Friday, November 18, 2011

Sheldon Brown to honor overlooked genius Herbie Nichols

When it comes to jazz and new music, the Bay Area is a medium-sized pond that sustains a dazzling array of small, often intermingled scenes. It’s an ecosystem in which a tropical profusion of players has found a niche, and among the most versatile and gifted is reed master Sheldon Brown, who is equally accomplished on an array of clarinets and saxophones.
The Eureka native moved down to San Francisco in 1979, and he’s been turning up in some of the region’s most interesting ensembles ever since, from Club Foot Orchestra, which revived the art of composing and performing scores for silent films, to Berkeley’s Klezmorim, the band that helped spark the revival of Ashkenazi Jewry’s party music.
He’s toured and recorded widely with Cuban pianist Omar Sosa’s expansive ensemble. And he’s played a key role in Clarinet Thing, the all-clarinet ensemble led by Beth Custer, and Hemispheres, a world jazz combo led by percussionist Ian Dogole.

Brown even finds time to lead several groups of his own, and on Saturday he presents a project devoted to the extraordinary compositions of pianist Herbie Nichols at the Hillside Club.

Responsible for the composition “Lady Sings the Blues,” a tune indelibly linked to Billie Holiday, Nichols became jazz’s quintessential overlooked genius. While he recorded several classic trio sessions for Blue Note, he scuffled for work until his death from leukemia in 1963 at the age of 44. Combining his love of modernist composers like Satie and Bartok with Caribbean inflections and bebop’s hurtling tempos, tunes like “House Party Starting,” “The Gig,” and “Shuffle Montgomery” have entranced subsequent jazz generations.

For Brown, Nichols’ music has provided endless inspiration, and over the course of a decade he ended up transcribing every tune the pianist ever recorded. He notes that while Nichols was profiled as a hard-luck case in A.B. Spellman’s classic book “Four Lives in the Bebop Business,” he should be remembered for his musical achievements rather than canonized as an abused master.
“Nichols is like St. Jude for all those cats who didn’t make it,” says Brown, a longtime Oakland resident. “There is that aspect to his story, but I wouldn’t want that to be the take away. The music is just brilliant. When I was in my transcribing fever, playing through his tunes a lot, I really got to know his completely unique voice.
He was a melodic improviser. He uses the melody of the piece in his solos, which distinguishes him from great players who apply their ideas to any tune. There’s elegance and humor is his music, but definitely tempered by a little bit of melancholy.” - http://www.berkeleyside.com/2011/11/17/sheldon-brown-to-honor-overlooked-genius-herbie-nichols/

0 Comments: