MYJAZZJOURNEYS.BLOGSPOT.COM (MJJ)
The MJJ Interview:
Third
Stream Music - Catching Up with Ran Blake - 50 Years Later
(transcribed)
Ken Grady
Earlier this year I met iconic pianist, author and educator Ran Blake, whose music I first heard almost 50 years ago.
Professor Blake has been mentoring aspiring
musicians at Boston's New England Conservatory (NEC) for over 40 years. He is a
practitioner of Gunther Schuller’s Third Stream genre in music. The Third
Stream genre has been described as being “…halfway between Jazz and Classical Music”. It can also include influences of song, film noire, literature, and other music. Or, something totally
different that enters the mind during the creative process that has an effect on
the music.
Ran Blake has 30 albums to his credit. His 2017 release, Town
& Country, features French vocalist Domonique Eade. His
latest literary work, Primacy of the Ear, was published in
(201o).
MJJ: I began by asking Ran Blake to elaborate on his
definition of Third Stream music, in which he includes many influences. Among
them, Billy Holiday’s voice, John
Coltrane on sax, the poetry of Edgar Allen Poe and Film Noire,
preferably that of French Filmmaker Claude Ghabrol.
RB: It's always been a blend to me. Like Beethoven
would blend Royal music with music of the fields. But, I guess I love people
like Hungarian composer Bartok Ives, Mahalia Jackson, Marian
Williams and Ray Charles. I love Charlie Parker, but his root is not
in me. I love Billie Holiday, and all the great singers.
So, I guess it’s a bigger switch. Does Ray
Charles
mix well with Bartok? And, if I had to do straight Bartok, or straight Soul (music) I don’t make it. I guess I have the chemical inside. I guess I do, because I can’t play any other way.
mix well with Bartok? And, if I had to do straight Bartok, or straight Soul (music) I don’t make it. I guess I have the chemical inside. I guess I do, because I can’t play any other way.
MJJ: Professor Blake has worked with Black artists
from Mahalia Jackson, to Thelonious Monk and Charlie
Parker. He even invited many of them to participate in workshops for his students
at NEC. I asked him about his purpose in doing so.
RB: Most of the people that I worshipped
happened to be African Americans. I like filmmaker, Joao Gilberto, and singer
Jackie
Paris. I certainly like Gunther (Schuller). But, I guess that it’s the
music (Jazz) that I love.
Sometimes I wonder if I should I be the one
to bring this to the students, but many don’t know Strange Fruit. They don’t know Deep Song, which is a great
Billie Holiday song by Cross & Curry which any culture
could do.
I want them to learn melodies from the great
artists. And listen over, and over again. That’s the way I learned. I feel
that’s the best way. Some students pick it up naturally and some, hands down,
would rather have written music.
And, I use the process of the Jazz musician even
though sometimes I might have an evening with Edgar Allen Poe. But, it does get
back to the human voice. All the legends like Jean Read. Nina Simone,
I’m more of a new convert. But, Abbey Lincoln, Billie Holiday,
Sarah Vaughn and the earlier popular gospel records of Mahalia Jackson.
And, what Duke Ellington could do with just four
trumpets.
I don’t know why. I respect all kinds of
music.
MJJ: I next asked RB why he prefers playing solo.
RB: Because I like to reminisce (while playing),
and when you’re with a group you really must be in the present. What is the
saxophonist doing, the singer, the drummer? It’s a good athletic exercise. I
know it’s important to do. There are so many others. Pianist, McCoy
Tyner, and so many people just crack with the group rhythm, playing
with an Art Blakey, or a Betty Carter. I don’t know why. I
just feel more comfortable alone, or with Jean Reed, 0r Dominique Eid. Or,
saxophonist, Ricky Ford.
MJJ: Ran Blake's most recent book, Primacy of the Ear delves
into the art of listening............
RB: The ear needs attention. Our ear picks up
things, if we give it a chance. It takes 2 hours a day away from music, even
sound. Because it’s like, “…will some stuff from the Opera get into your ears?”
Putting the ear first, rather than the eyes or the fingers, at the center of
your learning is the key forming a truly personal style. I can look at a score
a little bit, but it’s just using the ear. Compared to Stravinsky, or post John
Coltrane, Billie Holiday might be easy. But, is it really? To bend the curves.
I really like to take my time and absorb over, and over again. To me, the voice
and the orchestra are my instruments.
MJJ: Professor Blake, Thank you for your time.
Ran Blake’s 2015 Sunnyside label release, Town
& Country, features French vocalist Dominique Eade. . This
release has been described as a, “collaboration from heaven”. Check out the
liner notes from Ingrid Monson, Quincy Jones Professor of African
American Music at Harvard University: “ Town and Country is a remarkable album,
offering a profound listening experience, conceptual clarity, and a reminder
that true art is always deeply necessary.”
Blake’s latest book, Primacy of the Ear was published in 2010.
Subscribe to Ran Blake's newsletter at, ranblake.com.
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