I've never listened to Gayle, and also had no idea he was such a piece of shit, damn.
More importantly - do I go see the Chris Speed Trio with Dave King this week, or Amendola vs Blades w/Cyro Baptista next week? Leaning towards the latter since I've seen CST before (although it's always delightful to see such great musicians), and I'm betting Cyro Baptista will be a real fun time live.
― 50 Favorite Jordans (Jordan), Monday, 11 September 2023 17:26 (two years ago)
Yeah I've never heard him either and had no idea, wow.
― Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 11 September 2023 17:30 (two years ago)
Would love to hear Cyro Baptista live. His album with Derek Bailey is a favourite of mine.
― Composition 40b (Stew), Monday, 11 September 2023 17:53 (two years ago)
Huh, didn't know about CG's antichoice views/onstage rants until now; the one time I heard him live (in '95, with Rashied Ali and William Parker), he didn't say a word until show's end
― Hongro Hongro Hippies (Myonga Vön Bontee), Monday, 11 September 2023 18:41 (two years ago)
cancelling the legacy of a jazz artist who i'd never heard of until he died just now
― xheugy eddy (D-40), Monday, 11 September 2023 19:14 (two years ago)
modernity is wild
I was a huge Charles Gayle fan from the moment I heard in him 1993, my first real brush free jazz as current vital force, not historical artifact, and it was through him I would discover, Ware, Parker, Shipp, et al and basically a whole universe music I'm still fascinated by to this day.
I never got to see him live, his one trip to Mpls I was aware of it but still underage, I tried to get into the show, couldn't.
I think I first heard his rants on "Testaments" (I think it's that one) so 1995 and it ruined his music for me, for at least twenty years I couldn't separate the art from the artist and even now I still can't really, but I can listen to those early records (and some more recent ones that record with Edwards/Sanders mentioned upthread is incredible) and hear the greatness of his playing and I have to admit he is still fascinating artist to me in spite of everything, though obv the line is different for everyone and even if he didn't have completely repellant homophobic and misogynistic views his music is really not for everyone, nor was he the kind of artist to compromise for any reason...I mean the whole "Streets" thing...
Matana Roberts's thoughts & livestream where very interesting and I mean, even in this thread there are youtube clips of Gayle playing with artists who would be the target of his rants, so I'm not sure how to square any of this...
― chr1sb3singer, Monday, 11 September 2023 19:49 (two years ago)
This essay from 2018 gets at some things I agree with (again, I'll have a long piece going out on Wednesday).
Most scandalously, he began preaching his version of Christian salvation from the bandstand. And thus for Gayle—a modest, unassuming if eccentric working musician verging on retirement age—the shit hit the fan. The most contentious aspects of Gayle’s sermonizing were his insistence that abortion was nothing but “a slick word for killing babies,” and his decrying of “men lusting after men and women lusting after women” as an “abomination” and a “sin” on par with “lying, cheating, and stealing.” Audiences, club owners, and festival directors alike were bemused and put off. Work became harder to come by.Now it probably goes without saying that, like most people my age in this country, I am cool with anybody lusting after anybody, and doing what they will with that lust, so long as all parties are consenting. Additionally, I will always be an advocate for a woman’s right to make her own decisions about reproduction and her own body. Gayle’s attitudes on these issues are not ones that I am in sympathy with. And I am not about to defend his right to profess those attitudes, since I know that, when expressed, they do real people real harm, especially when their expression is buttressed by institutional support.But I also feel that it’s important to acknowledge that Gayle’s Christianity is, and has always been, firmly in the mainstream of American evangelical thought. When Gayle made these statements about abortion and homosexuality—just two years after Planned Parenthood v. Casey, and years before Will & Grace and Brokeback Mountain and Queer Eye, when “gay panic” defenses for murder still held some water in the American justice system—most Americans probably would have agreed with him. A jazz blog is a fine place for a reminder that the past, even the recent past, is often a bleaker place than we like to remember it.Gayle’s fundamentalism is a reflection of a pervasive American situation. The fact that he — a penniless African-American musician with a negligible audience* that, by his own admission, probably disagrees with him — has been singled out for institutional censure thus makes me a little bit queasy. He’s an easy target. We can’t bring down Pat Robertson or James Dobson, but we can sure as hell can bring down Charles Gayle.Gayle’s Christianity is actually a bit more nuanced than the spine-chilling pronouncements to which it is often reduced. A 1994 concert performance in Santa Barbara affords Gayle his longest and most poetic stay at the pulpit. Fired by Michael Wimberley’s drums, Gayle does indeed decry abortion and homosexuality. Outrageously, he implies that being “a homosexual” is equivalent to being “a murderer” in a long list of spiritual transgressions—as are smoking, and drinking, and being “a very arrogant person.” But, for all that, he gives no impression of moralistic hauteur. “You all got a slick word for killin’ babies,” he begins to say, and “a slick way of committing abomination” – but he suddenly corrects himself: “when I say you, I mean me.” In Gayle’s interpretation of scripture — and he does know his scripture — one Bible sin is as good as any other as a reflection of a person’s spiritual character. (Telling us that smoking is no different than lying or “fornicating,” he admonishes us — and himself — not to “try to get uppity-jumpity about what sin you’ve committed.”) He is aware that the New Testament says that no-one is without sin, not least the preacher himself. The nature of the sin is immaterial; even being a “good” person as opposed to a “bad” one is immaterial. What is material to Gayle is that sin itself is forgiven, as long as the sinner comes believingly to Christ. And that, he says, is the message of John Coltrane, Albert Ayler, and Eric Dolphy. Any other interpretation of the music of these African-American icons is, he decrees, an appropriation: if you haven’t “surrendered” to Christ, “don’t talk about Coltrane, don’t talk about Albert, don’t talk about Black music, because you’re talkin’ a lie.”
Now it probably goes without saying that, like most people my age in this country, I am cool with anybody lusting after anybody, and doing what they will with that lust, so long as all parties are consenting. Additionally, I will always be an advocate for a woman’s right to make her own decisions about reproduction and her own body. Gayle’s attitudes on these issues are not ones that I am in sympathy with. And I am not about to defend his right to profess those attitudes, since I know that, when expressed, they do real people real harm, especially when their expression is buttressed by institutional support.
But I also feel that it’s important to acknowledge that Gayle’s Christianity is, and has always been, firmly in the mainstream of American evangelical thought. When Gayle made these statements about abortion and homosexuality—just two years after Planned Parenthood v. Casey, and years before Will & Grace and Brokeback Mountain and Queer Eye, when “gay panic” defenses for murder still held some water in the American justice system—most Americans probably would have agreed with him. A jazz blog is a fine place for a reminder that the past, even the recent past, is often a bleaker place than we like to remember it.
Gayle’s fundamentalism is a reflection of a pervasive American situation. The fact that he — a penniless African-American musician with a negligible audience* that, by his own admission, probably disagrees with him — has been singled out for institutional censure thus makes me a little bit queasy. He’s an easy target. We can’t bring down Pat Robertson or James Dobson, but we can sure as hell can bring down Charles Gayle.
Gayle’s Christianity is actually a bit more nuanced than the spine-chilling pronouncements to which it is often reduced. A 1994 concert performance in Santa Barbara affords Gayle his longest and most poetic stay at the pulpit. Fired by Michael Wimberley’s drums, Gayle does indeed decry abortion and homosexuality. Outrageously, he implies that being “a homosexual” is equivalent to being “a murderer” in a long list of spiritual transgressions—as are smoking, and drinking, and being “a very arrogant person.” But, for all that, he gives no impression of moralistic hauteur. “You all got a slick word for killin’ babies,” he begins to say, and “a slick way of committing abomination” – but he suddenly corrects himself: “when I say you, I mean me.” In Gayle’s interpretation of scripture — and he does know his scripture — one Bible sin is as good as any other as a reflection of a person’s spiritual character. (Telling us that smoking is no different than lying or “fornicating,” he admonishes us — and himself — not to “try to get uppity-jumpity about what sin you’ve committed.”) He is aware that the New Testament says that no-one is without sin, not least the preacher himself. The nature of the sin is immaterial; even being a “good” person as opposed to a “bad” one is immaterial. What is material to Gayle is that sin itself is forgiven, as long as the sinner comes believingly to Christ. And that, he says, is the message of John Coltrane, Albert Ayler, and Eric Dolphy. Any other interpretation of the music of these African-American icons is, he decrees, an appropriation: if you haven’t “surrendered” to Christ, “don’t talk about Coltrane, don’t talk about Albert, don’t talk about Black music, because you’re talkin’ a lie.”
― read-only (unperson), Monday, 11 September 2023 20:38 (two years ago)
I saw Charles Gayle in 2001 or 2002. It was great. He played a lot of piano, which surprised me a little, but I really enjoyed. I sat at a table next to Roscoe Mitchell.
― bbq, Monday, 11 September 2023 22:40 (two years ago)
Eh, I think that take is bullshit, but considering the pushback I’ve gotten here and elsewhere about it, I’m just not going to say anymore about it in the hopes that we might talk about some newer jazz that actually matters instead of some deceased crackpot.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 01:22 (two years ago)
The new Irreversible Entanglements is…nice? very mellow compared to the live concert on YouTube from 2018 I played next. I know Moor Mother couldn’t keep up this level of outrage forever (nor should she). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=diLI9m5PFXs
― deep wubs and tribral rhythms (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 01:41 (two years ago)
Can't say too much, but I interviewed all five of them yesterday for a major upcoming feature.
― read-only (unperson), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 02:29 (two years ago)
― xheugy eddy (D-40), Monday, September 11, 2023 2:14 PM (seven hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
new board description
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 02:47 (two years ago)
Obviously people can choose to disengage with an artist if they have an issue with their personal beliefs. But i do find it a bit odd when people are surprised that the weirdo outsider artist is in fact a weirdo outsider.
― bbq, Tuesday, 12 September 2023 05:42 (two years ago)
Many times, weirdo outsiders understand what it is like to be a weirdo outsider.Despite the implication of your post, being a virulent homophobic, anti-woman crackpot like Gayle is an example of an “outsider “ aligning himself with hegemony, not an outsider being weird and outsidery. Gay people are outsiders, and given the way this country is run, so are women. Really pitiful that so many value a third-rate head’s playing over the humanity of others, and justifying it badly in the doing so.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 11:32 (two years ago)
given that some of views probably aligned with maga republicans, it would be an insult to genuine weirdo outsiders to put this dead arsehole in the club!
― vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 11:59 (two years ago)
For free sax players who also play piano ( and other instruments) Sam Rivers gives me everything I’m craving (if he had gross beliefs he kept them to himself). Speaking of Rivers, are there any new archive releases on the horizon from No Business label? I think there are seven so far.
― deep wubs and tribral rhythms (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 12:33 (two years ago)
You're not going to change Charles Gayle after he's dead. It's a good thing to speak up about the views he had, it's a good thing to speak up about the hegemony. And you can do these things while still valuing his playing and place in jazz history, without conflating everything. Nobody is "justifying" anything here or choosing "his musicianship over the humanity of others" whatever that means.
― Nabozo, Tuesday, 12 September 2023 12:52 (two years ago)
If anything, everyone has reacted to say that his views were appalling and a disappointment. What more do you want ?
― Nabozo, Tuesday, 12 September 2023 12:55 (two years ago)
You and I are reading different threads— what I see here, largely, is a lot of people saying, “yeah but” or choosing to elide his views completely. What I want is for people to strongly denounce his views and say that it absolutely and justifiably tarnishes his music. Instead, we get anodyne statements like “yeah i saw him it was great, i was seated next to roscoe mitchell :-)”
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 13:04 (two years ago)
I read a book by Ajay Heble, then-director of the Guelph Jazz Festival, which has a long discussion of his dilemma around booking a show by Charles Gayle. As I recall, his final decision is against - specifically because Gayle often expressed his views onstage, rather than privately or even just in interviews. Needless to say, such "delicate" distinctions would probably not be applied in the social media era.
― Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 12 September 2023 13:07 (two years ago)
Feel really bad for speaking against the new Fly or Die upthread, it’s a great album but I wasn’t in the headspace first it at first. I usually wait to give judgement in such cases but for some reason above I felt compelled to just blurt out my first thoughts without giving it a fair shot.
― zacata, Tuesday, 12 September 2023 14:53 (two years ago)
Ok fine, I'll give it another listen :)
― 50 Favorite Jordans (Jordan), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 15:04 (two years ago)
yeah same! i think my feelings toward the previous record sort of badly colored my opinion of the newer one, so i will try again soon
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 12 September 2023 15:07 (two years ago)
The Irreversible Entanglements is appeased and almost playful at times, and trying new things. Stand out track Root <=> Branch moves abruptly from a contemplative first half to a second mocking half. Slow ballad Sunshine features demented vocals and electronics. Really feeling the bass that surging on the closer Degrees of Freedom with its slow swing, as the strings and horns agonize around it, beautiful track, Nina Simone is somewhere smiling proudly. I was less convinced by the first half, which was closer to Matana Roberts. Soundness made me think of Algiers Can we let the subbass speak though, that's cool. Good record.
― Nabozo, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 09:09 (two years ago)
Final thoughts on Charles Gayle.
― read-only (unperson), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 15:30 (two years ago)
was less convinced by the first half, which was closer to Matana Roberts. Soundness made me think of Algiers
― dow, Thursday, 14 September 2023 02:19 (two years ago)
Damn, Nasheet Waits:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkWdU-WeGFw
― 50 Favorite Jordans (Jordan), Thursday, 14 September 2023 21:53 (two years ago)
Damn, that smokes. Might have missed it, but didn't see much discussion about the New Jawn album from earlier this year, Prime, which is terrific.
― Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 14 September 2023 22:24 (two years ago)
Yeah, I love both that group's records. Didn't know McBride had that kind of energy in him!
― read-only (unperson), Thursday, 14 September 2023 22:42 (two years ago)
I love the new Irreversible Entanglements. They're such a good band. I like them in both groove and freak-out modes.
And yeah I think that Jaimie Branch album is great, she was such a force. I like all the Fly or Die albums, but apart from the live album I think this one is my favorite.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 19 September 2023 05:16 (two years ago)
Spoke to Jason Ajemian about the making of the album and jaimie's legacy.
https://daily.bandcamp.com/features/jaimie-branch-interview
― Composition 40b (Stew), Tuesday, 19 September 2023 10:45 (two years ago)
I just purchased tix to see Daniel Villarreal in Brooklyn in Oct. Very excited.
― il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Tuesday, 19 September 2023 13:38 (two years ago)
My latest Stereogum column is up. I interviewed pianist Aaron Diehl, who's just released a recording of Mary Lou Williams' Zodiac Suite with the chamber orchestra the Knights (using Williams' own arrangements); I also reviewed new albums by Matana Roberts, James Brandon Lewis, Darcy James Argue's Secret Society, Gard Nilssen's Supersonic Orchestra, Idris Ackamoor & the Pyramids, and others.
― read-only (unperson), Thursday, 21 September 2023 16:51 (two years ago)
Saw NIS tonight— truly a fantastic show. My husband was terrified of the harmonium player, and frankly, I understand a little. Small room, great sound :)
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Sunday, 24 September 2023 02:33 (two years ago)
Third Fly or Die is quite the statement. What a broad range of influences this album contains. How those guys respond to each other flawlessly and joyfully. While each element is calibrated and nothing weighs more than it needs to. Borealis Dancing and Baba Louie could easily find their place as year end tracks.
― Nabozo, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 06:04 (two years ago)
Just got tix to Makaya in two weeks. I saw him once here with a trio in a small club, missed the last show at a larger rock club that I heard was great, and this one is in a concert theater. Wonder who will be in the band this time?
― Jordan s/t (Jordan), Thursday, 28 September 2023 19:38 (two years ago)
this Darius Jones fLuxKit album is best thing I've heard in ages
― vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Monday, 2 October 2023 13:39 (two years ago)
Speaking of xxxpost Aaron Diehl, and thinking of tight combustible piano trios in general, heard this recently on radio---Bill Charlap with Peter Washington and Kenny Washington---"Cool," from The Songs of Leonard Berstein, sounding not that much like West Side Story, which is cool with me:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85ei57oi7xk
― dow, Tuesday, 3 October 2023 00:08 (two years ago)
I have to say, this Emergency Group release from February absolutely knocked me flat in a good way, especially Pt. 1
https://emergencygroup.bandcamp.com/album/inspection-of-cruelty
One of the few fusion things I've heard in recent years that really does pull it off. They've got another album due out soon.
― Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 14:00 (two years ago)
Oh, that's Dave Mandl's band. He used to (does?) write for Wire. Good stuff. They played in London recently but couldn't make it up.
― I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 20:45 (two years ago)
Ha, I didn't even register that connection with Wire.
I just played that first track again today and liked it even more. Not that I'm arguing they are near equals in the quality department, but for all the times I've read hype about groups that channel the spirit of '70s Miles, this is one of the few that actually makes a convincing case that they could even be in the same ballpark. Some major Jack Johnson vibes.
― Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 20:52 (two years ago)
Nice; definitely gonna buy their stuff. Thanks!
― read-only (unperson), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 21:00 (two years ago)
Glad you like it! I made it about five minutes into that track and bought the full download and pre-ordered the new CD.
― Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 3 October 2023 21:09 (two years ago)
I saw Makaya McCraven's In These Times show last night, 11 piece band incl. a string quartet, Brandee Younger on harp, three horns (Marquis Hill, Greg Ward, and De'Sean Jones, who also conducted the strings), Junius Paul, and Matt Gold. It was pretty incredible. Def more about the ensemble and the tunes rather than blowing, but everyone got a moment and MM was ridiculous throughout.
― Jordan s/t (Jordan), Thursday, 12 October 2023 14:45 (two years ago)
This is truly my year of guitar ballads, so I'm psyched about this record by pedal steel guitarist Dave Easley with Jeff Parker and Jay Bellerose.
https://daveeasley.bandcamp.com/album/ballads
― Jordan s/t (Jordan), Friday, 20 October 2023 20:37 (two years ago)
There was supposed to be a new Ohad Talmor album coming out today called Back to the Land on Intakt. It's a two-CD set recorded with a trio (Chris Tordini on bass, Eric McPherson on drums) plus a ton of guests: Joel Ross, David Virelles, Leo Genovese, Shane Endsley, Russ Johnson, Grégoire Maret, Adam O'Farrill. A lot of the tunes are based on transcriptions from a rehearsal recording Talmor found of Ornette, Lee Konitz, Charlie Haden and Billy Higgins; that group played a one-off concert at the Umbria Jazz Festival in 1998 and none of that music was ever heard again.
Anyway, it's not coming out because Denardo Coleman has objected, possibly because Ornette's name appears in big letters on the front cover. So the release has been pulled from the schedule and who knows, maybe it'll come out later or maybe it'll have to be destroyed or something. I don't know, but I have a physical copy already cause Intakt still sends me physical promos even though I have asked them several times to stop.
― read-only (unperson), Friday, 20 October 2023 21:43 (two years ago)
I thought for a second it was going to be another nonsensical casualty of the Israel/Hamas thing, but it's just Coleman fils being overprotective again.
― deep wubs and tribral rhythms (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 20 October 2023 21:51 (two years ago)
I saw the Daniel Villarreal show in Brooklyn this week. Loved Panama 77 but was having trouble with the mellower new album. New songs sounded way bigger and more dynamic live. Great show.
― il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Saturday, 21 October 2023 00:59 (two years ago)
This is truly my year of guitar ballads, so I'm psyched about this record by pedal steel guitarist Dave Easley with Jeff Parker and Jay Bellerose.https://daveeasley.bandcamp.com/album/ballads
this is right up my alley
― corrs unplugged, Saturday, 28 October 2023 16:36 (two years ago)