JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Sun Ra Arkestra’s Maestro Marshall Allen’s 100th birthday.
Category: avant garde jazz
Throwback: Happy 110th Birthday, Sun Ra!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 110th anniversary of Sun Ra’s arrival.
Throwback: Happy 99th Birthday, Roy Haynes!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Roy Haynes’ 99th birthday.
Throwback: Black History Month: John Coltrane
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates celebrates Black History and pays tribute to John Coltrane.
Throwback: Happy Belated 97th Birthday, John Coltrane!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms belted celebrates John Coltrane’s 97th birthday.
Throwback: Happy 99th Birthday, Marshall Allen!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Sun Ra Arkestra’s Marshall Allen’s 99th birthday.
Throwback: Happy Belated 109th Birthday, Sun Ra!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms belatedly celebrates the 109th anniversary of Sun Ra’s birth.
Live Concert Photography: BRIC Arts Media’s BRIC Jazz Fest at BRIC House Night 2: 10/22/21 feat. Sun Ra Arkestra with Roy Nathanson and Nick Hakim, Adi Mayerson and Samir Langus
New Video: Nite Bjuti Shares Woozy Contemplation of Black Girlhood and Womanhood
Nite Bjuti (pronounced as Night Beauty) — Candice Hoyes, Val Jeanty, and Mimi Jones — is an an acclaimed trio of Afro Caribbean improvisational artists, who use electronics, vocalism, bass, Haitian rhythms, sampling and spoken word to cultivate their narrative journey. The trio draw inspiration from a a centuries’ old Hatian folk tale called “Night Beauty,” about a girl whose bones begin to sing in the afterlife, her spirit seeking justice. The members of the trio play to rediscover the deeply buried Diasporic beauty in our world that’s transcendent cross generations. Fittingly, they made their debut at Jazz at Lincoln Center, as part of a celebration of 2018 International Women’s Day.
The trio have played NUBLU Jazz Fest, NYC Winter Jazzfest, The Schomberg Center and Jazz at Lincoln Center, and have done a live studio performance on WGBO. The trio are UMEZ Arts Engagement grant recipients for last year’s mixed media installation commissioned by the Schomberg Center for Research in Black Culture. They’re also 2020 recipients of the NYC Women’s Fund in Jazz Music, which has fully funded their full-length debut album, slated for an April 14, 2023 release.
Thematically, the trio’s debut reportedly contemplates existential themes including coming of age and deep physical, mental and spiritual change. The album’s first single, “Mood (Liberation Walk)” features around skittering voodoo and soca-like beats, ethereal cooing and wailing, a propulsive bass line, whirring electronics and a spoken word poetry to create a woozy synthesis of ancient folk traditions, contemporary electronic production and tight grooves. But the song also manages to a be an ageless conversation across time and space among members of the Diaspora, discussing things that only those within the community know and understand — and in the language that those within know and understand.
”What good is freedom if you don’t really feel free? Black girlhood maturation brings a range of evocative contradictory experiences,” Nite Bjuti’s Candice Hoyes asks, and “in ‘Mood (Liberation Walk)’ we express the sudden sensation of a girl jumping/jumped into puberty, roped into a new emotional reality, physicality and societal positionality. As explored in the music video, she jumps through the portals of her own design right until the foreboding street lights flicker. Jumping is tied to shared childhood experiences, embodies connectivity and the chasmic leaps of growth in the Black womanly experience.”
Throwback: Happy 96th Birthday, John Coltrane!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 96th anniversary of John Coltrane’s birth.
Throwback: Happy 97th Birthday, Marshall Allen!
JOVM (belatedly) celebrates Marshall Allen’s 97th birthday.
Throwback: Happy 96th Birthday, Roy Haynes!
Yesterday was the legendary Roy Haynes’ 96th birthday. Over the course of his 77 year career — yes, 77! — Haynes has played swing, bop, fusion and avant garde jazz with a who’s who of jazz, including Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, Stan Getz, Sarah Vaughan, Chick Corea, McCoy Tyner, Oliver Nelson and a long list of others. And unsurprisingly because of such a lengthy and productive career, Haynes is one of the most recorded drummers in jazz history.
I had the pleasure and honor of photographing and watching the imitable legend play on a SummerStage bill that featured Ron Carter and McCoy Tyner. At the time, I believe that Haynes was around 91 and even in his advanced age, he was full of energy, charming and incredibly spry: during his set, he got up from his drum kit to tap dance and sing. I hope to have that kind of energy and joy if I get to that age! He’s also still regularly playing and touring. And if it wasn’t for the COVID pandemic, Haynes would have been playing his annual Blue Note residency to celebrate his birthday.
Happy birthday, Mr. Haynes! May there be many, many, many more!
