Sturgill Simpson – A Sailor’s Guide to Earth

A Sailor's Guide to Earth

Sturgill SimpsonA Sailor’s Guide to Earth Atlantic 551380-2 (2016)


Following the success of his prior album, the excellent Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, Sturgill Simpson returns with a more grandiose effort, A Sailor’s Guide to Earth.  His voice still sounds like Waylon Jennings, but the approach of this album ranges from country to southern rock to southern soul to chamber pop.  The opening song has kind of spacey, vaguely psychedelic effects, but eventually launches into a full-throated soul song — very reminiscent of Willie Nelson‘s crossover success Shotgun Willie.  By the third song, “Keep It Between the Lines,” with a full horn section (The Dap-Kings) and prominent slide guitar, he’s squarely in the progressive southern rock territory of “Spanish Moon” by Little Feat (from Feats Don’t Fail Me Now).  Other songs recall later-period “roots rock” recordings by The Band.  The closer “Call to Arms” is pretty rockin’ and concludes the album nicely.  The lyrics remain a liability.  They are mostly pretty clunky throughout, despite best intentions.  And Simpson’s voice has a limited range.  But the musical ideas here are fun and return to the concept of crossover country music that brings together groups of listeners that won’t normally interact, even if it does so in a retro way (it would have been more radical and daring to combine country music with contemporary hip-hop or smooth R&B than the kind of soul music that was popular four or five decades ago). 

The Ornette Coleman Double Quartet – Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation

Free Jazz

The Ornette Coleman Double QuartetFree Jazz: A Collective Improvisation Atlantic SD-1364 (1961)


“It is an insight of speculative philosophy that Freedom is the sole truth of Spirit.” – Hegel, Reason in History

There is much confusion over what “free jazz” means and what Ornette Coleman’s album of the same name really means.  There is a Paul Bley interview (The Wire, Sept. 2007) that I cite as much as possible that explains much about Ornette Coleman’s role in this debate.  But let’s step back a bit further.  If “free jazz” means totally spontaneous improvising, then it long predates Ornette or the 20th Century.  Cavemen banging on logs with sticks were playing free jazz by that definition.  Obviously, this is not what people really mean, or, if they do, their point is trivial.  Rather, as Bley explains, Ornette’s approach was to tear down barriers and instead construct his own musical system instead.  Basically, this is the sort of political project that goes back quite a ways, exemplified by Age of Enlightenment thinkers like Jean-Jacques Rousseau (whose social contract theory posited that groups invested authority in themselves).  There were also certainly other people working in this direction just within the realm of jazz music in the 1950s and even late 1940s (Cecil Taylor, Lennie Tristano, Stan Kenton), though Ornette did more than most to convey a sense of an identifiable and lasting new system of performance, rather than merely tearing down the old systems for a kind of one-off experiment.  The importance of “free jazz” as a “genre” is that it is positioned within a very particular time, place and social structure, and gains meaning primarily in relation to those contextual reference points, including the history of atonal music in the Euro-classical tradition.  This was near the end of the Jim Crow era, thinking well beyond its limits to questions of the ways people would relate to each other beyond such systems of institutionalized discrimination.

G.D.H. Cole wrote and introduction to The Social Contract and Discourses of Rousseau.  In that introduction (pp. xxvii-xxxvi), he wrote about different types of social contract theories of politics, and contrasted the views of Thomas Hobbes with those of Rousseau.

“All Social Contract theories that are at all clearly defined fall under one or other of two heads.  They represent society as based on an original contract, either between the people and the government, or between all the individuals composing the State.  Historically, Social Contract theories tended to pass from the first to the second of these forms.

***

“Hobbes agreed that the original contract was one between all the individuals composing the State, and that the government was no party to it; but he regarded the people as agreeing, not simply to form a State, but in one and the same act to invest a certain person or certain persons with the government of it.  He agreed that the people was the final source of all authority, but regarded the people as alienating its Sovereignty by the contract itself and as delegating its powers, wholly and for ever, to the government which its members agreed to set up.  As soon, therefore, as the State is established, the government becomes for Hobbes the Sovereign; there is no further question of popular Sovereignty but only of passive obedience: the people is bound, by the contract, to obey its ruler, no matter whether he governs well or ill.  It has alienated its rights to the Sovereign, who is, therefore, absolute master.

***

“Not until we come to Rousseau is the second form of the contract theory developed into a thorough-going assertion of democratic rights.

***

“Philosophically, Rousseau’s doctrine finds its expression in the view that the State is based not on any original convention, not on any determinate power, but on the living and sustaining will of its members.

***

“Pure democracy, however, meaning the government of the State by all the people in every detail, is not, as Rousseau says, a possible human institution.  All governments are really mixed in character; and what we call democratic governments are only comparatively democratic.  Government will always be to some extent in the hands of selected persons.  Sovereignty, on the other hand, is in Rousseau’s view absolute, unalienable, and indivisible.”

Perhaps that is a rather long explanation, but it makes for a useful analogy here.  The features of bebop (and hard bop and cool jazz) resemble in certain respects a Hobbesist view.  The players of that style/genre invest in a set of governing rules, and perhaps a set of pioneers who establish those rules (Charlie Parker, etc.); all those players then follow those rules and surrender their ability to change the rules.  Maybe this is an oversimplification, but when Ornette Coleman came along he very clearly marked a transition toward a Rousseauian conception of jazz.  Suddenly, all the players in a combo could have a say in making the rules.  Sure, they ceded some organizational authority to Ornette as the bandleader and composer to put forward some elements of the music on their behalf, but there was no privilege in that that could not be withdrawn at any time (even during performance).  The very structure of the music was always open to the will of all the band members (to a point at least; for a discussion of limits on that approach see Jo Freeman‘s classic essay, “The Tyranny of Structurelessness” which is a more recent and nuanced version of a set of arguments that runs from Robert Michel‘s reactionary tract Political Parties: A Sociological Study of the Oligarchical Tendencies of Modern Democracy).

Rousseau himself once wrote:

“In our day, now that more subtle study and a more refined taste have reduced the art of pleasing to a system, there prevails in modern manners a servile and deceptive conformity; so that one would think every mind had been cast in the same mold. Politeness requires this thing; decorum that; ceremony has its forms, and fashion its laws, and these we must always follow, never the promptings of our own nature” A Discourse on the Moral Effects of the Arts and Sciences (1750).

These “promptings of our own nature” are precisely what Ornette and his band offer up on this album.  And to do so requires an impolite, impertinent break from servile conformity.

The music of Free Jazz features a “double quartet” (so named rather than just an octet because it was Ornette’s regular quartet plus other musicians, including a former drummer of his regular quartet, who doubled up on various instruments with the original quartet — some of the double quartet performers had recorded together the day before on John Lewis Presents Contemporary Music 1: Jazz Abstractions: Compositions by Gunther Schuller & Jim Hall).  They play themes and variations.  In other words, a theme is stated, then variations on the theme are played.  The variations are not limited by strict tonality or chord changes.  The themes are sometimes described as “buzzing fanfares”.  To some, this is odd, dense, difficult music.  To others, this can be fun, enjoyable stuff.  There are also opposing views about this being formless, messy, insignificant music, and even some say that the use of a theme/variation approach makes this not free jazz at all (a bit of hindsight thinking there).  It is possible to ask about critics who think this is formless whether they are socially conservative or reactionary.  Perhaps they don’t admit it, but do they pine for a sense of “order” or “sensible limits” that just so happen to depend on certain groups having power over others, that reject the idea that people can set rules for themselves and instead believe that only certain people (or even deities, if we include here the lunatic royalist/theocratic fringe) are capable of establishing rules that all others must obediently follow.  If all this seems removed from the music of Free Jazz, it shouldn’t.  Listeners do tend to split along these very lines, and therefore this is about something inherent in the music.

The album itself is just one long track (spanning two sides of the original LP).  There was another song recorded, “First Take,” which was released on the archival collection Twins (1971) and then later appended to reissues of Free Jazz as a bonus track.  John Coltrane was heavily influenced by Ornette — he took private tutoring from Ornette for a while.  This album inspired Coltrane to record Ascension.  So if this album is to your linking, perhaps that is another recording worthy of a listen.

Coleman plays well.  His performance is somewhat typical of this period.  Eric Dolphy appears on bass clarinet.  If there is any other jazz musician that needs to be considered alongside Ornette it has to be Dolphy.  A talented multi-instrumentalist, he played with a very “vocal” quality and often leaped between registers.  His phrasing was more atonal than Ornette’s.  The bass clarinet, with its woody sound, it a good compliment to Ornette’s brash and sour tone on alto sax, and it manages to cut through the sound of seven other players well.  Dolphy was one of the few performers worthy of keeping up with Ornette in a setting like this.  Yet he never hogs the spotlight.  Ed Blackwell is a crucial piece of the puzzle too.  Billy Higgins plays somewhat conventional cymbal rides, while Blackwell moves around his drum set, and plays his toms more frequently, adding hints lyricism to his drumming.  Bands with two drummers often drift into a morass of indistinct bashing around, but here the two percussionists are able to both provide a sense of forward propulsion through a steady beat and range through rhythmic improvisations — many modern jazz groups in the coming years tended to choose only one or the other.  They get some solo time near the end of the performance.  Charlie Haden is the most prominent of the two bassist.  Scott LaFaro is here too, and he would replace Haden in Ornette’s regular combo until his death in 1961.  The bassist get some solo time as the horns drop out roughly two-thirds to three-quarters into the performance.  The two trumpet players are Don Cherry and Freddie Hubbard.  They are very different players, with Hubbard playing more conventionally melodically.  The contrasts that the brass players contribute is another key ingredient in making the music distinctive.

The original album jacket featured a painting (White Light) by abstract expressionist Jackson Pollock, who painted using “loaded brushes” and drips.  There is a story about Pollock (possibly true) that an unsympathetic critic came to see him paint at his studio.  Fed up, Pollock flung a gob of paint across the room and precisely onto the doorknob, telling the visitor: there’s the door.  He both rebuked the critic and demonstrated his precision (which the critic denied) with that single gesture.  Ornette was less brash and far more soft-spoken.  And yet, he faced many of the same criticisms as Pollock and used similar artistic techniques.  Visiting a Pollock exhibit, Ornette once said,

“See? There’s the top of the painting, there’s the bottom. But as far as the activity going on all over, it’s equal.  It’s not random. He knows what he’s doing. He knows when he’s finished. But still, it’s free-form.”

Sometimes unacknowledged is that Pollock was interests in jazz, especially be-bop.  There was a definite affinity between his painting and jazz music.  Ornette obviously saw parallels.

Listeners who say Ornette was not really playing “free jazz” because others had less structure miss something.  Being more chaotic, with less delegation of organization, is merely a matter of degree.  The fundamental character of self-determination, along the lines of Rousseau, is the major break that Ornette Coleman represented within music (and jazz music especially).  And more so, Rousseau rejected the idea of total direct democracy as impractical, and Ornette likewise tended to reject the idea of complete unstructured, chaotic total improvisation.  The music does reject a center, tonal or social, and for that reason is anti-essentialist (there is no “essence” or “core” of the music or its performers).  Instead the music focuses on what the performers do.

There is another criticism of all “free jazz” that it is elitist.  This is a thorny issue.  On the one hand, it was music that was never widely popular, and its main audiences tended to be educated, well-off urbanites.  But, on the other hand, given how this music fits so well with the sorts of political theories that have been considered dangerous to social and political elites since the beginning (Rousseau had to flee his home under threat of death due to his writings; The Communist Manifesto is just a refinement of Rousseau’s concepts), this would seem like the very opposite of elitist music.  Could it be that those who see this as elitist music simply assume that ordinary people are incapable of changing their views, to adapt to a new kind of music, which is almost like saying they are inherently conservative?  Or like saying they are inherently stupid?

Free Jazz is one of those albums that some listeners will immediately like, even just upon hearing about the concept and the title.  This is the sort of music that has the capacity to change a listener’s entire conception of what is possible in music.  On the other hand, there are and will continue to be detractors.  But even those who don’t immediately like this, or consider listening to it to be hard work, should at least give it a try, if for no other reason that to gain some exposure to the pioneering conception of music that gave rise to it in the first place — a musical education without something like Free Jazz will necessarily be incomplete.

Freddie Hubbard & Stanley Turrentine – In Concert, Volume One

In Concert, Volume One

Freddie Hubbard / Stanley TurrentineIn Concert, Volume One CTI 6044 (1974)


A really, really good — if strangely overlooked — live jazz fusion album, comparable to Cannonball Adderly‘s The Black Messiah and Donald Byrd‘s Ethiopian Knights, which is to say this is not formally or stylistically innovative but everybody involved delivers superb performances with a focus on warmth and heart.  There also is an equally good Volume Two, on which Herbie Hancock shares top billing — strangely, because he plays on both volumes, but also not so strangely given the commonalities this music shares with his own Mwandishi group.  As fusion was starting to drift into bland mediocrity, this is something else entirely, a vibrant, energetic and likable rock-inflected electric jazz performance that sidesteps the sort of pandering that usually goes hand-in-hand with fusion from this point onward.  There are overt signs of structure, and efforts to make the performances sound proper and professional, but there is always a hint of something unruly and dangerous lurking behind every note.  It is that sense of double meaning that makes this more than just a funky good time (which it also is).

Roy Brooks – Ethnic Expressions

Ethnic Expressions

Roy Brooks and The Artistic TruthEthnic Expressions Im-Hotep CS-030 (1976)


Roy Brooks’ group The Artistic Truth is captured performing live on November 22, 1973 at Small’s Paradise in New York City on Ethnic Expressions.  The music is syncretic jazz.  The players absorb and recreate all manners of styles, from hard bop, to soul jazz, to world fusion.  There is a spiritual, vaguely pan-africanist vibe (leaning “positive” rather than “militant”).  There were a number of groups and record labels pursuing this sort of approach in the early 1970s, and it is a style that has survived in pockets here and there.  What makes this record so special is that the band is great and they no matter how frequently they switch up the style or genre, it is always an organic transition and they play each and every style/genre deftly.  Brooks had a troubled life.  But this album shows no signs of any of that.  The album was once very rare, but is now widely available.

Dead Boys – Young Loud and Snotty

Young Loud and Snotty

Dead BoysYoung Loud and Snotty Sire SR 6038 (1977)


The best songs on Young, Loud and Snotty were ones carried over from the Cleveland cult band Rocket From the Tombs.  There is no question that the available recordings by Rocket From the Tombs are far superior, including both the demo and live versions (The Day the Earth Met the Rocket From the Tombs) and the reunion recordings (Rocket Redux).  But I once heard Iggy Pop say that sometimes you need a stupid record.  For stupid, thick-headed rock and roll, it’s hard to beat the Dead Boys.

David Bowie – Scary Monsters… and Super Creeps

Scary Monsters... and Super Creeps

David BowieScary Monsters… and Super Creeps RCA BOW LP 2 / PL 13647 (1980)


In some ways, this is a transitional effort: the close of Bowie’s late 1970s style and the beginning of his forays into 80s pop.  The eclectic eccentricities of Lodger are held in check, focused around a more steady pop sensibility.  This is still quirky art rock, but it flows together as an album better.  Even if it lacks any individual song as good as “Modern Love” from Let’s Dance or “D.J.” from Lodger, there is not a bad tune anywhere.  It would take Bowie a long, long time to make an album this good again — and it could be argued he never did.

Ornette Coleman – Skies of America

Skies of America

Ornette ColemanSkies of America Columbia KC 31562 (1972)


Skies of America is one of the most perplexing — and frustrating — albums in the Ornette Coleman discography.  For one, it was recorded with significant technical and logistical restrictions: the performance would not fit on a single LP and had to be edited for release; it was recorded in the UK and local musicians union rules prohibited Ornette’s desired staging (which would have included his regular band alongside a full symphony orchestra); and rehearsal time for the symphony was limited to the point of inadequacy.

This album was an unmistakable signpost that Ornette was having what can only be described as delusions of grandeur.  The humility that was always one of the most attractive features of his music was receding.  In his early career he sought to find any avenues to pursue his music, first by finding musicians who would play with him, then to having paying gigs and some recognition by other musicians.  Those things seemed like enough for him for a while, though he was notoriously fickle about compensation and sought to sidestep the music industry through self-staged performances like the famous Town Hall 1962 concert.  Now he seemed to be seeking external validation and acceptance by the musical establishment, the general public, and the bourgeois.  These weren’t exactly humble goals.  By the end of the 1970s he seemed genuinely convinced (according to his mangers at the time) that he should achieve popular fame to equal that of any pop superstar, and also that he should earn millions of dollars (as he noted in interviews).  If these things don’t seem to bear directly on the music, a quick comparison of his recordings from a decade earlier reveal significant departures, and these are plausible explanations for them.

The music itself is what is typically called “third stream” music: a synthesis of jazz and classical music, usually in the form of completely notated, scored music that resembles the improvisations of jazz.  Ornette has mostly written music for a full symphony that sounds a bit like what his small jazz combos played, with him soloing in brief passages.  Yet a nagging issue with the score is the orchestration.  It makes scant use of the possibilities of a full orchestra.  Mostly the players play homophonically, with the entire orchestra moving in unison (for what it is worth, conductor John Giordano re-orchestrated the entire piece in the mid-1980s, with Ornette’s assistance, and that version was performed multiple times).  This brings up a number of contradictions.  Ornette often spoke about “unison” as a principle of his music, but in the jazz context that meant having independently improvising players choosing to work cooperatively, whereas in the symphonic context it meant merely a kind of dictatorial power over the score that the entirely symphony plays.  Also, using a full symphony seemed decadent, and the same results could seemingly be achieved using a smaller chamber group.  For instance, Ornette had composed other (and underappreciated) pieces for smaller chamber groups, like “Dedication to Poets and Writers” (on Town Hall, 1962) and “Forms and Sounds” (on The Music of Ornette Coleman).  In some ways, these things seemed less like musical achievements than social grandstanding, with Ornette putting a feather in his cap to say that he had commanded the sorts of resources necessary to have a full symphony perform a composition. Moreover, the insertion of Ornette playing jazz saxophone solos on a few songs seems to add little to the piece, other than to insert Ornette as a distinct and individual personality into proceedings that are otherwise dominated by the collective sound of the orchestra — though “The Men Who Live in the White House” does point to his light, airy later-career performance style.  The syncopation added by the symphonic percussionists at times also seems a bit clumsy.

In all, this is a problematic recording to say the least.  The underlying compositions do have merit, which does shine through.  However, the way it was realized and recorded leaves much to be desired.  In hindsight, this was a sign that the 1970s were going to be rocky when it came to Ornette Coleman recordings.

My own view of the album tends to vary widely depending on when I hear it.  I can listen to it and think that Ornette is a complete dilettante, and another time listen to it and think it is inspired if still hampered in how it was recorded.  My feelings are mixed.  I can say that I find a 1987 bootleg recording of a live Italian performance of a re-orchestrated version of the piece to be far superior to this one.

The Jimi Hendrix Experience – Are You Experienced

Are You Experienced

The Jimi Hendrix ExperienceAre You Experienced Reprise RS 6261 (1967)


The Jim Hendrix Experience’s debut album is a great one.  Released in significantly different forms in the UK and US — get one of the expanded versions from the CD era that include all the UK and US tracks, plus the complete early singles (with both A- and B-sides), resulting in more than what either the US or UK original stand-alone versions offered.  There is a strong influence from electric blues traditions, but what makes this album special is how it goes well beyond tradition.  In fact, the confident psychedelic edge throughout the album makes clear that Hendrix and his band are committed to the counterculture.  This album could really only have been made at the specific time that it was made.  It conveys a sense of inevitability, like the counterculture was poised to win and let all the freaks (and everybody else) be themselves, unhindered.  Hindsight shows that over the next fifty years the other side claimed almost all the victories, and from that perspective the hippie vision of the Jimi Hendrix Experience seems almost like a quaint relic.  But there is nothing frivolous about how the band plays these songs, which have that blues feeling but often a kind of macho swagger, curiously put to use in service of less macho notions, all done in a way that is quite earnest in is own way.  This represents the attitude that will almost be necessary if the tables are to turn and the countercultural vision rekindled.

“The Wind Cries Mary” has a dreamy romanticism not unlike Bob Dylan‘s “Mr. Tambourine Man.”  “Purple Haze” is the overtly druggy freakout.  “Fire” and “Fox[e]y Lady” are kind of libidinal rockers, and some of the better known album tracks (released together as a single later on).  Along with “Hey Joe,” these are some of the most recognizable rock songs of the period.  They have been played on the radio consistently even decades later.  Yet there is more to the album than just a few highlights.

“3rd Stone From the Sun” is a kind of swirling sonic odyssey, which tends to rob the social status quo of its power by invoking cosmic imagery that places human struggles on just one “stone” in an increasingly accessible solar system (this was the “space age” after all, and this song probably qualifies as afro-futurism).  The blues stuff like “Red House” (only on the UK version), plus “Manic Depression” and “I Don’t Live Today” convey a sense of struggle, and a lack of naivety, without succumbing to hopelessness or discouragement.  The perspective is of acceptance of struggle and hardship as part of achieving something beyond present circumstance.

It is the often thunderous — and sometimes sweetly tender or mystical — guitar riffs that separate this from a lot of psychedelic rock of the day.  This doesn’t sound like trifling stuff.  It is big, sweeping, decisive, dramatic.  It is also worth mentioning that it isn’t just Hendrix that makes this album great.  Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell make substantial contributions, be it Mitchell’s penchant for loose, supple, jazzy drumming that adds dynamism or Redding’s steady bass lines that complement without ever detracting from Hendrix’s leads.

I guess you could say I’m Hendrix-normative when it comes to rock guitar.  I listened to Hendrix albums extensively as a teenager, and came to accept him as a standard bearer for what it meant to be an excellent rock guitarist.  Looking back, it seems reasonable to take that approach.  There are other ways of playing guitar, inside or outside the rock idiom, but anyone who can play as well as Hendrix (not the same way, but as well) is indeed a talented player.  There is no shortage of opinions claiming Hendrix as literally the best electric guitar player.  But there is no reason to object to that!