Extended Analysis

ART-i-Facts: Great Performances from 40 Years of Jazz at NEC

By
RAUL D'GAMA ROSE,
Raul d'Gama Rose

Raul d'Gama Rose

Senior Contributor since 2003

When you hear great music, be prepared to be touched in your soul.

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Published: April 14, 2010

Various Artists
ART-i-Facts: Great Performances from 40 Years of Jazz at NEC
New England Conservatory
2010

For almost 150 years the New England Conservatory has been a repository of learning for musicians from around the world. The institution has maintained a fine sense of history and 40 years ago began a long and intense love affair with Afro-American music, when it became the first major conservatory in the country with a fully accredited Jazz Studies Program, instituted by then conservatory president, composer and multi-instrumentalist Gunther SchullerGunther Schuller Gunther Schuller
b.1925
composer/conductor
. Since then an endless stream of stellar musicians has emerged from its program, carrying the history of the music of America out into the world. This has been as true of its faculty as of its students, too numerous to name. However, it bears mention that bassist Charles MingusCharles Mingus Charles Mingus
1922 - 1979
bass, acoustic
and pianist Jaki ByardJaki Byard Jaki Byard
1922 - 1999
piano
taught there, as did the pianist George RussellGeorge Russell George Russell
1923 - 2009
piano
.

Refreshing partnerships and residencies continue to abound. Saxophonist Wayne ShorterWayne Shorter Wayne Shorter
b.1933
saxophone
melded his quartet with the NEC Philharmonia for a performance of Prometheus Unbound. The violinist, Carla Kihlstedt, just completed a short residency and the prodigiously talented pianist Jason MoranJason Moran Jason Moran
b.1975
piano
has joined the faculty of an institution he calls "an open door" for jazz. So it is probably no surprise to find that some of the finest performances of America's music might have happened as a result, or under the auspices, of the NEC.

ART-i-Facts, released to coincide with the so-called 40th Anniversary of the Celebration of Jazz Hot and Cool, is a fine document in praise of both the conservatory and its efforts to hold high the esteem of 20th century American classic music. Recorded performances range from the hauntingly beautiful solo interpretation of Thelonious MonkThelonious Monk Thelonious Monk
1917 - 1982
piano
's "'Round Midnight," by Jaki Byard, as well as another stellar rendition by pianist Ran BlakeRan Blake Ran Blake
b.1935
piano
, to George Russell putting the NEC Big Band through its paces as he directs them through his challenging chart, "All About Rosie," and Gunther Schuller directing the NEC Jazz Orchestra as they negotiate Duke EllingtonDuke Ellington Duke Ellington
1899 - 1974
piano
classic, racy "Cottontail." There are also memorable performances by soprano saxophonist Steve LacySteve Lacy Steve Lacy
1934 - 2004
sax, soprano
, playing his solo version of "Thelonious," and a splendidly mysterious performance of John ColtraneJohn Coltrane John Coltrane
1926 - 1967
saxophone
"India," by tenor saxophonist George GarzoneGeorge Garzone George Garzone
b.1950
sax, tenor
.

Among the most memorable tracks are the beautiful "Cameo," by valve trombonist Bob BrookmeyerBob Brookmeyer Bob Brookmeyer
1929 - 2011
trombone
with the NEC Jazz Orchestra, Jimmy GiuffreJimmy Giuffre Jimmy Giuffre
1921 - 2008
clarinet
"The Train And The River," by tenor saxophonist Sam Decker, guitarist Will Graefe and bassist Nate Therrien, and a rousing performance of Bob MosesBob Moses Bob Moses
b.1948
drums
"Reverence" by the NEC Jazz Orchestra under the direction of Ken Schaphorst. The fabulous and tantalizing traditional Greek chart is given a magnificent twist in "Zeibekiko" as the clarinet of Joe ManeriJoe Maneri Joe Maneri
1927 - 2009
saxophone
and the doumbek of Sophia Bilides fuse the 9/8 rhythm with an elastic jazzy improvisation. Vocalist Dominique EadeDominique Eade Dominique Eade
b.1958
vocal
rendition of her spiritual "Go Gently To The Water" is enthralling as is the magnificent closer, Scott JoplinScott Joplin Scott Joplin
1868 - 1917
piano
"Maple Leaf Rag," by the NEC Ragtime Ensemble, conducted by Schuller.

To those who have posited that the NEC has been a tad Euro-centric, here is ample proof that the opposite may be true. Moreover, there is little doubt that any venture that was blessed by Schuller was full of reverence for the music created by the genius of Afro-America—little doubt that this is as much the classical music of this century going forward as any music written by so-called classicists. ART-i-Facts is an album of truly historic music kept alive by succeeding generations of musicians, as much as it is one that might be enjoyed for the sheer joy of this music called jazz.


Tracks: Cottontail; 'Round Midnight; Zeibekiko; Thelonious; Aluminum Baby; All About Rosie; Cameo; The Train and the River; Reverence; India; Go Gently to the Water; Making Lunch; 'Round Midnight; Maple Leaf Rag.

Personnel: Duke Ellington Repertory Orchestra conducted by Gunther Schuller (1); Jaki Byard: piano (2); Joe Maneri: clarinet (3); Rebekah Zak: piano (4); Albin Zak: guitar (4); Sophia Bilides: doumbek (4); Steve Lacy: soprano saxophone(5); NEC Jazz Orchestra conducted by Carl Atkins featuring Harvey Mason: drums (6); NEC Big Band directed by George Russell (7); Bob Brookmeyer: valve trombone with the NEC Jazz Orchestra (8); Sam Decker: tenor saxophone (9); Will Graefe: guitar (9); Nate Therrien: bass (9); NEC Jazz Orchestra conducted by Ken Schaphorst (10); George Garzone: tenor saxophone (11); John Lockwood: bass (11); Rakalam Bob Moses: drums (11); Dominique Eade: voice (12); Mick Goodrick: guitar (12); Jed Wilson: piano (12); NEC Jazz Orchestra conducted by Ken Schaphorst featuring Malcolm Campbell: piano (13); Ran Blake: piano (13); NEC Ragtime Ensemble conducted by Gunther Schuller (14).

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