Still Free After All These Years
Ornette Coleman has been turning heads ever since the release of his landmark album, The Shape of Jazz to Come,in 1959. He followed that up with yet another definitive, genre-defining album a year later, Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation. Since then, Coleman hasn't looked back in his quest to break down musical barriers, redefine band dynamics and continually explore the sonic space of improvisation. Heaps of albums and collaborations later - Charlie Haden, Don Cherry, Scott LaFaro, Freddie Hubbard, Billy Higgins, Elvin Jones, Eric Dolphy, Dewey Redman, and Pat Metheny among them - not to mention a MacArthur "Genius" Award, Coleman still squanks like he was a young cat of yesteryear, taking listeners on a journey not soon forgotten.
Sound Grammaris the first album for your own label of the same
name, your first new recording in a decade and your first live album in
20 years. Why now?
I consider myself a composer that
performs. I spend most of my time trying to write music so my band
won’t get bored.
You’ve rarely
performed on other peoples’ records though relatively recently you
appeared on Joe Henry’s Scarand Lou Reed’s The Raven. Why these two,
non-jazz artists?
I just never have refused to do something
to support a composer or singer. I think music is not at the level
bankers are. I have a very sympathetic reason to want to support those
that want to make their living in playing music.
You recorded with Jerry Garcia
for Virgin Beautyin addition to sitting in parting with the Grateful
Dead in 1993. How’d these collaborations come about?
I
remember being in California; Jerry Garcia called me up. I went out and
sat in with the Grateful Dead. For some reason they thought I did a
pretty good job because they said, “Oh, come back.” The one thing that
I’ve always been able to do is improvise in any form of changes of
melody.
You traveled to
Africa in the mid ‘70s, spending time with rural musicians in both
Morocco and Nigeria, playing traditional music. Yet when you returned,
you went very electric. Why?
The natural sounds were always
sounding more rhythmically. The electric sound was always sounding
like, “That’s not the right note but keep doing it, It was like that.
To me it’s still like that. In other words—I’m going to say something
and it’s going to sound vulgar—but I don’t mean it to sound like that:
When you’re having sex, what are you having it for?
For pleasure or to experience a deeper connection with someone?
Okay,
fine. But at the same time you already know what you’re going to go
through to get wherever you’re trying to go. But in sound, it seems, it
doesn’t travel. It goes into an abyss. It doesn’t have anything that
it’s indebted to yet at the same time it can warm you, it can speak as
if it had a language.
At 76, you’re one of the last true jazz innovators. How do you feel?
Musically,
I really have found and developed a true human condition that will
allow me to go and play in any musical environment without being booed
or beat up. There should be nothing on this planet that’s above
someone else just for that to exist. I don’t know how long I or anyone
is going to live. But the sky doesn’t have no roof, right? So if the
sky has no roof, where is the roof we’re looking for? Why is it that
whatever human beings are, that something has to control what you can’t
do and what you want to do? Why does that exist?
I’m not sure, but at least your sounds will still exist because they’ve been captured and preserved.
Yeah. And peanut butter, too. [laughs]
Photo Jimmy Katz
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