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Books > Music > Contemporary popular music > Jazz
Sun Ra (1914-93) was one of the most wildly prolific and
unfailingly eccentric figures in the history of music. Renowned for
extravagant performances in which his Arkestra appeared in
neo-Egyptian garb, the keyboardist and bandleader also espoused an
interstellar cosmology that claimed the planet Saturn as his true
home. In Sun Ra's Chicago, William Sites brings this visionary
musician back to earth--specifically to the city's South Side,
where from 1946 to 1961 he lived and launched his career. The
postwar South Side was a hotbed of unorthodox religious and
cultural activism where Afrocentric philosophies flourished,
storefront prophets sold "dream-book bibles," and Elijah Muhammad
was building the Nation of Islam. It was also an unruly musical
crossroads where styles circulated and mashed together in clubs and
community dancehalls. Sun Ra drew from a vast array of locally
available intellectual and musical sources--from radical
nationalism, revisionist Christianity, and science fiction to jazz,
rhythm and blues, Latin dance music and the latest pop exotica--to
put together a philosophy and performance style that imagined a new
identity and future for African Americans. Sun Ra's Chicago
contends that late twentieth-century Afrofuturism emerged from a
deep, utopian engagement with the city--and that by excavating
postwar black experience from inside Sun Ra's South Side milieu we
can come to see the possibilities of urban life in new ways.
On December 4, 1957, Miles Davis revolutionized film soundtrack
production, improvising the score for Louis Malle's Ascenseur pour
l'echafaud. A cinematic harbinger of the French New Wave, Ascenseur
challenged mainstream filmmaking conventions, emphasizing
experimentation and creative collaboration. It was in this
environment during the late 1950s to 1960s, a brief "golden age"
for jazz in film, that many independent filmmakers valued
improvisational techniques, featuring soundtracks from such seminal
figures as John Lewis, Thelonious Monk, and Duke Ellington. But
what of jazz in film today? Improvising the Score: Rethinking
Modern Film Music through Jazz provides an original, vivid
investigation of innovative collaborations between renowned
contemporary jazz artists and prominent independent filmmakers. The
book explores how these integrative jazz-film productions challenge
us to rethink the possibilities of cinematic music production.
In-depth case studies include collaborations between Terence
Blanchard and Spike Lee (Malcolm X, When the Levees Broke), Dick
Hyman and Woody Allen (Hannah and Her Sisters), Antonio Sanchez and
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu (Birdman), and Mark Isham and Alan
Rudolph (Afterglow). The first book of its kind, this study
examines jazz artists' work in film from a sociological
perspective, offering rich, behind-the-scenes analyses of their
unique collaborative relationships with filmmakers. It investigates
how jazz artists negotiate their own "creative labor," examining
the tensions between improvisation and the conventionally highly
regulated structures, hierarchies, and expectations of filmmaking.
Grounded in personal interviews and detailed film production
analysis, Improvising the Score illustrates the dynamic
possibilities of integrative artistic collaborations between jazz,
film, and other contemporary media, exemplifying its ripeness for
shaping and invigorating twenty-first-century arts, media, and
culture.
The New York loft jazz scene of the 1970s was a pivotal period for
uncompromising, artist-produced work. Faced with a flagging jazz
economy, a group of young avant-garde improvisers chose to eschew
the commercial sphere and develop alternative venues in the
abandoned factories and warehouses of Lower Manhattan. Loft Jazz
provides the first book-length study of this period, tracing its
history amid a series of overlapping discourses surrounding
collectivism, urban renewal, experimentalist aesthetics,
underground archives, and the radical politics of
self-determination.
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