Evento
FRIDAY 19 NOVEMBER, 19H30
Black
Art Jazz Collective
Wayne
Escoffery saxofone
Jeremy Pelt trompete
James Burton
III trombone
Victor Gould piano
Rashaan Carter contrabaixo
Mark Whitfield Jr. bateria
In the twenty-first century, or, in other words, in a
post-migratory, post-colonial and finally multipolar world, one would think
that jazz, being a distinctively black tradition, the recognition of the
Afro-American contribution to the formation of popular music’s canon of the
last hundred years would be evident. For several reasons, among them certainly
the residues of abuse of prominent position on the part of classical European
culture and the inherent arrogance of its defenders but also due to ideological
exploitation, in recent years we have witnessed the emergence of multiple
projects “celebrating” jazz’s black roots. Irrespective of the cultural or
sociological considerations one may articulate about such phenomenon, it is
obvious that there are differences of artistic quality and pertinence between
them, varying according to the quality of their interpreters and the honesty of
their purposes. The Black Art Jaz Collective, co-founded in 2012 by saxophonist
Wayne Escoffery, trumpeter Jeremy Pelt and drummer Jonathan Blake, all of them
reputed instrumentalists from New York’s jazz circuit of the last two decades
and accomplices in collaborations with jazz’s legends such as Ron Carter or
Wayne Shorter, fits on the group of those who do it with undeniable integrity.
The band’s sound is recognizable for the superimposition of musical and
political narratives, thereby honoring the evocative power to the
African-American cultural patrimony, not only its artistic heritage but also
its history of political resistance. In that sense, and like their own members
vindicate, this project is evocative of the ethical and aesthetical principles
of seminal jazz ensembles of the past, namely the legendary Jazz Messengers led
by Art Blakey.
Besides Escoffery, Pelt and Blake, all of them highly
educated musicians and adoptive citizens of New York, where they arrived with
the explicit intent of making a career in jazz, the Black Art Jazz Collective
is currently formed by trombonist James Burton III, pianist Victor Gould,
bassist Rashaan Carter and drummer Mark Whitfield J. We are, therefore,
speaking about a group of instrumentalists of undeniable technical competence
and creativity who are consolidating their trajectory in jazz alongside some of
its most prominent figures, such as Wallace Roney, Joe Lovano, Kenny Barron or
Bobby Hutcherson. Contrarily to what (too) often happens in contemporary music,
this band is not devoted to the revisitation of jazz’s canon repertoire,
although that punctually occurs in their albums and live performances. In this
case, it is on the spirit of their original compositions that we find the
reminiscences and invocations of black culture’s extraordinary legacy, which,
in its different expressions (not only jazz but also hip-hop, soul, funk, among
other sub-genres), constitutes without doubt the most precious of western’s
music of the twentieth century.