WOLf + LAMB ON MArcY hOTEL / DJ PrEMIEr ON cOMINg TO NYc
Transcription
WOLf + LAMB ON MArcY hOTEL / DJ PrEMIEr ON cOMINg TO NYc
DAILY NOTE Wednesday, May 1, 2013 4 22 of JAZZ MEETS METAL DOWNTOWN WOLF + LAMB on marcy hotel / DJ PREMIER on coming to nYC THE DAILY NOTE LAST NIGHT New York is a city of dichotomies navigated seamlessly by its residents. We travel uptown and downtown, from Manhattan to the outer boroughs; sometimes we hang out in obscure Bushwick warehouses, other times we find ourselves sipping sauvignon blanc in the atrium at MoMA. New Yorkers are known for their collective ability to remain opinionated yet open-minded, brash but extremely friendly, intellectual and highfalutin while still knowing how to let loose. In today’s Daily Note, critic Hank Shteamer examines the interconnections between jazz and metal (they’re closer than you think). In our archival Q&A with hip-hop pioneer DJ Premier, we learn that the producer isn’t even from New York originally, and that Gang Starr almost didn’t happen— proving the point that this town can knock you down, but a little perseverance works wonders. And author Will Hermes regales us Clockwise from top: Erykah Badu outside of Brooklyn Museum before her lecture; Rakim interviewed by Jeff ‘Chairman’ Mao; Bobbito DJing at Mobile Mondays!. with a 20-year-old tale of a downand-dirty show at the Mudd Club, recognizing that the intersection of jazz, funk, punk, and hip-hop makes for a damn good dance party. Just like the best nights out, the most interesting music can be simultaneously raw and rough, droney and dulcet—incongruity at its finest. New York City is complicated and maddening. But it’s still the best city on earth. Enjoy it. MASTHEAD Editor in Chief Piotr Orlov Copy Chief Jane Lerner Senior Editor Sam Hockley-Smith Senior Writer/Editor Vivian Host Contributing Editor Shawn Reynaldo Staff Writer Olivia Graham Editorial Coordinator Alex Naidus Contributors Sue Apfelbaum Gustavo Dao Adrienne Day Will Hermes Hank Shteamer Nick Sylvester Creative Director Justin Thomas Kay Art Director Christopher Sabatini Production Designer Suzan Choy Photo Editor Lorenna Gomez-Sanchez Staff Photographer Anthony Blasko Cover Photo Roberto Polillo All-Seeing Eye Torsten Schmidt The content of the Daily Note does not necessarily represent the opinions of Red Bull or Doubleday & Cartwright. ABOUT RBMA The Red Bull Music Academy celebrates creative pioneers and presents fearless new talent. Now we’re in New York City. The Red Bull Music Academy is a worldtraveling series of music workshops and festivals: a platform for those who make a difference in today’s musical landscape. This year we’re bringing together two groups of selected participants — producers, vocalists, DJs, instrumentalists and musical mavericks from around the world — in New York City. For two weeks, each group will hear lectures by musical luminaries, work together on tracks, and perform in the city’s best clubs and music halls. Imagine 2 a place that’s equal parts science lab, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, and Kraftwerk’s home studio. Throw in a touch of downtown New York circa 1981, a sprinkle of Prince Jammy’s mixing board, and Bob Moog’s synthesizer collection all in a 22nd-century remix and you’re halfway there. The Academy began back in 1998 and has been traversing the globe since, traveling to Berlin, Cape Town, São Paulo, Barcelona, London, Toronto, and many other places. Interested? Applications for the 2014 Red Bull Music Academy open early next year. 3 FROM THE ACADEMY UPFRONT “We didn’t think of being stars. We were funking around for fun.” —Bernie Worrell, founding member and keyboardist of Parliament-Funkadelic, April 30, 2013 TONIGHT BROOKLYN MASONIC TEMPLE A Night Of Improvised Round Robin Duets RBMA’s Julian Brimmers interviewing Bobbito. Knockdown Center Drone Activity In Progress This Thursday, some of music’s most progressive experimentalists will unite at Knockdown Center in Queens for a heady few hours of heavy drone and gorgeous reverb. Every single person on the roster has contributed something amazing to our weird, wide musical landscape, so we thought we’d highlight a few releases from some of the performers to help you find your footing. Pete Swanson Drone Activity In Progress Stephen O’Malley, KTL (Stephen O’Malley & Peter Rehberg), Body/Head (Kim Gordon & Bill Nace), Prurient, Hunter HuntHendrix of Liturgy, Oren Ambarchi, Alan Licht, Vatican Shadow, Pete Swanson, Mick Barr, Kid Millions/ Jim Sauter Duo, Alberich, Pharmakon, Noveller, grassmass and Hiram Martinez at Knockdown Center. See redbullmusicacademy.com for more info. 4 Prurient Krallice Bermuda Drain (Hydra Head, 2011) The very first thing you hear on “Many Jewels Surround the Crown,” the opening track from Bermuda Drain, one of the more “accessible” Prurient albums, is Dominick Fernow’s throat-scorching scream. From there, the track transitions into a decayed extraterrestrial floating synth exploration, with Fernow muttering and whispering threateningly over the top. The rest of the record proceeds similarly, with confrontational vocals (sample lyrics from “Let’s Make a Slave” include “Leave your family behind/lock the gates and hide the key”) acting as brutal counterpoint to an often beautiful soft instrumental pulse. Stephen O’Malley Body/Head (Kim Gordon & Bill Nace) Prurient + 13 More Krallice (Profound Lore, 2008) Virtuoso musicians can be impressive; they can also be pretty boring. All the technical skill in the world doesn’ t mean you know how to write a compelling song. Guitarist Mick Barr is an exception. In Krallice, Barr, guitarist Colin Marston and drummer Lev Weinstein prove that there’s actually a way to combine lightning-quick fretwork with a sense of power and structure. “Cnestoral” is a whirlwind of tangled shredding that transcends dry technical know-how to become meditative and beautiful, and just when you think it can’t be topped, “Energy Chasms” layers even more complex instrumentation into a frantic build and release. MAY 02 145 W 32nd St Brian Eno: 77 Million Paintings Sunn O))) Monoliths & Dimensions (Southern Lord, 2011) Listening to Sunn O))) requires patience. Slow guitar drones expand and refract on themselves with the density of concrete in the seconds before it hardens. On Monoliths & Dimensions, core members Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson, along with a cast of experimental music luminaries (Oren Ambarchi, Dylan Carlson of Earth, Eyvind Kang, and more) created an album where unrelenting waves of gut-liquifying bass are punctured by angelic choirs and— not that you can make it out—actual conch shells. There are full orchestras worth of instruments coming together in the service of pure sound. What you can’t hear is just as important as what you can. 01 UPCOMING EVENTS STURM UND DRONE Man With Potential (Type, 2012) After the dissolution of Yellow Swans, the apocalyptic (and, inexplicably, sometimes calming) drone and field-recording duo of Pete Swanson and Gabriel Saloman, Swanson went back to the drawing board. Rather than continue to work with pure noise, he applied his understanding of harsh sounds to a rigid dance structure. Instead of filling every available space with clusters of skittering, grinding electronics, he added empty space and a strong backbeat to create songs couched in classic techno. Swanson’s music still sounds like the end of the world, only now we’ll have something to dance to if everything comes crumbling down. 20+ Artists from Jazz to Electronic MAY ON-AIR you too can get in on the Red Bull Music Academy without missing a beat. As the Academy unfolds, RBMA Radio is the sonic gateway to everything going down—live and on-demand. Since 2005, RBMA Radio has been at the center of each Academy edition; it broadcasts to over 60 countries and has built a network of music lovers around the world. They’ll be capturing the New York madness as it unfolds—a daily update from the Academy airs each weeknight at 6pm (EST). The radio team transmits live from the belly of the Academy, condensing 23 hours of near-constant activity into an at-a-glance overview for those who can’t attend. And every Thursday they team up with local favorite East Village Radio (evr.com) for a two-hour program full of exclusive interviews and the freshest tracks. Listen for new music from Academy participants, glimpses into the most recent lectures, guest DJ appearances, and the best live moments captured from around town. Tune in now to rbmaradio.com. –Olivia Graham MAY 03 Le Bain Masters At Work & Special Guests MAY 03 Smorgasburg Brooklyn Flea Record Fair Special MAY 04 The Bunker @ Public Assembly FIRST BLUSH Participants remember their early musical inspirations. On Friday night, Red Bull Music Academy 2013 participants Knox, QuietDust, August Rosenbaum, and Jimi Nxir perform live at Le Poisson Rouge in the West Village (the club used to be the famous jazz room the Village Gate). We asked these four talents to tell us about the first record they ever bought and why it’s so special. Andy Stott Atom TM Objekt Octo Octa More MAY 04 New Museum KNOX (Queens, NY) “The first record I ever bought with my own money was No Doubt’s Tragic Kingdom. It was the alternative tough tween’s pop anthem. It gave me something to relate to outside of the sugar-toothed, glittered-girl-power kaleidoscope. I remember playing the record and belting along the whole way through. My poor parents!” knoxtheband.com AUGUST ROSENBAUM (Copenhagen, Denmark) “I started breaking away from listening to my parents’ records when I got Wu-Tang Forever, Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue, and Queen’s Greatest Hits for my tenth birthday. I loved them equally!” augustrosenbaum.com JIMI NXIR QUIETDUST (Washington, D.C.) (Dublin, Ireland) “I bought Al Green’s I’m Still in Love with You, D’Angelo’s Voodoo, and Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon around my junior year; it was with money I saved from not buying lunch. They really changed my viewpoint on music. Voodoo got me at the perfect time —all the issues in that record hit home. I wasn’t really into rock then but I bought Dark Side of the Moon and it did so much for me.” jiminxir.com “The first record I bought was Spice Girls’ Spice World when I was about six. It was special because I saved up my own money to buy it. Also it’s a reminder that my taste in music is always evolving!” soundcloud.com/ quietdust Classic Album Sundays: A David Bowie Special Nile Rodgers, Tony Visconti, Ken Scott MAY 05 Terminal 5 Flying MAY Lotus Ultraísta, Thundercat & Band 05 RECORDED LIVE FOR RED BULL MUSIC ACADEMY RADIO TUNE IN AT RBMARADIO.COM 5 FROM THE ARCHIVES Q&A dj premier The legendary producer on life before Gang Starr. What was your first exposure to hip-hop? Seeing the b-boys breaking when my grandfather took me to Times Square. We’d always go to Times Square—that’s when it was really grimy and people were getting robbed left and right. Now it’s all cleaned up since Giuliani came into office and made it all pretty for the tourists. It’s not the same Times Square that I remember. So during that time going into Midtown and seeing all the sights and everything; all the b-boys used to be breaking for money, it was crazy. The Rock Steady Crew was one of the first that I saw, where the Marriott Marquis is—right there off Seventh Avenue and, like, 44th. They were right there and they had the Rock Steady Crew outfits on and I was like, “Man, this is ill.” And they kept cutting up Incredible Bongo Band’s “Apache”—you know, the break part of “Apache” with the bongos. And then they’d go into “It’s 6 Just Begun” by Jimmy Castor Bunch and they had a cassette tape that was remade by whoever cut it up and it kept being repeated on the breakdowns, and every time it went to the breakdown, another cat would go off and do his thing. The way they were doing all these moves was just amazing. So you attended Prairie View University in Texas? Where I met my man Biggest Gord. He’s now one of my partners. I’ve been down with him since college. Yeah, I’ll elaborate on it more, but that’s where we met. He’s from Brooklyn, New York. And that’s where you formed your first group as well? I formed this group with my man Top-Ski—who’s from Boston, ironically, like Guru—and two of our friends that we went to college with. We were called MCs In Control and later we changed our name to the Inner Circle Posse—why I don’t know, because I thought MCs In Control was a dope name. We formed and I used to do all the parties because I always had every record. So how did MCs In Control evolve, or how did that group lead you to Gang Starr? The first summer when we were together, I moved in with [Biggest Gord’s] family. It was Gord’s first year in college and he was like, “Look, you can crash at our place in Brooklyn.” So I moved to East New York and again we spent the whole summer there and, rest in peace to Gord’s dad, Arden Franklin, he made us get a job. I got a job at a young peoples’ daycare as a counselor. I had no experience but they had a shortage of counselors. Top, my MC, came with me and we both got the job together. We actually became cool counselors. Like, some of the kids that we counseled are now successful in business; two of them have their own clothing companies, they’re doing real well. Actually, when M.O.P. did the “Ante Up” video, the wardrobe that they wore was by the kid that I actually taught when he was 11 or 12 years old. And I was young! I wasn’t even 24 yet. We used to do that every day and that’s when I went to Staten Island and saw Ghostface Killah way back. We got into a fight in Stapleton projects, which is where he’s from, with the other kids that were trying to fight our kids from Brooklyn. When we went back to school the following year, I said, “You know what? Forget it.” I asked Gord, “I’m going to move and is it possible to stay with you a little while until I get on my feet?” But your demo… Yeah, I’ll explain that. When I was in Texas I worked at a record store called Soundwaves; it was like the neighborhood store that everybody who was “ghetto” would shop at. For one, we all had to know our music. You had to know blues; you had to know zydeco because Louisiana and all that was close enough so a lot of people shop there. You had to know rock, hip-hop, and soul. My man Carlos Garza, who already [worked] there, got me the job based on my knowledge of music. During that time Carlos used to still report to all the independent hip-hop companies and he told Stu Fine at Wild Pitch, “Hey, this guy…” I was called Waxmaster C at that time because my name is Chris and everyone had Jam Master or Grandmaster. I just wanted some type of master so I was Waxmaster C, and he told them about me. So Stu said, “Man, I got this group Gang Starr that has three members right now but they’re really not getting along with each other. The DJ is fighting with the MC, the other MC doesn’t like the rhymes, and the other guy is really great but he just needs a tight team.” So I was like, “Tell him I’ll be in the group.” I wanted my guys to be in the group with them, so it’d be like Top and me and we’d join him and help him out. [Top] wasn’t trying to see that. So then I said, “Alright, I’m not interested. Let’s try to shop my group.” The demo happened to run across Stu Fine’s office but they were just a husband-andwife company so they had nobody to really A&R for them. Guru used to listen to all the demos and Carlos copied my cassette tape demo and snuck it to New York. And all of a sudden he was like, “Man, I’ve got to tell you something. I sent that cassette, they like it.” And they were like, “Hey, we’re going to fly you up.” Me and Top went up there, but they didn’t like Top’s voice; they were like, “Nah, he doesn’t have any flow.” So I said, “Well, put us in a real studio and maybe we can make it sound better.” Went to the real studio, still didn’t like it and I still wasn’t interested. I stayed in New York and Gord took me everywhere; he took me to WBLS and I saw Marley Marl open the door to wait for Heavy D to walk in. They were like, “Yeah, we’re still waiting for Biz [Markie] to get here.” I’m like, “Wow, Biz is coming.” And that’s the era. I remember Heavy D had on an all-grey sweatsuit—the regular grey sweats that people wear—he had the matching grey top and he had the big fat dookie cable underneath but you could see it bulging out the neck and I was like, “Damn, this is real.” Interviewed by Jeff ‘Chairman’ Mao at Red Bull Music Academy Toronto 2007. For the full Q&A, head to redbullmusicacademy.com/lectures. inset Photo: Matt Barnes. opposite photo: May Truong Those who’ve been closely associated with the New York hip-hop sound might be surprised to learn you’re not actually from New York. Where are you from and how did you get to New York? I was born in Houston, Texas, and then moved. My mother is from Baltimore and my father is from South Carolina. They’re both teachers. My mother’s an art teacher so that’s how I learned to draw and do all that—by force. But now, since graffiti came out, I guess it’s all tied in to hiphop. So thanks to my mom for that; she’s a very big music woman. So through all of that, my upbringing… I was born in ’66, so I have a lot more understanding and experience of the music. To be from Texas gives me an advantage over anybody that gets into the music business in the 21st century, unless they do their homework on the origins of music that came before hip-hop. I didn’t have any rap records when I was a kid; we only had soul music. My grandfather lived in Brooklyn so we used to go visit him all the time when I was young. We used to always stay with him every Christmas, every Thanksgiving, every summer. My older sister was tired of doing it because we were older and she wanted to hang out with her friends but I kept wanting to go because I was just so into the whole scene. The first time I ever came to New York I saw a guy commit suicide on the subway on the train that we were on. We ran over him and they had to back the train up off of him; his arm was separated and he was still shaking on the track. I was just like, “Wow, this is where I want to live,” you know what I’m saying? Go back and tell your friends what you did for the summer and you saw a dude commit suicide. Which is not a beautiful thing, but just the whole aspect of seeing that and getting off the train—this is freshly done so the cops aren’t even there yet—just the whole action and seeing the people. My grandfather was a big baseball and football fan so he used to always take me to every Yankee game when I was little; he took me to the World Trade Center, the Empire State Building. I did all of that early, so that by the time I was 13 I said, “I’m definitely going to move here.” It still wasn’t because of hip-hop yet—I wanted to live here, period. That’s how I started to make my plans of being here once I was able to get some money up and move. 7 feature BLACK MAGIC The flowering of the unholy union between jazz and metal. WORDS Hank Shteamer ILLUSTRATION Hashashin The Puck Building, New York City; New Year’s Eve 1989 John Zorn sits onstage, smiling fiendishly. Clad in a “Die Yuppie Scum” T-shirt and blue camo pants, the saxophonist, composer, and leader of Naked City calmly taps out time on his knee and mayhem ensues. Drummer Joey Baron executes jackhammer blast beats as guitarist Bill Frisell plays gnarled, surf-gone-prog riffs; meanwhile, the Japanese vocalist (and Boredoms founder) Eye shrieks and convulses, egged on by Zorn’s blaring alto sax. The concert lasts more than two hours—weaving in classic soundtrack themes and bite-size references to country and classical— but many of the pieces clock in under a minute. In case the message isn’t already clear, Zorn announces a composition entitled “Jazz Snob Eat Shit.” An apartment in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn; January 2011 I’m seated in the living room of Craig Taborn. Taborn is a jazz pianist, one of the most well-respected in New York, or on the planet. He’s worked with legends ranging from bassist Dave Holland to former Art Ensemble of Chicago member Roscoe Mitchell. Taborn is playing DJ for the afternoon, and what he wants to hear at the moment is Cryptopsy, a Montreal band known for its ultra-technical, uncommonly deranged approach to death metal. We stare at the speakers, wrapped up in the sound. Taborn weighs the relative merits of the different vocalists the band has employed; former member Lord Worm is the fan favorite, but he votes for bullish mid-period barker Mike DiSalvo. I listen more and mull his point. Death by Audio, Williamsburg, Brooklyn; February 2013 Two musicians are locked in a fully improvised duet. Their approaches are so sympathetic that the sound pours forth in a unified stream. The guitarist is Mick Barr, a 30-something player known for reconciling top-velocity metallic shred and insular experimentation in projects such as Orthrelm and Krallice. On drums is Marc Edwards, a 63-year-old drummer who has worked with Cecil Taylor, David S. Ware, and other free-jazz legends over the course of a 30-plus year career. Together the two achieve a brutally beautiful sort of trance music. 8 9 feature feature The jazz/metal overlap has evolved to the point where the crossing of this boundary doesn’t automatically connote some stodgy idea of transgression, where players from both sides can finally step back and assess just how much they have in common, locating the affinities that lie underneath the obvious surface differences (image, decibel level). As mainstream pop grows ever more synthetic, as DJs and producers inherit the rock-star mantle, as laptops and loops supplant guitars and drums as the primary engines of DIY music-making, jazz and metal come to seem more and more like sibling idioms. Both genres thrive on highly specialized, unmistakably human-centric technique—think of a death-metal drummer’s double-kick chops, or his jazz counterpart’s four-limbed independence. Both privilege the small, tight-knit ensemble, in which musicians interact with the speed, precision, and power of pro athletes. And both enjoy profoundly devoted fan bases, support systems that encourage artists working in their respective genres to stretch and explore. Thanks to Tony Williams, John McLaughlin, Robert Fripp, Greg Ginn, John Zorn, and many others, the ice has shattered into bits. Today’s counterparts are sifting through the rubble, searching for what comes next. The collective known as Sunn O))) is an important touchstone for this new wave of jazz/metal crossover. The group’s basic M.O. is to elongate the zombified plod of doom metal into sprawling drone epics, a strategy that’s helped make them a key nexus among players from various experimental-minded scenes. On 2009’s Monoliths & Dimensions, core Sunn O))) members Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson roped in guests including vocalist Attila Csihar, best known for fronting notorious Norwegian black-metal band Mayhem, as well as trombonist Julian Priester, who has recorded with jazz greats such as Herbie Hancock, Max Roach, and Sun Ra over a 60-year career. The results ranged from the band’s signature abstracted doom to a more placid approach. The record’s final piece, titled “Alice” and dedicated to Alice Coltrane, concludes with Priester soloing over a shimmering ambient passage. The cameo harked back to a 2008 LP by acknowledged Sunn O))) forebears Earth, The Bees Made Honey in the Lion’s Skull, which incorporated renowned jazz guitarist Bill Frisell into its desolate slo-mo twangscapes. It would be tough to peg either of these records as jazz or metal, and yet DNA from both genres is traceable in each. Works like these hint at the vast potential still remaining in so-called fusion. Sunn O))) in particular seems to be seeking an inter-genre soundspace—a purely textural experience, a sound to go swimming in. Various groups currently active in NYC are engaging in a similar pursuit. The trio of Mick Barr, saxophonist Jon Irabagon, and drummer Mike Pride demonstrates how jazz and metal musicians are bonding over fresh aesthetic ideals, with raw aggression being only one component of a broader sonic palette. Irabagon and Barr come from different worlds. The saxophonist first attracted wide attention in 2008, when he won the prestigious Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition, a contest that celebrates a staunchly traditional sort of jazz virtuosity. The victory netted Irabagon a recording contract—the album he released a year later, The Observer, toed the party line. It featured pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Rufus Reid, and drummer Victor Lewis—all esteemed veterans of the jazz mainstream—and a sound that looked back to postbop’s mid-’60s heyday. Irabagon turned up in promotional photos wearing a natty suit. To a casual spectator, it would’ve seemed like he was aiming for a straightlaced jazz career. But The Observer was actually the second of two major statements Irabagon issued in 2009. The first was an extended duet with Pride, I Don’t Hear Nothin’ but the Blues, a dauntingly extreme statement that was nevertheless one of the most engaging re- leases of the year. Reviewing the album in Time Out New York, I wrote: “Sax-percussion duets often nod to the John Coltrane– Rashied Ali free-jazz classic Interstellar Space. But to find an analogue for this [record], you’d have to look to 2005’s OV, a remarkable work of sustained minimalism by the post-metal duo Orthrelm. I Don’t Hear Nothin’ but the Blues—like OV, a continuous piece of nearly 50 minutes—seems driven by infernal monomania, as if Irabagon and Pride were simultaneously afflicted by the same nervous tic.” Like Irabagon, Mick Barr has been known to alter his aesthetic framework at will. The guitarist emerged from the D.C. post-hardcore scene in the late ’90s as half of the esoteric mathrock duo Crom-Tech. Orthrelm was Barr’s next major project. It focused on hyper-complex, non-repeating miniatures—like the work of a thrash-metal band locked for years in a lightless basement and driven insane. On OV, though, Barr and his bandmate, drummer Josh Blair, turned their attention to obsessive, grand-scale minimalism. ter’s best work tends to fall into one or the other camp: a series of aptly self-described brutal-prog releases by his former band the Flying Luttenbachers (peaking with 2006’s excellent Cataclysm); Horrorscenscion, a 2012 LP by the instrumental tech-metal trio Behold… the Arctopus; free improv work with players such as reedist Vinny Golia and guitarist Henry Kaiser. Sometimes you’ll hear techniques from one realm seep into the other, as when Walter employs snippets of blast beats and double-kick drumming in his trio with guitarist Mary Halvorson and trumpeter Peter Evans, but such crossover always stems naturally from the context at hand. He knows jazz; he knows metal. He reserves the right to blur these disciplines, or keep them compartmentalized, as the situation demands. Walter tends to broadcast his dual citizenship—proudly sporting grindcore t-shirts at his avant-jazz gigs—but there are other quieter corners of this overlapping territory, where one genre seems to exert a strange kind of subterranean pull on the other. Craig Taborn is an interesting case study. A few years ago, I started spotting Taborn at metal shows. In 2010, he scheduled a duo gig with forward-thinking Canadian death-metal guitarist Steeve Hurdle at the Stone, John Zorn’s East Village venue. (The concert was canceled due to visa issues and tragically, Hurdle passed away in 2012.) I began a correspondence with the pianist and eventually interviewed him. Taborn is one of the most knowledgeable metalheads I’ve ever met—a listener who’s equally well versed in thrash staples like Slayer and Voivod and the furthest reaches of the metal va n g u a r d : C a l i f o r n i a ’s Spaceboy, Norway’s Virus. But while he’s worked in rock-oriented settings— such as the Gang Font featuring Interloper, a loopy fusion group with Bad Plus drummer Dave King and former Hüsker Dü bassist Greg Norton—the pianist’s output doesn’t overtly reflect an extreme metal influence. The title of Taborn’s enthralling 2011 solo-piano release, Avenging Angel, evokes a grandly sinister, metal-related sensibility; sonically, though, the crystalline, eerie, almost alien-sounding pieces on the record more closely resemble contemporary classical music than either jazz or metal. As I sat with Taborn discussing Cryptopsy and other esoteric bands, the notion of trying to pin a given musician into one genre or another started to seem more and more absurd. Is it really all that surprising that an open-minded artist would be omnivorous in his or her tastes? Or that this diversity might not be apparent on the surface? What’s clear is that jazz and metal remain magnetized in some fundamental way, and that this attraction has only strengthened over time. All sorts of curious compounds have emerged—psychedelic prog-jazz, free-form punk, improvised grindcore with screaming saxophone—and more are arriving constantly. Irabagon, Barr, and Walter are just three representatives of a larger community of players currently exploring the jazz/metal overlap in NYC, including tuba player Dan Peck, banjoist-guitarist Brandon Seabrook, and cellist Joe Merolla. In recent years, John Zorn has turned away from the shock theater of Naked City, focusing on projects—such as the Moonchild ensemble and the series of compositions heard on 2011’s Enigmata—that combine jazz and metal elements in still jarring yet more holistic ways. Meanwhile, Taborn and other like-minded players, like pianist Matt Mitchell and drummer Dan Weiss, maintain a steady diet of extreme-metal listening while excelling in the progressive jazz sphere. The upshot is that it’s becoming more and more difficult to assess one of these styles without seriously considering the other; they once seemed like distant cousins and now look more like blood brothers. Jazz is thriving. Metal is thriving. And the territory between them is now, finally, starting to feel like a self-sustaining ecosystem. Both [jazz and metal] thrive on highly specialized, unmistakably human-centric technique— think of a death-metal drummer’s double kick chops, or his jazz counterpart’s fourlimbed independence. ABOVE: Jazz musician John Zorn, London 1989. Photo by Peter Williams/Corbis In a broad sense, jazz and metal couldn’t have less in common: one is an African-American art form hinging on virtuosic, moment-to-moment interplay; the other is a predominantly white music built around paradigms of volume and density. But as the examples above suggest, the two genres share a rich overlapping history. The early crossover between jazz and aggressive rock, spearheaded in the late ’60s by musicians such as drummer Tony Williams and guitarist John McLaughlin, was a literal hybrid: the souping up of small-group acoustic post-bop with a rumbling electric engine. The pioneers of the movement encountered flak from jazz purists, but in retrospect, their so-called fusion made perfect sense. It reconciled two idioms descended from black American music—recall that the de facto first metal band, Black Sabbath, began life as the Polka Tulk Blues Band—each one a staunchly organic style based on real-time musician-to-musician interaction, the art of the harmonious jam. In the ensuing decades, the jazz/metal crossover branched off in countless surprising directions, from the forbidding, improv-driven art metal of early- to mid -’70s King Crimson to the Grateful Dead–inspired free punk that guitarist Greg Ginn 10 undertook a decade later on Black Flag releases such as The Process of Weeding Out. During the early period of Naked City, founded in ’88, John Zorn focused on brain-scrambling juxtaposition, gleefully colliding grindcore, free jazz, and atmospheric exotica. Later, Zorn would join forces with Bill Laswell—architect of Last Exit, his own fearsomely raw noise-fusion outfit featuring free-jazz guitarist Sonny Sharrock—and Napalm Death drummer Mick Harris in the alternately hellacious and dubbedout trio Painkiller. In current-day New York, a new kind of jazz/metal interplay is brewing. Musicians such as Mick Barr, drummer Weasel Walter, saxophonist Jon Irabagon, and various others are helping to usher this disparate movement into a lush, weird spring, spawning fresh hybrids—not jazz, not metal, not fusion exactly, but the beginnings of an autonomous aesthetic. It’s worth asking what’s special about the current moment. Why are conditions right for a new kind of jazz/metal intersection? First, metal has grown steadily more respectable over the past decade. In retrospect, Naked City’s middle-finger iconoclasm seems almost quaint. Today, you’d have to go a lot further than a grindcore-jazz hybrid to scandalize any well-informed NYC music fan. We live in an era where critics regularly review doom and hardcore records on Pitchfork and in the New York Times; where documentaries and art shows fixate on the iconography and principal players of Norwegian black metal. Perhaps even more so than jazz, metal is now viewed as a cutting-edge genre, a canonized art music, a style you need to know if you want to be in the know. During the ’80s, the era of bullet belts and back patches, this notion would’ve been unthinkable. (In 1990, metal was literally on trial: that was the year two Nevada families sued Judas Priest for supposedly inspiring their sons to shoot themselves via alleged subliminal messages.) At the same time, jazz continues to grow ever hipper and more eclectic. In NYC, young, pop-savvy listeners flood gigs by Jason Moran, the Bad Plus, Vijay Iyer, and Robert Glasper—all historically minded jazz artists who also engage meaningfully with the present—and flock to the annual Winter Jazzfest, a festival that regularly embraces Nels Cline, Vernon Reid, and other players equally well-known in the jazz and rock spheres. While the proverbial jazz snob might still exist in some ivory tower, he or she certainly isn’t the norm. Irabagon invited Barr to join him and Pride for some shows, and eventually the project became a trio. Like the 2009 Irabagon/Pride duo, the 2012 debut of this new lineup, I Don’t Hear Nothin’ but the Blues Volume 2: Appalachian Haze, consists of a single album-length improvisation. The players zero in on densities and qualities of sound. Irabagon’s ululating sax entwines with Barr’s continuously unspooling guitar squiggles while Pride runs interference, juggling frenzied free-time rolls and what sound like rhythmic allusions to Gary Glitter’s “Rock and Roll Part 2.” The record hinges on the same principles that drive most good improv: attuned listening, sensitive response, varied dynamics. These players come from different backgrounds, but here they leave idiom behind. It’s a humble endeavor, one that doesn’t foreground the idea of splicing or juxtaposing genres. Irabagon, Barr, and Pride are simply playing together, exchanging sonic ideas and constructing a group sound from scratch. That unpretentious spirit also drives several other Barr projects, including his superbly matched duo with Marc Edwards. The team-up came about thanks to Weasel Walter, a drummer and composer who settled in Brooklyn a few years back, after long stints in Chicago and Oakland. If the current wave of jazz/ metal crossover in NYC has a ringleader, it might be Walter. The 40-year-old is a connoisseur of all varieties of extreme music—black metal, experimental improv, modern classical—and an evangelical fan of those whose work he respects (like Barr). At the same time he’s an enormously prolific musician, documenting his work on his own ugEXPLODE label. More so than Irabagon or Barr, Weasel Walter has performed extensively on both sides of the jazz/metal divide, gigging with veteran improvisers like Evan Parker and Marshall Allen, as well as with Chicago thrash-doom band Lair of the Minotaur and maniacally intense San Francisco noise-rock group Burmese. At the same time, he isn’t a committed fusionist. Wal- 11 COLUMNS COLUMNS The Marcy Hotel A column on the gear and processes that inform the music we make. LO G OS The origins of iconic images from NYC's musical history explained. the wu-tang clan’s bat-winged w made its first appearance on the group's 1993 debut single “Protect Ya Neck,” as part of a more detailed hand-drawn illustration laden with the group’s spiritual and martial arts-inspired symbolism. Mathematics, who designed the original logo, says, “The thing was to try and make something to stand out, kinda like the Batman insignia.” Although most of his work with Wu-Tang has been developing the group’s sound through a vast repository of samples, the former graffiti artist turned producer from Jamaica, Queens, studied graphic and commercial art at Thomas A. Edison Career and Technical Education High School. Math had already been messing around with a few logo variations when it came down to an all-nighter as “Protect Ya Neck” was going to print. “At the time, I was doing carpentry work with my pops,” 12 he recalls, “and RZA, Ghost, Power [Oliver Grant, Wu-Tang executive producer], and U-God, they came to the job at like ten o’clock in the morning and picked it up.” An early version showed a warrior’s severed head, held by his dreadlocks by a hand extending from the W, and had “Wu-Tang Clan” written through it in faux Asian-style handwriting. As RZA notes in the Wu-Tang Manual, “That one was too gory, but I liked how he wrote the letters, so I had him come up with the sword— because my tongue is my sword. But that didn’t reflect everything I was about either. So I told him it needs to represent the sword, the book, and the wisdom.” By the time their first album, Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), came out later that year, gone were the sword and book, but the mark of the W—in yellow, and still with Wu-Tang Clan written through - Sue apfelbaum it—remained. The sub-class of audio snake-oil salesmen has it easy. Not because we’re all easy marks, but because they’re not exactly selling snake oil. Every piece of gear—every resistor, every last milliounce of gold plating—affects the signal path. What they say is true. What they don’t say though... that might be more important. In this space, I’m interested in the way our gear works invisibly—not so much how a piece of technology affects the signal path, but more how it rewires our brains and determines our creative processes. Analog versus digital—that old chestnut. Analog equals warm! Digital equals cold! What does this mean?! To find out, I spoke with Red Bull Music Academy 2013 participant TJ Hertz, a Berlin-based producer who records as Objekt. He’s turned in excellent remixes for Radiohead and SBTRKT, as well as pristine salvos for Hessle Audio and his own label. He also writes digital signal processing algorithms for Native Instruments. If anyone can “hear” digital, it would be the guy whose business is, to some extent, the digital modeling of analog effects like tape delay and tape saturation. Any time there's an effect with a feedback loop, our ears expect the effect of the processing to enter the feedback loop as well. “Delay is an interesting example,” he tells me over Skype. “The filter—or, in the case of a tape echo, some saturation—goes through the loop.” You could speak of “digital coldness” when that grit doesn’t make its way into the feedback loop, when the echoed signal is clean and precise. “You expect it to get dirty,” Hertz says, “but it never does.” That’s our straw man “crude plug-in” type scenario. But for Hertz, “digitalness” is less obvious in any one sound or effect than it is in the arrangements and productions themselves, “where the tools steer the producer into working in a certain way.” DAWs like Ableton are loop-based environments that can lead to predictable transitions and structures if you’re not diligent. “That,” Hertz says, “sounds a lot more digital than bit aliasing.” -Nick sylvester in 2005, after gentrification made significant inroads into Williamsburg, Marcy Avenue was still, in the words of Wolf + Lamb’s Zev Eisenberg, “a dump.” But the fledging party crew saw the potential for a future headquarters when they leased a squat brick building, once a machine shop, at the intersection of the Williamsburg Bridge and the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. This three-story structure, the color of benign neglect, would become the Marcy Hotel. But Zev (“Wolf ”) and his DJ/producer/label partner Gadi “Lamb” Mizrahi, both native Brooklynites, saw what the rest of the world didn’t: a perfect spot for late-night soirees, the noise of which—minimal techno, house, and a grab bag of eclectic sounds—would be masked by the cars roaring overhead. They gut-renovated the space using found materials as décor, a 1920s noir style emerging after they looted a crumbling old theater a friend had purchased upstate. Old film strips made for a partition by the entrance, and giant film-rewinding spools were set with lights and pronounced chandeliers. Initially Zev and Gadi had a wine-bar concept for the space, but that idea was jettisoned after a trial run. “It quickly became obvious that it wasn’t meant to be a wine bar,” says Zev, “but [rather] some kind of underground loft party.” And so the Marcy Hotel was born. “No rules. Very DIY. It was a liberated way to party,” he says. And the music hewed to a similar “variety show” format, featuring live acts, MCs, and genre-defying DJs and producers like Nicolas Jaar and Soul Clap at the helm. The Marcy opened at a time in post-Giuliani Manhattan when dance music had largely been co-opted by luxury brands and bottle service. The underground scene was pushed to the fringes of the outer boroughs, unspooling in dank warehouses; despite such limitations, or maybe because of them, it was a heady time, and Wolf + Lamb tried to channel that spirit through the Marcy. “No lines, no bullshit,” says Zev. “People would just get lost in the music, everybody having a good time.” It wasn’t long before the Marcy outgrew itself—after colonizing the yard next door, the Marcy succumbed to neighborhood complaints and it closed to the public in 2011 (it currently serves as Wolf + Lamb’s record-label headquarters). But it inspired a new wave of Brooklyn-based producers and parties, and Wolf + Lamb continue to impact fans across the globe. - Adrienne Day Top 5… Brooklyn Flea Record Fair moments PRESENTED BY Brooklyn Flea’s Record Fair features collectors, independent record labels, and shops inside the Smorgasburg food market in Williamsburg. Vendors sell new and used vinyl, CDs, ephemera, and gear, and there are DJs throughout the day. The Flea’s first Record Fair happened on a hot day in 2008 in Fort Greene, and every year (now twice a year) it grows bigger but also weirder and more fun. Here are Flea head honcho Eric Demby's five favorite Record Fair moments. L A N D M A RK S THE BRONX The places, spaces, and monuments of NYC's musical past, present, and future. past featured landmarks 1 max neuhaus’ "times square" 2 The Thing Secondhand Store 3 The loft 1 QUEENS 2 3 MANHATTAN What: The Marcy hotel Where: marcy avenue, williamsburg Why: no-bullshit techno party When: 2005-2011 STATEN ISLAND BROOKLYN 1 2 3 4 5 Flying Lotus Loved watching Steven Ellison sign some dude’s stomach at the fall 2012 Record Fair. El-P Back in 2008, when it was the Superstar DJ Record Fair, El-P sold his own records and all this cool old gear he was getting rid of. Not sure most people even knew it was him. Thurston Moore The Sonic Youth frontman comes to buy records now and then from one of our vendors, Phil Lanigan of Addicted to Vintage, which still gives me a shiver. Thurston’s always totally blasé, just like you’d imagine. The Brothers Demby When the market first opened, my brother and I used to play records in the schoolyard backstop at the Fort Greene Flea every weekend, and he’d wheel over the sound system from down the block on a cart. Those were the days. Portishead XL debuted the new Portishead single at the fall 2011 Record Fair. When the band played Late Night with Jimmy Fallon the week before, Fallon promoted the Record Fair on air. 13 New York story New York story Contort yourself The author of Love Goes to Buildings on Fire offers a personal postscript of no wave New York. words will hermes illustration Gustavo Dao i wrote my recent book on New York City’s mid-’70s music scenes using a strict five-year chronology: ’73 to ’77. This was partly conceptual—disco, hiphop, and punk rock were invented in New York during those years, while the salsa, loft jazz, and downtown composer scenes hit their creative peaks. But the framework was also practical: I wanted to build a coherent narrative arc and write a readable volume, not a doorstop reference text. Also, after years of research and interviews, I wanted to finish the damn thing already. But in some ways, the New York scene got more exciting just after my book ends, when musical borders got more porous. The above scenes were rubbing shoulders by late ’77, but they didn’t intersect much. There were flashes: minimalist composer Rhys Chatham deciding to devote himself to electric guitars after a night at CBGB witnessing the Ramones (who bought their weed from the same dude who supplied jazz composer David Murray); cellist Arthur Russell, an art-music composer and art-pop singer-songwriter, seeing God on the dancefloor at Nicky Siano’s Gallery. There were salsa lovers who dug Kool DJ Herc’s park jams, hip-hoppers weaned on son montuno, disco fans who rocked, punks who boogied, improvisers who grokked notated music, and composers who dug free jazz. It took a while for these languages to really start blending. No wave was one locus. It took its aggression and noise from both punk (notably proto-punk electro provocateurs Suicide) and the polyglot free jazz of the lofts. No wave was short-lived, if it was a scene at all (see Thurston Moore and Byron Coley’s semi–oral history No Wave: Post-Punk. Underground. New York. 1976–1980 and Marc Masters’ No Wave for the breakdown). Its key document is No New York, released in 1978 and produced by Brian Eno with the complete opposite of the billowy ambience that became his trademark. It collected tracks by four bands: DNA, James Chance and the Contortions, Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, and Mars. Its shrill attack was tough to love, but its power was undeniable. Like out jazz, which also has a performance-art element, no wave was best experienced live. James Chance (née Siegfried) was the man to see back then, and I caught his act whenever I could. He took Iggy Pop’s audience-baiting to new 14 extremes, yelling verses, howling on his sax, then stepping offstage to slap someone who wasn’t paying attention. In what may have been Robert Christgau’s only bar brawl with a musician, the critic once jumped on Chance after the singer hit a woman he was with. Chance’s music was funky in a twisted way, which made it fun to dance to. At one point, he was offered money by the fusion-minded ZE Records to make a disco LP, and James Chance and the Contortions mutated into James White and the Blacks, a confrontational no-wave soul revue. The latter always seemed to book hometown gigs between Christmas and New Year’s in the early ’80s, and since that’s also my birthday week, I often celebrated with them. Downtown was still so seedy and druggy and scary, but you just accepted it as the human condition. When I turned 21, a bunch of us piled into a Tribeca dive bar to catch a discount buzz before a Mudd Club show. An old Latino dude (old to us, anyway—he was probably in his 30s) came over to our table and, astonishingly, offered us free cocaine. He’d bought it to share with his girlfriend, who he told us had just broken up with him, and he didn’t have the heart to snort it himself. We were dubious, but the powder was vetted, and he kept it coming for an hour or two, abstaining himself but saying it made him happy to see young people enjoying themselves. It was heartbreaking, and watching my friends jockey for position like pigs at a trough was instructive. We asked the dude to join us for the show but he declined, no doubt for the best. Chance was ferocious. We danced like crazy. No one got hit. But it was a memorable night. Chance’s music epitomizes ’80s downtown for me: art-damaged and madwired, dangerous, sputteringly rhythmic, furiously alive. After Studio 54 and its offspring had defined dance clubs as corny, classist, and starfucky, venues like the Mudd Club, Tier 3, Danceteria, Hurrah, and the World were revelations. Hip-hop came downtown, the product of its own dance-music class war. Blondie connected with Fab 5 Freddy. Afrika Bambaataa cut a record with Johnny Rotten, played the Ritz, and did a residency at the Roxy roller disco (I recall Bam DJing a spectacular P-Funk show there in the ’80s). The South Bronx sister group ESG brought their rec-room funk to the Mudd Club, where the DJs played punk, jump blues, boogaloo, reggae, African drum jams, and bubblegum pop by turns—no doubt taking cues from Bambaataa, the melting-pot master. Our crew would dance to anything. We’d lose our shit freestyling to Ronald Shannon Jackson and the Decoding Society, a harmolodic jazz-funk outfit led by Ornette Coleman’s brilliant drummer and featuring the guitar and banjo of a young Vernon Reid, who went on to form Living Colour. Defunkt, led by Joe Bowie, little brother of jazz scientist Lester Bowie, was another awesome avant-party band. Why should hot improvisation, deep dance grooves, and rock muscle be so tough to resolve? These players pulled it off handsomely, even if it proved a shortlived lingua franca. It worked best live, although few labels documented it. In addition to ZE, the local 99 Records put out Latin-inflected beats, dub reggae, and the debut by composer Glenn Branca. Franco/Afro/Anglo/American label Celluloid put out jams with DJs, jazzbos, rockers, rappers, West African guitarists, and kora players (see the illuminating new anthology Change the Beat on Strut Records). This polyglot spirit waxes and wanes in NYC. I was touched to see Liquid Liquid—the avant-funk outfit who recorded for 99 and was a touchstone for the Brooklyn early-2000s dance-rock bubble—open LCD Soundsystem’s farewell show at Madison Square Garden. (I was also touched to see that famous group photo of the Fania All-Stars—a couple dozen salsa dudes surrounding Celia Cruz like planets around a sun—turn up on the big screens during a montage later that night.) It’s beautiful to see doomy no-wave greybeards Swans in the midst of an unlikely second act, splitting the difference between post-punk noise and minimalist drone, crushing a new generation of skulls. Bachata is the new salsa, evolving its own sphere of influence. Indie rock, jazz, and notated composition are crossbreeding in some Bushwick loft as I type. And as far as I can tell, the dance-music culture has never been more alive. Which is, of course, why we’re here. Will Hermes is the author of Love Goes to Buildings on Fire and is a frequent contributor to Rolling Stone and NPR. He tweets at twitter.com/ williamhermes and lives in upstate New York. 15 Flying Lotus Ultraísta Thundercat En2ak/ Rafik May 5 & 6 Terminal 5 out sold 610 W 56th St 8pm $32.50 Red Bull Music Academy New York 2013 April 28 – May 31 236 ARTISTS. 34 NIGHTS. 8000 ANTHEMS. 1 CITY. www.redbullmusicacademy.com Discover More On Red Bull Music Academy Radio TUNE IN AT RBMARADIO.COM