July Update

So it’s been a long while since I’ve really had anything to write here – I’ve been busy moving in to and setting up my new place in Cambridge, and I’ve been quite busy making ends meet and making good on all of my obligations.  There hasn’t been much time for the type of quasi-indulgent-self-reflection that blog writing takes, but today I have a lazy afternoon all to myself.

Music in July has been a very positive thing – I’ve been playing all over town, and I have a lot of great projects coming in the future.  I’ve continued to play with the Roma Band, which is always an interesting cultural experience (and excellent ear and endurance training), and I’ve continued to play on and off again with the Beantown Swing Orchestra.  Special thanks goes to all the folks that came to the Joe Moffett duo gig on July 12th, and to Ben Stepner for recording it for all to hear over the web.  Hopefully the trio work we did with James will get a much-needed update in the next few weeks.

August promises to be a really productive month: I have several interesting gigs coming up: tonight I’m playing with Gleason’s Twins in J.P., and next week – on Thursday (August 6th) – I’m playing at the Regattabar with the Nick Grondin group.  Both groups should be an interesting, entertaining experience.  Next week, I’m playing Schubert’s 8th symphony in western MA as a ringer in a youth symphony.  I’ve had to work on honing my alto clef chops, and it’s reminding me how much I enjoyed practicing classical trombone techniques.

I’m also planning a new project with Kathy Olson, a killer bari sax player (and my sweetie), in which we’ll play music inspired by the classic Gerry Mulligan and Bob Brookmeyer quartet.  We play at La Luna Cafe on August 21st, and another gig is on the horizon.  I’ll post music from that project as soon as it gets recorded.

This site will change some in August, as well.  As you’ve probably already noticed, I’ve started to use Twitter as a way to bridge in-between major blog posts – I like it because it’s easy and fun and a very low commitment on my time.  Also expect a major rehaul of the “media” page – in a few weeks it will be much easier to use, and divided more clearly into specific projects.  I want to get some of my more straight-ahead jazz work on the page as well as some classical trombone examples.  I’ve also been working on a few posts which will see the light of day in the next week or so.  I’ve been recording solo trombone improvisations, and a post with my thoughts on the project will appear soon (with recorded examples), as well as a post about the great Lawrence Brown which I’ve been struggling to complete since late June.

And lastly: thanks to all the people who have checked stuff out on the site – my old post on Mississippi John Hurt seems to be the most popular, which is cool with me, and I really appreciate everyone who has listened to the music and come to the gigs.

Leave a comment

Filed under Update

Duet with Joe Moffett

emerson

Recorded on July 12th, 2009 at a house party concert in Brookline, MA

Enjoy Your Symptom!

 Several Short Pieces/Just A Little Something

Joe Moffett: trumpet, tapes
Randy Pingrey: trombone, tapes

Recorded by Ben Stepner

Enjoy Your Symptom! and the short tunes are improvisations.  Just a Little Something (sheet music, for those who are interested, is here) is a composition that I wrote for the occasion.

Leave a comment

Filed under Duets, Jazz

A Melancholy Science

adornoa

Here are tracks from my new trio’s most recent performance – at Rutman’s Violins on June 26th, 2009:

Thriving Off a Riff

A Shrug of the Shoulders (formerly “Piece for Trio”)

An Excuse for Laziness (formerly “Tapes”)

Featuring:

Randy Pingrey on trombone, water
James Wylie on alto sax, clarinet, and tape
Joe Moffett on trumpet and tape

Recorded by Dan VanHassel (thanks Dan!)

If you’re interested in hearing more here are the same tunes, a few days earlier, in rehearsal.

A word or two about the compositions: the three tunes we played at the event were written specifically for that concert.  My goal was to strip back some of the layers of composition, in order to try to reveal the thing – or anything – that lies underneath.  From Godard’s movie My Life to Live: “A bird is an animal with an inside and an outside. Remove the outside, there’s the inside. Remove the inside and you see the soul.”  If you similarly remove the outside and inside of composition, what is the remainder?  This is my melancholy science.

Thriving Off a Riff is based on a Webern string quartet, but only in the loosest of terms.  Some of the pitch material is kept, and I try to maintain a similar sense of pacing and form.  The goal for me was to show, in some small way, the inadequacy of pitch as an expressive device.  That at a certain point, pitch fails to express some of the expressions that are most basic and essential for us to express.  I chose to base the piece after Webern because of his connection to and mastery of pitch, and to show that (if only to myself) there is more to his craft than the clever reordering of pitch rows.  This aspect – pitch – was the first compositional layer I chose to peel back.

A Shrug of the Shoulders is an attempt to give aesthetic weight to failure and incompetence, much in the same spirit as Samuel Beckett, whose words started this blog two months ago.  I’m interested in investigating the point at which virtuosity breaks down and becomes irrelevant to the musical goals.  The compositional challenge has an interesting proposal: how do you write music which remains interesting (or at least sympathetic) yet embraces failure?  Do you go for charming impotence, humorous ignorance, or (preferably) do you go for something deeper?  This aspect – virtuosity – was the second compositional layer I chose to peel back.

An Excuse for Laziness examines the metaphorical end-of-the-line for composition.  The compositional aspect, instead of relying on pitch or form or other written aspects, is based on orchestration – each player is limited to playing with certain cliche sounds from early jazz performance practice – and on the prerecorded tapes which James and Joe manipulate on old, barely functional tape players which they didn’t necessarily know how to operate.  My goal, in the loftiest and most pretentious way of putting it, was to try to capture an aural sense of oldness, to show that at the eleventh hour it is improssible to remain timelessly hip and that sooner or later everyone looks at least a little old-fashioned.  Was it a success?  Well, it’s a topic I’ll certainly have to come back to.  This aspect – composition, itself – was the third and last compositional layer I chose to peel back.

After all this: what remains?  I’m not yet sure.  Check out the tracks, and tell me what you think.

And, as if that wasn’t enough for me to blabber on about, here is my arrangement of Raffi’s Baby Beluga, which was performed by the Comprovised All-Stars:

Baby Beluga

Or, if you prefer:


 
I’m extremely grateful for all the wonderful performers that you hear on these tracks, and deserving of particular thanks is Travis Alford and Dan VanHassel for arranging the concert and inviting me to bring my weirdo stuff as well as Joe and James, who play so wonderfully (and musically!) on the trio tracks.

Thank you very much for listening!

2 Comments

Filed under Trio

None but the lonely trumpet…

davedouglas

Dave Douglas on solo brass playing at Destination:OUT

Brilliant!

Leave a comment

Filed under Solo Trombone

Chasing after Derek Bailey (Trio and Part Two of my Solo Experiment)

No time to write right now, but I wanted to put up a sneak peak of my very new project with a trio of horns.  These are the three tunes we’re going to play tomorrow night at Rutman’s.  James was so kind as to bring his recording device to the rehearsal:

Thrashing on a Riff
Piece for Trio
Tapes

Working with James (the saxophonist) and Joe (the trumpeter) is a real pleasure – they are both so wonderful!  Please come on 6/26 and check out how these pieces have developed since we recorded them a few days ago.

I’ve also continued to work on solo playing.  Here are a few tracks I recorded on the 22nd or 23rd:

Five
Six

It’s a small step forward in the development of a certain type of solo voice.  I’ll try and update later, with my thoughts on what I’ve worked on since my last entry.

1 Comment

Filed under Solo Trombone, Trio

Solo Trombone

There is this tradition of solo trombone improvising.  In Derek Bailey’s book on improvisation:

The most interesting soloists to my ears often turn out to be trombonists.  Paul Rutherford and George Lewis, in their different ways, both seem to make improvisation the basis of their solo playing and also take advantage of the “singleness” of the solo situation; happy for the music to sound like one person, playing alone.     pg.109

Well, that sounds like an interesting thing to explore!  Today, on a whim, I recorded some solo improvisations.

One
Two
Three
Four

I’m working on developing a solo language.  I have to say, it’s challenging for me to improvise all by myself for any extended period of time – I think the longest track is two or three minutes, and most of them are closer to half that.  There are stories about Anthony Braxton and Roscoe Mitchell really focusing on individual details of music in order to extend their improvisations, and I can totally understand why.  My personal favorite is the fourth track, because it has that focus which is lacking in the other three.

I’ve also never quite wrapped my head around what Derek Bailey means by “singleness”, at least in the sense that, desipite working on solo playing for about a year, I have yet to be able to enjoy the emptiness.

Anyways, I’ll continue to work on it.  One person, playing alone.  Thanks for listening!

Leave a comment

Filed under Solo Trombone

Jazz in our Postmodern Times

Right now it’s 10:30 and the Bill McHenry Quintet is between sets at the Village Vanguard in New York. 

Performing are:
Bill McHenry: tenor sax
Duane Eubanks: trumpet
Andrew D’Angelo: alto sax
Ben Street: bass
Paul Motion: drums

I’m not sure which is more amazing:

1) I’m watching it from Boston, and the audio is excellent.
2) There are records (famous, famous records we all have) with Paul Motion playing there in 1961 with Bill Evans and Scott LaFaro and he’s still playing there!  And he sounds good.  And he has developed his own concept for almost 50 years.
3) Andrew D’Angelo sounds killing.  That guy had cancer – brain cancer – and he’s still with us.

There was also a chat room where you could interact with the radio hosts and other viewers in real time, if that’s your thing.  And no one drink minimum at my house.  And I don’t have to figure out how to get home after the show. Thinking back to when I was back in high school, this sort of technology would have been almost totally unimaginable to me.  It would have all seemed like something out of Star Trek, yet here we are.

Did you miss it?  Bummer!  Fortunately, you can download (or stream or whatever) the audio from NPR’s website.  I’ll post the links in an update tomorrow.  Also, I’d recommend following Live at the Village Vanguard and the NPR jazz blog ( A Blog Supreme).  Next month they’re going to be broadcasting a set by the Fred Hirsch trio.  Hot damn!  There’s also a corresponding Flickr site

And what about the music?  It was fantastic!  I’m a big fan of Roses, Bill McHenry’s latest effort, and the most original moments of the broadcast – the new McHenry tunes – were the next logical step in that language.  Rubato, post-free jazz, which has unique forms and very thoughtful improvisation.  Maybe I’ll write more about this later, when I have more time.

Bill McHenry

Bill McHenry Live at the Village Vanguard

Ok – the 11 o’clock set is starting!  Gotta go!

Leave a comment

Filed under Jazz

Mississippi John Hurt: An Appreciation

I was coming home from a big band gig in Maine this evening – we were listening to music in the car – and Mississippi John Hurt came through the speakers.  I had discovered Hurt back in February or so, when I was going through old delta blues records, searching for a vibe of authenticity that I felt was absent in my own playing.  I checked out lots of amazing artists, and the three that stood out the most  to me during those winter months were Charlie Patton, Lightning Hopkins, and Mississippi John Hurt.

Hurt was particularly special to me.  When you listen to really good blues musicians, a lot of them sound like they lived a really hard life – Patton sounds like his voice can just barely croak out the necessary syllables, Sun House sounds as if he’s tearing his guitar apart – pulling each string right to its breaking point.  Hurt is different.  He sounds normal and gentle, not like the good-fer-nothing deviant musician type, but like the type of guy that quietly lives his life going to work during the week and to church during the weekend.

And if he sounds like it, it’s because that’s what he did.  After cutting a series of sides for Okeh Records in 1928, the Great Depression (and probably his disposition for family life) put his music carreer on hold until the folk revival movement of the 1960’s restarted it – and he became a real star.  For the 30’s, 40’s, and 50’s he was a share cropper and weekend gig musician in Avalon, Mississippi.

But most important of all is the music.  Listening to his stuff is reassuring to me: he’s not necessarily hip like blues musicians typically are.  His voice is soft and delicate and his guitar style is very precise and meticulous.  He was living proof that you don’t need to be a hipster scumbag to make interesting music, that people who weren’t cool also had a right to express themselves, and that expression could sound good and interesting to other people.

Mississippi John Hurt

A few online resources:

Mississippi John Hurt on Youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvRxA8gR7bw

Mississippi John Hurt on archive.org:
http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=creator:%22Mississippi%20John%20Hurt%22

“This is the hammer that killed John Henry, but it won’t kill me…”

1 Comment

Filed under Appreciations

A New Project

On June 26th, I’ll be premiering a new project at Rutman’s Violins as part of Travis Alford’s Comprovised music series. It will feature James Wylie on saxophones and clarinet and Joe Moffett on trumpet (and Scott Halligan might join us if the stars align in our favor). We’re going to play music that addresses some of the ideas I’ve been tossing around in my head – this is the first group I’ve had that has nothing like a rhythm section, and I’m going to try to channel the sounds of early jazz.

Needless to say, I’m really excited to begin working again on something that’s my own thing.

Right now I’m trying to break the 10 minute mark as far as composition and form are concerned. All of my previous work really times out at 5 or 10 minutes – after that the composition looses steam. I’m trying right now to write music which could go on for twenty minutes and still be interesting.

Leave a comment

Filed under Trio

Tons of Updates

There are now tons of things to listen to on the media pages.  Please, if you feel so inclined, check them out!

Things are cooking!  Expect lots of new content in the next few weeks as I learn how to use WordPress!

Leave a comment

Filed under Update