” “Document Humanum,” and “The Shadow People.”
“He (William Parker) is something of a father figure” stated Larry Blumenfeld in a New York Times article. He has looked for and encouraged young talent and has been a mentor to many young musicians.
Place of Birth: Bronx, NY
Date of Birth: January 10, 1952
Education: Private studies with Richard Davis, Jimmy Garrison, Wilbur Ware and Paul West.
Fellowships, Prizes, Grants, Honors, Residencies
-New York State Music Fund commission of “Double Sunrise Over Neptune,” performed at Vision Festival XII in June 2007-Named as one of the “50 Greatest New York Musicians of All Time” in Time Out New York, March 2007
-Residency at Luther College’s “A Sense of Vocation” program in Decorah, Iowa, 2007
-Nameless Sound Resounding Vision Award, Houston, TX, 2006
-Residency at Hallwalls in Buffalo, NY, 2006
-Jazz Musician of the Year, Musica Jazz (Italian Magazine), 2005
-Participant in Visiting Artist Program at Haystack in Deer Isle, Maine, 2004
-Other Minds Festival commission of “Spirit Catcher for Four Musicians and Tape,” in San Francisco, CA March 2003
-Residency at the Djerassi Foundation in Woodside, CA, 2003
-Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust Commission of “Universal Tonality,” in 2002
-New York State Council on the Arts Commissioning Award, 2000
-Residency at Bennington College, Bennington, VT, 1991
-Residency at the Rotterdam Conservatory, 1991 and 1994
-New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) Artist Fellowship, 1988
Work, Highlights
2007: Premiered “Double Sunrise Over Neptune,” which was presented at Vision Festival XII and commissioned, recorded and commercially issued by Arts for Art with support from the New York State Music Fund. Recorded Alphaville Suite for double quartet. Premiered multimedia piece, “Expanded Humanity” with students from Humanities Preparatory Academy (NYC) and the Amistad Academy (Hartford, CT).
2006: Premiered “Lakota Chamber Music,” for woodwinds and “Light In The Hall of Whispers,” for string ensemble. Residency at Hallwalls in Buffalo, NY and performed theatre/Dance/Music Piece “Looking For Cookie Gilchrist” in collaboration with Patricia Nicholson.
2005: Played at Tel Aviv Jazz Festival with Roy Campbell’s Pyramid Trio, Voted Jazz musician of the year in Italy by Musica Jazz. Taught at the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music.
2002: “Universal Tonality” premiered at Roulette, commissioned by the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust.
2001: William Parker Quartet formed, recorded “O’Neal’s Porch.” Taught at the Rotterdam Conservatory. Premiered project entitled The Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield.
2000: William Parker Quartet formed, recorded “O’Neal’s Porch, recognized in 2001 by the New York Times as one of the Best Jazz Albums of the Year. “Kaleidoscope” premiered at the Fifth Annual Vision Festival, commissioned by Arts for Art with funds provided by NYSCA and performed by the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. Premiered “Big Orange Mountain,” performed by the Kitchen House Blend Band.
1999: The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra performed at Alice Tully Hall.
1998: The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra and Dance performed “Mass for the Healing of the World” at Verona.
1995: Premiered 10 compositions in an 8-week season with the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra at the Knitting Factory. Composed music for the dance-drama “The Shadow People.”
1994: Founded the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. Composed new music for Czechoslovak-American Marionette Theater, as well as arranging and re-orchestrating music from Dvorak’s opera “Rusalka.”
1993: Founded sextet In Order to Survive, which performed at Roulette and the Knitting Factory.
1991: Participated in Total Music meeting, Berlin, Germany. Composed music for Marcus Dance Theater, “The Generation Table,” performed at PS 122, and for Denis Charles Dance Troupe. Toured Japan, England, France and Germany with Cecil Taylor’s Feel Trio.
1988-89: Co-organized Second Sound Unity Festival, New York City. Presented “Vision on an Ordinary Day,” a composition for large ensemble, with poetry, voice and dance, at Cooper Hewitt Museum.
1986 – 87: Composed and presented “Vision Peace and Battle Cries,” a modern ballet for large orchestra with poetry and voice in collaboration with choreographer Patricia Nicholson at La MaMa. Toured Japan with Billy Bang and Europe with Cecil Taylor.
1985: Composed music for documentary shown on PBS, “Community Dig.”
1984: Co-organized “Sound Unity,” a five day international festival at CUANDO, New York City.
1983: Premiered composition, “Inheritance” for three voices, bassoon, alto flute, double bass and dance in Downtown Music Series at Third Street Music School.
1982: Premiered “A Thousand Cranes,” an opera for orchestra, dance and a chorus of 1000 school children, performed at opening of UN Second Special Session for Disarmament, June 1982.
1981: Concerts for solo bass in Berlin. Composed “Peace Suite” a composition for large ensemble, voices, dance and poetry. Toured Europe with Cecil Taylor Unit.
1980: Composed and performed “Night Skies,” a modern ballet in collaboration with choreographer Patricia Nicholson. Joined Cecil Taylor Unit.
1978: CETA Artist Program with Theatre for Forgotten. Composed for many of theater productions and performed in prisons and hospitals.
1975: Performed at the Five Spot with Don Cherry.
1974: Performed with Cecil Taylor’s big band at Carnegie Hall
William Parker is an improviser, and composer. He plays the bass, shakuhachi, double reeds, tuba, donson ngoni and gembri. He was born in 1952 in the Bronx, New York. He has studied bass with Richard Davis, Art Davis, Milt Hinton, Wilber Ware, and Jimmy Garrison.
William Parker entered the music scene in 1971, playing at Studio We, Studio Rivbea, Hilly’s on The Bowery, the Salt and Pepper club and The Baby Grand, and quickly became a sought after bass player in the New York music scene. He has played with many musicians from the avant-garde such as, Bill Dixon, Sunny Murray, Charles Tyler, Billy Higgins, Charles Brackeen, Alan Silva, Frank Wright, Frank Lowe, Rashid Ali, Donald Ayler, Sonny Simmons, Jeanne Lee, Gunter Hampel, Karl Berger Dave Burrell, Don Cherry, Cecil Taylor, Jimmy Lyons, Milford Graves and with traditionalists like Walter Bishop, Sr. and Maxine Sullivan.
William’s early collaborations with the dancer and choreographer Patricia Nicholson created a large repertoire of composed music for ensembles ranging from solo works to big band projects. Parker played in the Cecil Taylor Unit from 1980 through 1991. He has also performed with musicians from the AACM such as Muhal Richard Abrams, Roscoe Mitchell, Henry Threadgill, Anthony Braxton, Wadada Leo Smith, Ernest Dawkins, and The Art Ensemble of Chicago.
WParLnoonan-1
In addition to his work with artists in the United Stated, William Parker has developed a strong relationship with musicians in the European Improvised Music scene such as Peter Kowald, Peter Brotzmann, Han Bennink, Tony Oxley, Derek Bailey, Franz Hautzinger, Tomasz Stanko, John Tchicai , Louis Sclavis, Conny Bauer, Hannes Bauer, and Louis Moholo.
In 1994 William began leading his own bands, In Order To Survive, and The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. 2001 marked a turn toward a more universal sound by working with drummer Hamid Drake on O’Neal’s Porch. The Raining on the Moon Quintet followed, with addition of vocalist Leena Conquest to the O’Neals Porch quartet. Most notable among many recent projects is the Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield.
William has taught at Bennington College, NYU, The New England Conservatory of Music, Cal Arts, New School and The Rotterdam Conservatory of Music. He has also taught music workshops in cities throughout the world including Paris, Berlin and Tokyo and the Lower East Side of New York.
Parker is also a theorist and author of several books including the Sound Journal (centeringmusic), Document Humanum (centeringmusic) , Music and the Shadow People (centeringmusic) and The Mayor of Punkville (centeringmusic).
Steve Greenlee of the Boston Globe stated in July 2002, “William Parker has emerged as the most important leader of the current avant-garde scene in jazz.” He is working in many of the more important groups in this genre, some of the most prestigious being his own, i.e. The Curtis Mayfield Project, Little Huey Creative Orchestra, In Order to Survive, William Parker’s Quartet and other groups. Mr. Parker is one of the most important composers in our time period, he is also a poet whose words are beginning to be heard in various media: in print, in song and in his theatre piece, “Music and the Shadow People.”s/performances for young people that he has conducted, both in the USA and in Europe. This has been for him amongst some of his most important work and greatest successes.”
In ‘95 the Village Voice characterized William Parker as “the most consistently brilliant free jazz bassist of all time.”
Mr. Parker has released over 20 albums under his leadership. In 1995 after years of obscurity as a leader, he released Flowers Grow In My Room, on the Centering label. This was the first documentation of the Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra. This CD hit #1 on the CMJ charts and The Little Huey began to tour. They have performed in the Verona Jazz Festival and Banlieues Bleues among others. William Parker’s new Quartet has hit with rave reviews for both albums “O’Neals Porch” and “Raining on the Moon.”
These releases and their success highlight William Parker as an outstanding composer and bandleader. From the beginning of his musical career, William Parker has been prolific, composing music all of the music for his projects. His compositional skills span a range including operas, oratorios, ballets, film scores, and soliloquies for solo instruments. He has also successfully explored diverse concepts in instrumentation for large and small ensembles.
William Parker is a poet, with three volumes published thus far: “Music Is,” “Document Humanum,” and “The Shadow People.”
“He (William Parker) is something of a father figure” stated Larry Blumenfeld in a New York Times article. He has looked for and encouraged young talent and has been a mentor to many young musicians.
Kathodik – Lasting Ephemerals
Innocenza e determinazione, nella formula espressiva proposta dal duo sax soprano/violino, della coppia anglo/italiana Gianni Mimmo / Alison Blunt.
Una visione impro, cameristico/contemporanea, rodata a fondo attraverso un lungo tour fra Inghilterra, Finlandia, Germania, Italia e Stati Uniti.
Fermata su prezioso vinile in tiratura limitata a 250 copie.
Son ampie zone melodiche, alternate a calibrate turbolenze tonali, quelle proposte durante la data londinese del 26 Giugno 2013, presso la St. Leonard’s Shoreditch Church.
Tre lunghe composizioni istantanee, fatte di contrasti, progressioni d’insieme e improvvisi rilasci energico/melodici.
Un approccio che prevede strade parallele e congiunzioni strumentali in stato d’evidente grazia.
Come altro definire difatti, il raccoglimento di violino e il dialogo, pigolante e circolare di Elliptical Birds?
O l’improvviso mostrarsi d’umori Ayler, fino all’affondo caotico/trattenuto di Scherzo?
E gli equilibrismi ad intermittenza, scultorei e mutevoli, in continuo rilancio chiaroscurale, dell’iniziale Lasting Ephemerals?
Stato di grazia, pratica quotidiana e reciproco, profondo rispetto.
Il tutto sudato e assemblato in scioltezza, data su data, palco su palco.
Con impigliate fra le corde del violino, tutta una serie di microscopiche suggestioni popolari, che non sarebbe male, esplorar a fondo in futuro.
Silenzio, concentrazione e slancio.
Il rischio, l’imprevisto e l’inesplorato, fedeli compagni di viaggio.Innocenza e determinazione, nella formula espressiva proposta dal duo sax soprano/violino, della coppia anglo/italiana Gianni Mimmo / Alison Blunt.
Una visione impro, cameristico/contemporanea, rodata a fondo attraverso un lungo tour fra Inghilterra, Finlandia, Germania, Italia e Stati Uniti.
Fermata su prezioso vinile in tiratura limitata a 250 copie.
Son ampie zone melodiche, alternate a calibrate turbolenze tonali, quelle proposte durante la data londinese del 26 Giugno 2013, presso la St. Leonard’s Shoreditch Church.
Tre lunghe composizioni istantanee, fatte di contrasti, progressioni d’insieme e improvvisi rilasci energico/melodici.
Un approccio che prevede strade parallele e congiunzioni strumentali in stato d’evidente grazia.
Come altro definire difatti, il raccoglimento di violino e il dialogo, pigolante e circolare di Elliptical Birds?
O l’improvviso mostrarsi d’umori Ayler, fino all’affondo caotico/trattenuto di Scherzo?
E gli equilibrismi ad intermittenza, scultorei e mutevoli, in continuo rilancio chiaroscurale, dell’iniziale Lasting Ephemerals?
Stato di grazia, pratica quotidiana e reciproco, profondo rispetto.
Il tutto sudato e assemblato in scioltezza, data su data, palco su palco.
Con impigliate fra le corde del violino, tutta una serie di microscopiche suggestioni popolari, che non sarebbe male, esplorar a fondo in futuro.
Silenzio, concentrazione e slancio.
Il rischio, l’imprevisto e l’inesplorato, fedeli compagni di viaggio.
The Vancouver Tapes
Tiziano Tononi – Drums, Congas, Gong, Bells, Whistles Daniele Cavallanti – Tenor and Baritone Saxes, Ney Flute, Bells William Parker – Double Bass A lost and found gem documenting the first meeting ever of two Italian avant jazz masters with the NY jazz bass giant. Totally live and improvised! Tiziano Tononi says: “Rockin’ the Vaults…sometimes you know, sometimes you don’t, what you find may become a great deal of a surprise, and this time we found out something very unusual like a mini-disc recording!!! What’s that? I’m pretty sure some people don’t even know what a mini disc was, anyway the music contained herein still sounded fresh and surprising after a few years, so I say to myself “why not?”, and here we are! Years after the Long Song Record “Smoke Inside” we got the smokin’ side of a joyful, powerful and subtle trio of characters, praising the Gods of music and improvisation through instruments tuned on a common language, burning, that night in Vancouver, the wall/bridges of the distance from Milano to New York.
Tiziano Tononi – Drums, Congas, Gong, Bells, Whistles Daniele Cavallanti – Tenor and Baritone Saxes, Ney Flute, Bells William Parker – Double Bass A lost and found gem documenting the first meeting ever of two Italian avant jazz masters with the NY jazz bass giant. Totally live and improvised! Tiziano Tononi says: “Rockin’ the Vaults…sometimes you know, sometimes you don’t, what you find may become a great deal of a surprise, and this time we found out something very unusual like a mini-disc recording!!! What’s that? I’m pretty sure some people don’t even know what a mini disc was, anyway the music contained herein still sounded fresh and surprising after a few years, so I say to myself “why not?”, and here we are! Years after the Long Song Record “Smoke Inside” we got the smokin’ side of a joyful, powerful and subtle trio of characters, praising the Gods of music and improvisation through instruments tuned on a common language, burning, that night in Vancouver, the wall/bridges of the distance from Milano to New York.