About Charlie Haden
(article from Verve Music group website)
http://vervemusicgroup.com/artist.aspx?aid=2808
In the midst of a fragile, post-9/11 atmosphere,
legendary bassist-composer-bandleader Charlie Haden
was inspired to create his meditative American Dreams
as a kind of healing balm for a shattered national
psyche. As he wrote in the liner notes of that
majestic 2002 symphonic offering: "I always dreamed of
a world without cruelty and greed, of a humanity with
the same creative brilliance of our solar system, of
an America worthy of the dreams of Martin Luther King,
and the majesty of the Statue of Liberty...This music
is dedicated to those who still dream of a society
with compassion, deep creative intelligence, and a
respect for the preciousness of life -- for our
children, and for our future."
Two years later, in the aftermath of the 2004
presidential election, Haden was inspired to speak out
this time using the Liberation Music Orchestra to
articulate his concerns. Not In Our Name, the title of
this new cd, stands as a musical manifesto for the
disaffection many people in America and all over the
world feel about the manner in which the present
administration is conducting its affairs both at home
and in the global arena. The material on Not In Our
Name comes strictly from American composers. As Haden
explained, "There was a necessity that I felt to play
music from American composers in protest to what's
going on, to make a statement that just because you're
not for everything that this administration is doing,
doesn't mean that you're not patriotic. So I wanted to
do 'America the Beautiful' to show everybody that
there's a lot of work that needs to be done here in
this country. And inside that song, Carla put the
African-American anthem 'Lift Every Voice And Sing.'
and Ornette Coleman's provocative "Skies Over America"
(the title track of Coleman's first recorded
orchestral symphonic work from 1972). And then there
is a Pat Metheny song that I've always liked, which he
wrote for the movie, The Falcon and the Snowman. At
the end of the movie they do this song with David
Bowie singing called 'This Is Not America.' We do
'Amazing Grace,' Dvorak's 'Goin' Home, which is from
his New World Symphony. And we also do 'Throughout,'
which is a Bill Frisell song that my daughter Petra
did with Bill on a duet record that they did (2003's
Petra Haden & Bill Frisell on True North). When I
heard it I really loved it and wanted to put it on the
record. We also do 'Adagio for Strings' by Samuel
Barber, put to a chamber orchestra, which I always
wanted to do."
This fourth Liberation Music Orchestra recording
reunites Haden with his longtime friend and colleague
Carla Bley. Recorded in Rome last summer at the end of
a triumphant tour of Europe, Not In Our Name, produced
by Haden, Bley and Haden's wife Ruth Cameron, features
a Liberation Music Orchestra lineup comprised of
seasoned LMO veterans like French horn player Ahnee
Sharon Freeman and tuba ace Joe Daley along with
newcomers like trumpeter Michael Rodriguez and alto
saxophonist Miguel Zenon (both of whom played on
Haden's Grammy Award-winning Land of the Sun last
year), tenor saxophonists Chris Cheek and Tony Malaby,
trumpeter Seneca Black, trombonist Curtis Fowlkes,
guitarist Steve Cardenas and drummer Matt Wilson.
Haden says that the genesis for the title of this
latest Liberation Music Orchestra project happened two
years ago when he was on tour in Europe with guitarist
Pat Metheny, performing music from their 1996 Verve
collaboration, Beyond the Missouri Sky. "I noticed
when we were walking around in Italy and Spain that
there were banners unfurled from different balconies
of apartment buildings that said, 'Not in Our Name,'"
recalls Haden. "That's the first time I had seen that
slogan before, and that really impressed me...that the
people in the apartments would do that. And then this
past summer when we were on tour in Europe with the
Liberation Music Orchesta, Miguel Zenon came up to me
at some point and said, 'Man, I just had this dream
last night that you should call your song 'Not In Our
Name.' And I thought that it was a great idea to also
call the album that as well."
Bley's brilliant arrangements underscore pieces by
Antonin Dvorak ("Goin' Home" from the New World
Symphony), Samuel Barber (a gorgeous chamber rendition
of "Adagio For Strings"), Bill Frisell (an adaptation
of Bill's lyrical gem "Throughout" from his 1982 debut
on ECM, In Line) and Pat Metheny (a reggaefied feel on
the pensive "This Is Not America," with sly quotes
from "Dixie," "The Star Spangled Banner" and "Battle
Hymn of the Republic" dropped in for ironic effect).
Elsewhere, Bley's singular arranging skills enhance
Haden's poignant waltz-time title track and her own
dark, dirge-like "Blue Anthem," as well as adding
layers of texture and mystique to a stirring
interpretation of the traditional gospel number
"Amazing Grace" and a potent, 17-minute medley of
"America The Beautiful".
Haden writes in his liner notes to Not In Our Name",
"the beautiful arrangements and performance of Carla
Bley are to be marveled at." Her use of dissonant,
minor key voicings in the horns on "America The
Beautiful," for example, adds layers of innuendo and
irony to that staid patriotic theme. Throughout Not In
Our Name, Bley's subtle tweaking of harmonies sets an
appropriately pointed tone for what is essentially a
jazz protest record. "Carla is something else!" says
Haden. "She voices her chords so special, I can tell
in a minute that it's her. She's the person that I
really trust to do the arrangements for the orchestra.
She's done the arranging on every record and I've
never, ever been disappointed."
Aside from creating beautiful arrangements for all the
pieces on Not In Our Name, Bley takes us to the Church
with her piano playing on 'America The Beautiful,'
though Haden admits, "I always have tried to get Carla
to play more piano but she's very shy. She doesn't
want to play that often and I keep encouraging her
because when she does play, it's so great, man. She
really opened up on that tour we did last summer,
especially when we did 'We Shall Overcome' as a
blues!"
Bley's slow-moving, gospel-inflected arrangement of
"Amazing Grace" serves as a perfect vehicle for
Haden's signature deep-toned bass solo, while her
luminous interpretation of Dvorak's "Goin' Home"
provides a beautiful showcase for trumpeter
Rodriguez's golden tone and soulful restraint and also
for alto saxophonist Zenon's pungent tone and fluent
lines. "Michael has this sound on the trumpet that you
don't hear much today," says Haden. "He's got this
really Chet Baker-Fats Navarro sound. It's more
gentle, soft...gorgeous. On that Dvorak piece, 'Goin'
Home,' he gets this beautiful breathy sound that Chet
and Fats used to get, and Miles too. And it's rare
when you combine that with the gift of improvisation.
The guy is so spontaneous and gifted at creating these
beautiful melodies. Miguel, of course, I had played
with on Land of the Sun. I called him to do that
record because I had heard him play over in Europe and
he really impressed me."
On "Throughout," the sparseness of Bley's own piano
playing blends with Cardenas' arpeggiated figures on
nylon string guitar, bringing a rare delicacy to that
poignant Frisell piece. Haden contributes another
resounding low-end solo here while the piece also
provides a perfect example of the two distinctly
different solo approaches taken by tenor saxophonists
Cheeks and Malaby. "Tony and Chris I had heard before
playing with Paul Motian's Electric Bebop Band. They
have two very different ways of approaching the music,
but both of which are brand new. They're searching for
new intervals, new melodies, which is something I
strive for and always have and always will. So these
guys really impressed me by having very distinctive
sounds. That's another secret of this artform, if
you're dedicated to it, is discovering how to get your
sound through the instrument the way your ears are
really hearing it. And that's what they all do. You
can really hear the difference between Tony and Chris
when they play their separate solos on the Bill
Frisell song. It's just amazing."
On the closer, Barber's hymn-like "Adagio," the LMO
strikes an uncommon balance between delicacy and
emotional power, just as the LMO had some 17 years
earlier on Haden's own fragile opus, "Silence" (from
1982's Ballad of the Fallen). "I was a little bit
afraid of the 'Adagio'," admits Haden, "because Samuel
Barber's composition with string orchestra is so
delicate that you really have to play it precisely and
in tune. But everybody did great. And the arrangement
is so great. It's in all different time signatures.
Carla makes it happen, man. She is a great conductor."
Grounding this edition of the Liberation Music
Orchestra with a deft, eminently musical touch on the
kit is drummer Matt Wilson "I had met Matt in Norway
at the festival in Molda when I was working there with
Pat Metheny," recalls Haden. "Actually, he had called
me right before that festival and said, 'Charlie, you
don't know me. My name is Matt Wilson. I know you and
I love your music and all the stuff that you do with
Dewey. I play a lot with Dewey, who gave me your
number. Anyway, my wife's about to have triplets. I
just wanted to ask your advice.' So that cracked me
up. And I just told him, 'Man, be prepared for a
trip!' I had a chance to play with him a couple of
times after that (including at the San Francisco Jazz
Festival a couple of years ago). I'm really glad he
could make this tour with Liberation Music Orchestra
because he really propels that band."
"The key to everything to me is the power behind every
note you play," he continues. "And that power can be
quiet power. And it also is a dynamic tone. It's just
the way you touch your instrument, whether it be
keyboard or the drums or the bass or the horns. This
power gives you an assuredness and you can instantly
hear it when someone's playing music with this
quality...that they're very sure of why they're
playing music. And every phrase that they play is
coming from that. And that's the way that Matt plays
the drums. I've played different concerts with
different drummers and the real musical ones have this
ability. And Matt does."
As a musical statement, Not In Our Name is a
profoundly moving and beautiful collection of tunes,
full of exhilarating ensemble work and bristling,
emotive solos by some outstanding musicians on the New
York scene. As a political statement, it stands as
Haden's rallying cry against an administration that
would subvert the greater good of the country. As he
writes in the album's liner notes: "So now, although
we lost the election, we have not lost the commitment
to reclaim our country in the name of humanity and
decency. Don't give up -- the struggle continues!"
In a career spanning five decades, Haden continues to
create music that is at once revolutionary and
uplifting. "I want to expand jazz," he says. "I don't
want to keep the audience limited. I want to reach
people who have never come to a jazz concert before.
One way to do that is by making records that have a
lot of different kinds of music on them." He succeeds
royally with Not In Our Name.
* * * * *
Born in Shenandoah, Iowa on August 6, 1937, Charles
Edward Haden began his life in music at the tender age
of 22 months, singing on his parents' country &
western radio show. He started playing bass in his
early teens and eventually left America's heartland
for Los Angeles. "This is the first town that I came
to when I left high school in Missouri," he recalls.
"I came to L.A. just to find Hampton Hawes. And when I
got here in 1956, there were a lot of jazz clubs and
there were a lot of great musicians on the scene. It
was a lot like New York in that aspect -- lots of
after-hours jam sessions, and playing as much as you
could play. Those were definitely exciting times."
Along with Hampton Hawes, Haden also played with such
jazz legends as Art Pepper, Dexter Gordon and Paul
Bley before teaming up with saxophonist Ornette
Coleman, trumpeter Don Cherry and drummer Billy
Higgins for regular gigs at the Hillcrest Club. In
1959, that pioneering quartet came east to New York,
secured an extended residency at the Five Spot and
began recording a series of seminal avant garde
albums, including The Shape of Jazz to Come and Change
of the Century, which revolutionized the course of
modern jazz. In addition to his hugely influential
work with Ornette Coleman through the '60s, Haden
subsequently collaborated with a number of adventurous
jazz giants, including John Coltrane, Alice Coltrane,
Archie Shepp and Roswell Rudd.
In 1969, Haden joined forces with pianist/composer
Carla Bley, founding the Liberation Music Orchestra.
The group's self-titled debut is a true milestone of
modern music, blending experimental big band jazz with
the folk songs of the Spanish Civil War to create a
powerfully original work of musical/political
activism. From 1967-1976, Haden played in Keith
Jarrett's stellar trio, quartet and quintet which
included drummer Paul Motian, percussionist Guilherme
Franco and tenor saxophonist Dewey Redman. In 1976, he
joined with fellow Ornette Coleman alumni Don Cherry,
Dewey Redman and Ed Blackwell to form Old and New
Dreams. A few years later he played alongside Dewey
Redman, Michael Brecker and Jack DeJohnette in Pat
Metheny's 80/81 band.
In 1982, Haden established the jazz studies program at
California Institute of the Arts and in 1986 he formed
his straight ahead Quartet West with saxophonist Ernie
Watts, pianist Alan Broadbent and drummer Larance
Marable. Through the '90s, he continued playing with
Quartet West and the Liberation Music Orchestra while
also producing and recording or performing with Pat
Metheny, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, John Scofield, Tom
Harrell, Hank Jones, Kenny Barron, Ginger Baker, Bill
Frisell, Jack DeJohnette and Michael Brecker. He has
garnered countless awards and Grammy nominations as
well as three Grammy's. There have also been a few
rare concert reunions with Ornette Coleman. More
recently, Haden has collaborated with such jazz greats
as Lee Konitz, Brad Mehldau, Joe Lovano, Alice
Coltrane and even players outside the jazz genre such
as Beck and Ringo Starr. His love of world music has
also seen him teaming with a variety of diverse
international players for many years, including
Brazilian guitarist Egberto Gismonti, Argentinean
bandoneon master Dino Saluzzi and Portuguese guitarist
Carlos Paredes. Charlie Haden is beyond category.
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