By Lazaro Vega
GRAND RAPIDS - Saturday, November 13, 8 p.m. at Wealthy Theater, 1130
Wealthy SE, Grand Rapids, poet/dramatist/activist Amiri Baraka with Chicago
trumpeter Malachi Thompson in an evening of jazz and poetry. Featuring
pianist Kirk Brown, bassist Harrison Bankhead and drummer Avreeayl Ra.
Presented by the Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts. Tickets are
available now for $10 by calling the UICA, 616-454-7000. A workshop with
Thompson and Baraka is scheduled for 4 p.m. the day of the show at the UICA,
41 Sheldon Blvd. SE, Grand Rapids. E-mail: uica@iserv.net.
Amiri Baraka is on the phone from his home in Newark, N.J. conversing with
Lazaro Vega of Blue Lake Public Radio.
Lazaro Vega: I'm just really happy to see that in the last year or so you've
become a much more public figure outside of academia through the recording
with Hugh Ragin, 'Afternoon in Harlem' on Justin-time, that 'When Sun Ra
Gets Blue,' and the recording with Malachi Thompson, ('Freebop Now,'
Delmark), as well as the concert this past summer with Sonic Youth and the
New York Art Quartet, and your appearance in the movie 'Bulworth.' All of
these things are fantastic. It's good to have you back out again.
Amiri Baraka: Well, thank you very much. Thank you. Well, I've been
teaching school for 20 years while these kids, you know my children, got
through school. And that's over with, most of it, anyway. I do have more
time to do other things now rather than just -- Because they had me in
exile. I had to drive two hours each way to get to work. It was like an
exile situation, not just a job.
LV: Where was that?
AB: I taught at The State University of New York at Stonybrook, which is
in Long Island and I live in Newark, New Jersey, so that's two hours each
way. That seemed to be the only job I could get for whatever reason, so,
piff.
LV: Did you listen to WBGO on your commute?
AB: Yeah sure, oh yeah, absolutely: I listen to 'BGO all the time
(chuckling) even though I harass them all the time. If they're playing corny
music I call them up and ask them about it, certainly. They can tell you how
I'd send them postcards. I used to carry postcards in my briefcase so if
some stuff went down that was really corny I could stop and write a post
card and send it at that moment (laughs). I wouldn't have to worry about it.
LV: Where you happy with that role in 'Bulworth'?
AB: Well, yeah, I was happy with it. I mean, obviously, being a writer I
asked Warren (Beatty) when he first asked me to do that could I write my own
dialogue, but you know the man with the scissors is always in charge
ultimately. I got to say one thing or two things, something like that. It
was o.k. It was Warren's picture, and he did what he wanted to with it and I
thought it turned out pretty well given the circumstances of working in
Hollywood with somebody like (Rupert) Murdoch. Although I don't think
Murdoch knew about it at the beginning. (Laughs).
I thought Warren did a good job given the straightened kind of circumstances
of not being absolutely free, you know what I mean? As a matter of fact that
movie probably will have a great deal of influence because of the elections
coming up and all that.
I figure Warren must have counted on all that.
LV: What would you think of him running for political office?
AB: Warren had a press conference. I don't know. I think Warren. What he
's done so far is pretty positive. I think what Warren did, and what I was
trying to do by coming out and endorsing (Bill) Bradley so early, was trying
to drive the thing to the left. And I guess the powers that be got the
message, because now they've got (Pat) Bucannon to opt for running for the
Reform Party. So what they're trying to do is keep it from going too far to
the left by putting the Nazi in it and running it back to the right a little
bit.
LV: It seems like he bailed on the Republicans because he didn't think
they were going the way he wanted to, either. He left the Republicans as
much as the Reform Party gained him, right?
AB: See, I think that Bucannon, he's got all this disingenuous claptrap
about Hitler and stuff, and the Nazis. I think that he probably believes
that there's kind of righty ground swell out there, you know what I mean?
Because it's true, there are more of these skinheads and Church of the
Creator and Arian Nation stuff. The Republicans were always kind of an
extension of them, at least the right wing Republicans were. So this is in a
way a kind of continuation of all that. I think they know it, and they're
trying to make use of it. (For) the same reason David Duke would come out
and run, you know?
Of course there's a lot of kind of populace disaffection with the main
parties for obvious reasons. So somebody like Bucannon can come out and talk
some populist garbage and get a lot of people who are leaning in that kind
of completely irresponsible direction. There're sections of the population
of all nationalities that have that putschist, disaffected, irresponsible
kind of mentality. Its just there's so many more white folks it makes it
more dangerous when they go there.
LV: Things have certainly changed a lot in American politics since the
1960's when you had Martin Luther King and Malcolm X representing a
completely different voice of the people.
AB: Well I think that they, the powers that be -- you have to remember
that the people that have the most money finally have the most
responsibility for where the body politic is, because they're the ones that
have the thousands of people writing, and making movies, T.V. and radio.
If you study American history you'll see that they do that. Each time there'
s a gain, that's what (E.B.) Dubois said: he called it 'The Sisyphus
Syndrome.' That every time we rolled the rock up the mountain, like the
Civil War thing. By the 1870's they had gotten rid of Reconstruction. By the
1890's 'separate but equal' was the law of the land. So the same thing in
the '20's we rolled back up the mountain again: people like Garvey and
Dubois, even the Communist Party, African Blood Brotherhood. But by the '30'
s it was rolling back down. Same thing in the '50's with Martin and Malcolm.
But remember the people who run this they talk a lot about America this,
America that, but remember all four of those people, Kennedy/Kennedy/King
and Malcolm, were murdered. That's to show you, first of all, the kind of
hypocrisy about people talking about America the great democracy; and number
two that there's a body of folks in this country since the Civil War who are
determined that it's not going to be a Democracy.
Those people didn't die with lightening bolts from God, you know. And I defy
anybody to tell me that they know the whole story of either Malcolm or John
Kennedy or Robert Kennedy or King's assassinations.
LV: Right. It's never been clear. When I came to this interview I knew we
would be talking about many, many different things because your life is so
multi-dimensional, but one aspect of your life that deeply affected me as a
young man -- I'm 39 now and I'm on the radio 30 hours a week playing jazz -
was when I was growing up in Grand Rapids I had heard about East Lansing and
what was going on at Michigan State with Anthony Braxton and Roscoe Mitchell
living in Bath, the AACM. And I really didn't have much to go on in terms of
trying to find out about the music of the Civil Rights era that preceded
them, except for your book 'Black Music' and 'Blues People.' Eventually I
read both of those, as well as the book by A.B. Spellman, 'Four Lives in the
Bebop Business,' and it really shaped my understanding of the music of John
Coltrane and Archie Shepp and even Albert Ayler.
AB: Yeah well that's good. Do you get a chance to play that now?
LV: All the time.
AB: Yeah! Well good Where are you, what state? Grand Rapids, Michigan. I
see. That's great because they're taking the music on the same trip that
they're taking politics (laughing) Kenny G for President!
LV: Well, trying to put the music of the AACM in perspective, and I wasn't
a music major, so hearing what Roscoe was doing was a mystery to me. But
understanding it as a reaction to the energy music that John Coltrane and
Albert Ayler exemplified put it in context. That really helped me out to
understand this advanced form of musical expression. I just owe you that.
AB: Well thank you very much. That's the writer's gig, whether he
fulfills it or not, that's certainly what it is: letting people know what's
going on. I think that this is an era where that work has (laughing) to be
done again.
LV: Yes it is. I heard George Lewis the trombonist is writing a book on
Anthony Braxton. Roscoe told me that. It's going to knock this entire
current neo-conservative thing down and put Braxton up where he belongs as
the Beethoven of our time.
AB: Well, I'd like to see it. George is an enormously skilled player.
Yeah, I'd like to hear that. I don't always agree with the results of their
musical concerns, but certainly George is one of the most skilled
trombonists around.
My problem is now I think that people have to not throw away the grand sort
of profundities of the tradition in search for things. I just got through
talking to a musician about this. There's a treasure chest that we have
rarely taken advantage of. I mean, like for instance what's his name? Wynton
(Marsalis) is doing the music of Duke and the music of Bud Powell and the
music of Monk. I think that's very positive. But there are a lot of people
who are putting that down who are confusing what is obviously a conservative
kind of approach with the idea of, you know, (whiney) 'we need a place to
play, we gotta have venues, we can't have this old shit.'
Well, I don't know. The point is that you've got to make your own place to
play in rugged, individualist America, apparently. I'm just happy that, you
know, we can hear the music of Duke Ellington, the music of Bud Powell, the
music of Charlie Mingus and so forth, done as a regular repertory staple,
because that's the way it's supposed to be done.
They do in these opera houses. They're still doing Europeans in the main.
You might hear every once in awhile Aaron Copeland or someone like that,
Morty Feldman, rarely. But in terms of a repertory of American music, you
see? And that's the same thing with all the culture. We're still laboring
under a kind of colonial restriction; do you know what I'm saying?
You go to Broadway. They've changed now a little bit because we've been
harassing them for the last decade, but when you go to Broadway you see most
of those are English plays. Where are the great American authors? Where are
the Tennessee Williams and Arthur Millers? Where are the Langston Hughes's?
Where are the Lorraine Hasburys, you know what I'm saying?
But see I think the problem is those really profound works say some things
about this country that, you know, the people with the money don't
necessarily want to hear. They want to know why the kids in Columbine start
killing people; why there are gangs in the inner cities. Those plays will
tell them a lot more than those committees that they get.
LV: Yes, they will. Artists have always been social critics in America and
that has been one of the troubles with it, I mean, in terms of support and
visibility. It's like struggling against the same organizations that are
going to fund them, or otherwise have the bread.
AB: Yeah.
LV: The two percent who have the concentration of wealth is often the
group that is being criticized in, for instance, plays by Eugene O'Neil.
AB: Yeah, well, see what they'll do, they'll do O'Neil's works, to my
way of thinking, after his expressionist and social realism. They start
doing his works when he starts moon worshipping. They might do 'The Iceman
Cometh.' But some of O'Neil's earlier plays are really profound and much
more revolutionary. Something like 'The Hairy Ape.' He did a lot of plays
about the sea, seamen, and those kinds of family/social situations. They don
't want to see those things anymore.
Like Tennessee, the great Tennessee Williams: there's something to be said
for Tennessee being one of the most profound American playwrights. They don'
t want to tackle Tennessee too tough. They just put a new play of his that
was not done before, but.
The Americans, we need a repertory of music, a repertory of drama; I mean a
regular American repertory that has a permanent place and also travels. We
need to be able to hear the great American composers, and we need to be able
to see great American theatre and film. There needs to be a regular
repertory, like we're looking at the (Italian) commedia dell' arte, you know
what I mean, or Comedie Francais, you know what I'm saying?
But they still think art is another form of money making rather than a form
of revelation and education.
LV: Listen, I was wondering if we could talk a little bit about your
discography with jazz musicians? I know there's 'The X is Black' on Mercury.
AB: 'The X is Black.' That was done in, oh, what was the name of that
thing? A poetry thing that was put together and had, I think, about 50 or 60
poets in it?
LV: Wasn't it 'The U.S. of Poetry'?
AB: Yes, that's what it is.
LV: So you're just in an anthology there. Well, I have the original New
York Art Quartet vinyl ESP record. I've got a copy of 'Black Dada Nilismus.'
AB: Oh, way back when, yeah. We have another record out, I guess it will
be out in January called 'Reunion' of the New York Art Quintet with Reggie
Workman, Milford Graves, John Tchicai and Roswell Rudd. It's a very fine
record. I've just heard the tapes. Even though a guy in Jazz Times wrote he
said that he hated, you know he saw the live thing we did, he said that I
had managed to drown out the band. No if you can drown out Milford Graves
alone (laughs). I mean that's just bizarre, man.
LV: When I heard that I remembered that Sonic Youth opened the show,
right? So you were dealing with a sound system oriented towards vocalists. I
mean, you probably weren't on stage in a jazz setting, wasn't it a big
concert?
AB: Yes, it's a big concert hall, but I think he heard words he didn't,
I'm not talking about profanity, but I think he had such ideological (pause)
trauma that he thought he couldn't hear it. I mean, unless there was
something actually wrong with the sound system. But there's no way in the
world I can drown out musicians, that's just bizarre.
LV: I didn't pay that any mind. Because the UICA had already booked this
concert you're going to do in Grand Rapids when that review came out, and I
just didn't pay it any mind at all.
AB: I started to write an answer, but then I looked at the answer and
the answer was so unforgiving and relentlessly, I said well, really, maybe I
ought to just let him slide, you know?
LV: That's right, because the record will speak for you.
AB: Yeah, that's what I thought. That's essentially what I was saying. I
don't know why he couldn't hear it, but it's probably because he didn't
appreciate what I was saying. These people are very sly. He says, 'He comes
on like Chuck D.' Now what is it? Is that because people finally accused
Chuck D. of having some anti-social, even anti-Semitic kind of ideas? Is
that why you're going to try to infer that somehow? That's to me so low. If
you don't like this stuff tell us why you don't like it, don't say,
(mocking) 'He came on like Chuck D.' What does that mean? That's an
association in somebody's mind.
LV: That allusion escapes me.
AB: Chuck D. was with Public Enemy. There was a big flap about him doing
some anti-Semitic stuff. So I thought this guy by saying 'Like Chuck D.' was
trying to imply some stuff without actually coming out so somebody can see
that he's just lying.
LV: The thing is if he's going to come out and say critically what he
really means, he has to get his writing chops together if he's going to talk
to you.
AB: Yeah.
LV: Because it's going to be Ali and Forman, I mean you guys are going to
go at it, and you better be ready for that. You really have to sharpen your
thoughts to the point you really want to make, because if it's at all vague,
you're just going to eat him alive.
AB: (Laughs). I just, yeah (piff) the guy's got nothing else to do. It
was that bad lead, I mean (laughs).
But the whole question of words and music, 'word music' I call it, it's I
think going to come into it's own in the mainstream and like anything that
comes into the mainstream some of it will be co-opted as soon as it appears.
That's what happens.
There's a big gathering this weekend in Newark, down at the New Jersey
Performing Arts Center, and then our own group, Kimako's Blues People. So
there's going to be hundreds of poets in Newark this weekend, and hundreds
of musicians. So it should be pretty valuable.
I think I'm working with David Murray on Sunday with that group called Fo
Deux. We made a record about three years ago called 'Revue' where he uses a
lot of the African musicians and stuff.
LV: That's on Justin-time. I know you also did a record with Murray in the
1980's on India Navigation, right?
AB: Right, way back, right. But the thing called Fo Deux is a great
record, by the way. Even though I'm on it. But I would say that's one of
David's great achievements to mix African American and African genres of
music together like that and still make it come out a whole. I thought it
was a wondrous accomplishment. I'm just sorry that it didn't get as big in
the U.S.
I have to say it's probably my fault it didn't get as big in the U.S. as it
got in Europe. In Europe the record was a number one seller for months. But
here, you know, because I was talking about slavery in the stuff that I did.
And everybody knows there is no such thing in America as slavery, so they
get a little fragile when you talk about it (laughs).
LV: Was there profanity on it?
AB: No, there's nothing. It's just a question of slavery. It's just a
question of slavery. See, the once you find out that, you know, its like
Jesse Jackson running. Although he's since sort of defected from reality.
But when he was running and people said well they're just doing that because
he was black. Well that might have something to do with it, but mainly it
was because of the political lines that he was taking. Do you know what I'm
saying? That they were left of the establishment; therefore he could have
been a white Anglo Saxon Protestant, as we will soon see with Bill Bradley.
But if you take certain positions, aye, that's - Or you could be Bruce
Springsteen talking about born in the U.S.A. There are certain positions
that the establishment is not comfortable with.
LV: I'm looking forward to hearing that. I also know you cut a record for
Enja that's only available in Europe that's coming my way, too.
AB: Well I wish you'd get me one, hu-huh. 'Real Song' you're talking
about. But you see those records like that they put them out, the
distribution is somewhat limited and a minute later they're gone. So it's
very frustrating here. But the New York Art Quintet record is coming out.
The Hugh Ragin record ('An Afternoon In Harlem') I liked a great deal.
LV: Your poem to Sun Ra is interesting. When you're going on saying Sun Ra
's name over and over it's as if you're trying to evoke everything about Sun
Ra by just saying his name.
AB: That's right, right. Well that's the Ancients. The ancient Africans
thought that you say the name and the spirit will appear. That's what I was
doing; I was trying to call his spirit up. And, well, I'm not going to speak
on that any further because if I start saying I did then they want to lock
me up.
LV: Well, I loved Ra. I saw Ra in Detroit, East Lansing, Chicago and
Ypsilanti, probably six or seven times in all.
AB: Sun Ra was a great to me. Really, all these people leaving out the
world suddenly and together is very disconcerting.
LV: Sun Ra was the epitome of big band tradition.
AB: Yes, absolutely, absolutely. He was just in tune with the space age,
that's all. He definitely was a traditionalist. I think in his last years he
played a lot more of traditional big band music, in his own inimitable way.
But still.
LV: I heard him play 'Queer Notions' by Fletcher Henderson.
AB: Oh yeah, well he used to be Fletcher Henderson's back-up pianist.
That's how old Sun Ra is. Sun Ra's older than dirt, man. So when he says he
played with Fletcher Henderson then you know how old he was. He was an old
guy.
That book that just came out by John Szwed is a very enlightening book if
you're interested. 'Space is the Place: The Lives and Times of Sun Ra' it's
called. It's a very informing book.
I think there are two books out on Sun Ra now. One from a guy in Germany,
Art LeBrechts I think his name is, and then the one by Szwed who's at, where
is he, Harvard or Yale, one of those places?
But it is good to see that there is some kind of more incisive and
analytical criticism and analysis of the work.
Rather than, 'I like it, I don't like it.' Or the 'gee-wiz' brand of
criticism, you know.
LV: Sun Ra, Cecil Taylor and Ornette Coleman came on the scene at a time
when music reached a point where anything was possible.
AB: Well you see the problem with American music is that the most
inventive and creative aspect of it is always the most oppressed, and so it
never gets to be as ubiquitous, say, as Kenny G. It's never heard as much.
In the real world Duke Ellington has set the tone for American music for a
long, long time, 50 years, anyway. Too often our young players don't have
the benefit of understanding that, or knowing that. Many do. But if you'll
check somebody like Sun Ra, you'll hear a lot of his solos come directly out
of Duke (especially) a lot of those band pieces.
People as thought as way-out as Monk, for instance, a lot of these people
are coming straight out of Duke Ellington.
To the extent we can appreciate Duke Ellington we can certainly appreciate
all of the kind of vectors from his gigantic body of works.
LV: Sure, Cecil Taylor as a pianist originally was in some ways out of
stride.
AB: Sure, oh, absolutely.
LV: He did a song called 'Wallering' for Fats Waller.
AB: Yeah. No, no, no, no: it's impossible. See, that's the point. When I
say great people in anything, it means there're some people that it's
impossible for you to ignore. In other words, it's impossible for you to
ignore Duke Ellington and really be in the 20th Century. You might be
walking around talking about, 'Oh, I like Monk! I like Monk!' But if you dig
Monk, you'll find Monk is Duke Ellington.
So it's a question of how do we absorb the resources of our culture? In
America it's funny because a lot of people don't even understand that their
culture is African, European and Native. You know what I mean? It's broader
than the establishment would have it be, obviously. To really absorb it you
have to understand that you are all of it. And a lot of people don't because
of racism, or people are not well educated, don't know much about the world.
This is defiantly a culture that's deep and rich, and richer and deeper than
people even understand.
If you have Africa and Latin America and Europe to draw on, I mean
effortlessly, as your psychological and historical kind of cultural
development and you don't know that, well, then you'll settle for Kenny G.
(Laughs). You'll settle for something you don't have to, I'll tell you.
LV: Or you just won't do the work to find out what's underneath that.
AB: That's right because it's deep; it's very deep. But look here I'm
going to have to run, I'm sorry, but I've got to get out of here right now.
LV: Oh, that's too bad. I was hoping we could talk a little bit about some
of the poems you'll be doing with Malachi Thompson.
AB: Oh, o.k. go ahead. I've just got a box load of stuff to do that I'm
not doing and I need to be doing it. Go ahead.
LV: I understand. Malachi mentioned that when you're performing, and I
guess you've been performing together since 1983 or so, that you have a
repertoire of poems about certain jazz musicians, Billie Holiday, --
AB: Oh yeah. As a matter of fact I want to bring out a book on each one
of them called 'The Book of Monk,' 'The Book of Duke,' 'The Book of 'Trane,'
who else? I've got 'The Book of Miles.' And then I've written individual
poems, a suite of poems to Charlie Parker, and Bud Powell. I've written a
whole reconstruction of Willie 'The Lion' Smith's life. I've done something
for Sarah Vaughn. And then I've done a theatre piece for Bessie Smith, Ethel
Waters, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughn and Abby Lincoln
together, a theatre piece for those singers.
So I've been working on stuff, a lot of stuff on the musical. We just put
together a new band. I've been working with bands for a long, long time, but
we have a new band now. It's all part of what I do. The music is an organic
part of my whole approach to literature and art.