| |
JERRY GRANELLI
Halifax-based percussionist-composer Jerry Granelli grew up in
San Francisco where he studied with Joe Morello and drummed
for pianists Denny Zeitlin and Vince Guaraldi (he's on A Charlie
Brown Christmas - on Fantasy Records and the Charlie Brown TV
soundtracks). He pioneered world jazz fusion and electro-acoustic
percussion during the 60's hippie era, established the music department
at the Naropa Institute in Boulder in '76, and has had a continuous
teaching career since then in Boulder, Seattle, Halifax and Berlin.
In the early '80s he performed and recorded in a trio with Ralph
Towner and Gary Peacock for ECM. He has recorded as a leader for
Evidence, Intuition, ITM, Koch, Love Slave and other labels, and
performed and recorded with longtime musical associates Mose Allison,
Jay Clayton, Jane Ira Bloom, Glen Moore, Anthony Cox, Dave Friedman,
and Jamie Saft, as well as projects with Bill Frisell, Robben
Ford, Julian Priester, Charlie Haden, Kenny Garrett, and Buck
64.
<return to top>
SANDHILLS REUNION

Photo: Catherine Stockhausen.
Jerry Granelli – Electro acoustic percussion and vocal
effects
Jeff Reilly – Bass Clarinet, Clarinet, assorted exotic flutes
and vocal effects
Christoph Both – Cello
David Mott –Baritones Sax
Francois Houle - Clarinet
J. Anthony Granelli – Electric Bass (USA)
Christian Kugel – Electric Guitar (Germany)
Rinde Eckert – Vocals / Text (USA)
Produced by Lee Townsend
Jerry Granelli's latest project is a most extraordinary interweaving
of words and music. The text, written and delivered by New York
actor/playwright/singer Rinde Eckert, is a linked series of internal
monologues and dialogues using the persona of Billy the Kid as
a thematic touchstone and the Sandhills region of Nebraska as
the landscape of memory: a narrative meditation on fame, character,
love, mortality... The music, played by a Canadian and international
septet brought together for the occasion, counterpoints and colours
the words, conjuring up its own mythic locations from the history
of blues and jazz while making it all new again.
The Jerry Granelli Septet is a bold new venture for jazz veteran
Jerry Granelli. Jerry has assembled a group of outstanding musicians
that have a powerful musical link; fresh, potent sound. Between
the seven members and vocalist there is a wide range of musical
styles – jazz, classical, rock, blues, world music, urban
groove, theater, etc. and what they have created together reflects
the sum total of this collective musical experience. Amongst their
stylistic diversity they discovered a remarkable similarity between
them in their approach to music – a compatibility that allows
them to travel immediately to the heart of the sound – to
make a new kind of new music, in the moment.
The Jerry Granelli Septet pieces were created using a series
of structures -- flow charts to focus the musical work. The group
developed these structures through improvisation to find the real
“flesh and blood” of the pieces and allow them to
take on their own life. The music was then handed over to Ekert
who through his own experiences and in the mood of the musical
pieces wrote the appropriate stories and text to accompany the
compositions. Together music and text form an aural landscape
masterpiece. It is through improvisation that this septet finds
the heart of the music. However, they also understand that improvisation
must be contained by discipline, skill and practice in order to
find the balance between control and freedom that is so necessary
to make this kind of music work.
Press links for Sandhills Reunion:
www.canada.com
The
Georgia Straight
www.allaboutjazz.com
Sandhills
Reunion - Interview with Jerry Granelli and Rinde Eckert
<return to top>
V-16
Jerry Granelli V16
The Sonic Temple (Monday & Tuesday)
David Tronzo, electric slide guitar
Christian Kögel, electric guitar
J. Anthony Granelli, electric bass
Jerry Granelli, drums, steel sculpture
Drummer on Vince Guaraldi's "A Charlie Brown Christmas"
LP and the TV soundtracks, cited in the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame as one of the inventors of psychedelic music, pioneer in
world-jazz fusion and electro-acoustic percussion in the hippie
era, founder/co-director of the music department at Boulder's
Naropa Institute in the '70s, longtime associate of Mose Allison,
Jane Ira Bloom, Glen Moore, Dave Friedman etc., and with a string
of wide-ranging projects under his own name in the last 20 years,
Jerry Granelli has been on the scene for so long - as percussionist,
teacher and bandleader - that there may be a tendency to take
him for granted.
Or not know where to pigeon-hole him. His last release for Songlines,
Sandhills Reunion (SA1553-2) was an "audio movie" (with
spoken text by Rinde Eckert) that covered a lot of musical and
poetic ground. V16's first record came out in 2003 (The V16 Project,
SA1544-2) with Anthony Cox on bass - though he never toured with
the band - and the current guitar team, the justly acclaimed David
Tronzo and the equally talented Christian Kögel, a former
student of Jerry's in Berlin and member of his previous two-guitar
band UFB. Like those bands, V16 ambles through the jazz cloakroom
without hanging its hat. This time round it's even less classifiable,
although Jerry does say that it "rocks out" but also
represents "jazz as it can be in the 21st century. The material
is plasma-like, always in flux and development. We all have these
vast musical lives that we've led and that's what we bring with
us….The band offers such a rich sound palette, I think of
everybody as sound artists rather than musicians." (By the
way, the steel sculpture that Jerry plays was made for him by
San Francisco artist Peter Englehart). We've been searching for
a tag, but terms like "avant jamband" don't really convey
what's going on, and compound descriptors like "spacey ambient/improv/freeform
roots'n'blues-cum-chamber jazz" are unwieldy. And partly
beside the point - they identify some stylistic markers and approaches
but not what makes it all hang together. Jerry's son J. Anthony,
who also produced the record, puts it this way:
"We began to feel that instead of improvising around tunes
we wanted to find a way to improvise within the tunes as a band.
This is different than improvising on "solo" changes
or specific sections. The band became more interested in playing
each tune as if we were a single entity, like a big eight-handed
musician. In this way the fabric of each song could be stretched
and changed as we felt in the moment. I think that we wanted to
play compositions that at the same time provided structure but
could be deconstructed on the fly. We also started to use a kind
of free counterpoint when we played, and the compositions that
we were using started to reflect that shift….We are also
all very comfortable with the idea of using our instruments in
a textural way. This is an important element of composition, but
can be overlooked in terms of an improvisation. We approach our
playing as if we are composing, but in real time, so this textural
use of sound is very important to our process….Our only
guideline is to try and convey meaning and depth in terms of the
emotional qualities of the composition."
Jerry, who has been part of Halifax's Buddhist community for
some twenty years, adds:
"There seems for me anyway to be a couple of things about
whether there are limits or how it works. One is giving up the
idea of SELF-expression…and being more interested, willing
to let the music lead the way. So then the possibilities become
much more open. This is perhaps one's primary skill as a spontaneous
composer. And I think it takes years of practice - or better,
doing - and the right players. That's why this band is so close
to my heart. I love them all as people, and we have a past together
musically, of different lengths, but we share common feelings
about the music - also even the differences are interesting. The
process of course involves both listening and responding, but
the intention or motivation has to, like I said, be serving the
music, and enjoying the openness of the moment, so I guess there
must be an element of fearlessness, and bravery…and trusting
each other and the music."
So we made this audiophile recording of the band over two nights
at the Halifax studio The Sonic Temple, as part of the 2006 Atlantic
Jazz Festival, and you hear the tunes as they went down, unedited
and in the order played: seven band originals and a James Brown
cover played as a lyrical slow blues. Jerry: "There was a
time when people went to clubs and heard a band 3 or 4 times in
a week. They could hear the music grow and change, you could even
hear 'bad nights' but there would always be something great. Now
we seem to constantly search for perfection in music, rather than
enjoying the process (nothing wrong with it being great music!).
So we decided if we were going to do it, let's let it be the way
it happened."
For the complete interview is at www.songlines.com.
For additional info: www.songtone.com/artists/Granelli/main.html,
www.myspace.com/tronzo,
and www.lvslv.com/about.htm.
Press links for V16:
Popmatters.com
<return to top>
|