Monday, March 31, 2008

Ornette Coleman at Town Hall

There aren't many of the great old jazz legends still alive, but Ornette Coleman certainly rates as one of them. I began listening to his music in the mid eighties when he released a CD called In All Languages. As a musician the sounds on that CD introduced me to many new ideas and taught me many things. The complex sounds on it created emotional responses that were equally complex. One might feel sad and at the same time confused and harried as layers of sound competed for your attention. It opened a new world of possibilities for what music could do.

In his younger days Ornette created a new musical theory called Harmolodics. I'm not sure I can define it, but it asks the musician to use his ear instead of following rules about keys and melody. It states that no one must hold down the rhythm or carry the melody. It frees the musicians, but also places a heavy burden on them.

There is a great story about the first time he attempted to put his theory into action. He was playing with a band and when his solo came he took off. The sound was so shocking that the band quit playing and the audience went silent. The bandleader fired him on the spot, and for good measure they beat him up in the parking lot afterwards and took his horn away.

But this is often how people react to revolutionary ideas.

Ornette took the stage at Town Hall in New York City, a somewhat frail elderly man dressed in a blue and white plaid suit. His band consisted of a drummer, a stand-up bass player, and an electric bass player.

There first sound the band unleashed was a chaotic flurry of notes that fell to a dead silence with razor sharp precision. That followed by the same frenetic melody line again followed by silence. Then the music began to flow. Although the sounds were unlike any other music, in a live setting it made more sense. Instead of being challenging, the free flow of notes cascaded over your ears creating a relaxing dream-like state.

Given that he has over 50 years of recorded music under his belt and I only know two or three of his albums I didn't expect to recognize much of what I heard, but that didn't matter because the music was entrancing. The musicians were not only excellent on a technical level, they also possessed an amount of instinct and creativity that was astonishing.

While never losing site of the tempo or groove, the drummer meandered from rhythm to rhythm as his whims took him, something rarely heard even in jazz. The upright bassist often played with a bow or switched back and forth within songs. The electric bassist played his instrument like a guitar, often playing chords and harmonics, or simply playing lead guitar type solos.

Ornette's Saxophone solos were as unique as his compositions. Usually starting each passage with a high-pitched sustained note that gave way to a bebop flurry that bounced back and forth down the scales. The other musicians kept their eyes riveted on him, at times following him, at others playing against him with a dazzling array of counter-melodies, but always tuned-in for a level back and forth interaction that very few musicians could achieve.

They each took turns visiting the main theme briefly before being whisked away in the torrent of their own improvisations. And just to remind us that they were in total control they would unite in the main melody without warning, or stop dead on the dime with incomprehensible timing.

Occasionally Ornette would lay down his saxophone for a few moments and pick up a trumpet and play lines that sounded like an elephant in distress. At other times he switched to violin and his playing became even more abstract.
During on such moment he bowed the instrument in a fast steady rhythm while slowly moving his fingers up and down the upper register of the neck. The upright bassist, also playing with a bow, began to follow him creating a strange harmonic that gave the music a surreal quality.

Throughout the night Ornette did not speak. Although playing with vigor he often sat on a high stool, somewhat hidden behind two music stands and a group of microphones. Between songs the upright bassist would come and leaf through Ornette’s sheet music to find the correct pages for him.

As the show came to an end the audience rose to their feet amid shouts of “Better than ever,” and “We love you.” Before the encore he spoke a few sentences with a low soft voice, none of which anyone could make out what he was saying, his words seemingly as mysterious as his music.

Monday, March 24, 2008

A Girl Named Violet

Yesterday my leg fell off
Just from he knee down
I don't know why I didn't notice it
I can't imagine where I left it
At least it wasn't my head

Last Wednesday I went to my uncle's house for a picnic
The whole family was there
He said, this isn't right
There's a fly in the potato salad
It seemed like the world was coming to an end
Things couldn't get much darker
Everyone agreed

I've been very concerned about Brittany Spears
I can't get her off my mind
I can't get any work done
I've been losing sleep
I hope things work out for her

They don't have weather reports on the news anymore
Only extreme weather alerts
And dangerous weather outlooks
It's very nerve wracking
Sunny days just don't make headlines these days
Mushroom clouds would be sexier

I have a movie I have to take back to the video store
But I just can't find the gumption to get up and do it
It's really becoming a catastrophe
Each day it's like another shovel of dirt is thrown on my grave
I should have never rented that movie
But you can't change the past

I don't know any girls named violet
But I think about her all the time

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

I am a murderer

I am a murderer
For the dream of America
In the name of Democracy
For unfettered capitalism
For us against them
I am a murderer

I am a murderer

My victims lie beneath the ground in lands my feet have never tread
Their hapless faces, I have never gazed upon
I have no knowledge of their actions
And can make no judgment of their deeds
They are countless and their names are not written down in any ledger

I am a murderer

My victims fell in El Salvador, Grenada, Nicaragua, Panama, Afghanistan,
Kuwait, Iraq, and places of which I do not even know

Because I pay taxes
I am a murderer
Because I do not run into the streets and shout
I am a murderer
Because I do not storm the halls of power
I am a murderer
Because I must confess, I do not even writer a letter in protest
I am a murderer

Perhaps if I lived under a cruel dictator
I could claim there is no blood on my hands
But alas, the facts of democracy allow no innocence
Except to serve the cause of self-deception

I am a murderer
A serial killer
Perhaps something even worse

Yet I rest in untroubled sleep
Where is my conscience?
Where is my morality?
Do I even lack humanity?

But my attention is lulled away by celebrity gossip controversies, game shows, and reality TV
My eyes are ever focused on expensive cars, new cloths, electronic gadgets, and good times
A carrot on a stick for a dimwitted mule

I may look back at the Jewish holocaust and say “never again”
Yet hypocrite that I am
I turn away as genocide in far away lands occur again without end

For a lifestyle of abundance beyond all human needs
Species are wiped out of existence on a daily basis

Right now I confess
To nature and man
To the myths of divinity
To the whispers of the ether
That this death is my legacy
This murder my page in history
This genocide my gift to future generations

I think of myself as a good person
I try not to cheat, lie, or steal
I am kind and respectful of others

Yet the undeniable truth is
I am a murderer

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Dickinsonian Review

Dickinsonian Newspaper- Brynn Steblay - March 2008


Caesar Pink and the Imperial Orgyóthe name is enough to make you lift an eyebrow. Imperial Orgy? And who is Caesar Pink? Well, he's no blushing Roman ruler. Pink is a man overflowing with experiences and emotions, as well as an artist who shamelessly shares his opinions.

Caesar Pink led a life wrought with desolation, depravation, and demonstration. From his youngest years, Pink was a misfit. For Pink, however, his outlet came in the form of music. When he was a teenager, Pink performed as amember of Friction, a group appropriately named for its radical political viewpoints.

It was not until 1994, after Pink had lived in a primitive cabin in the remote Appalachian woodlands, been in and out of jail, rid himself of all material possessions and most personal ties, and was ultimately chased out of his hometown, that the artist reached an all-time low, or "spiritual death."Not coincidentally, however, Pink's fall came at a time when Caesar Pink and the Imperial Orgy had just begun their journey in the musical world.

Pink's difficult past seems to serve the band well, fueling the group's shameless "celebration of life, love, sexuality and rebellion."

Their self-titled album is an intriguing collection of what group members call "gospel hymns for agnostics and atheists"ósongs whose nature changes as frequently and dramatically as Pink's own life previously did.

The first track on the album, titled "The Amazing Tenacity of Job and His Brethren," paints a grim picture of society. Pink's strained, wavering voice cries over a steady drumbeat: "There's no second chances / and no one forgives"óan assertion which alerts listeners that Caesar Pink and the Imperial Orgy will not be having any "tween" boy-band drama. Pink means business: the song's first line, apart from being grammatically incorrect, is a powerful statement, reminiscent of Pink's hard-lived life and failing religious faith.

While the first track has a punk rock feel, the second song, "In Praise of Shadows," is a much more upbeat, "rockerhymn." The song opens with a simple, catchy guitar beat similar in style to B.B. King's "Riding with the King." Female vocal accompaniment also adds an uplifting, church-chorus appeal,making this song seem less demoniac than "The Amazing Tenacity of Job and his Brethren." However, upon close listening, the lyrics are none the more comforting: "I heard a scream out in the dark," cries Pink, "Everybody's got a skeleton somewhere."

"So it is," the album's third track, is unlike any aforementioned song. The beat is a unique cross between a Mario Kart theme song (Rainbow Road, anyone?), a Hawaiian luau, and High School Musical's peppy song, "Bop to the Top."

Clearly, the sound is an extreme fluctuation from Pink's previous works; yet, the lyrics contain the same dismal outlook. "Happy Endings," the last song on the C.D., speaks about kids who smoke joints, sip wine by the water's edge, and pass time in a town with no name, satisfied with their lives because they are convinced "it's the best [they] can do." Such negativity clearly stems from Pink's troubled youth; however, despite the artist's sincerity, Pink's message is often looked down upon by others.

Caesar Pink and the Imperial Orgy has garnered much hatred from radio stations for its "ungodly, unethical" lyrics, according to WEXP Radio, a station which has banned the group from its own airwaves.

It is true, the group makes negative references to the Lord, Satan, and Jesus.

However, it is up to the listener to decide whether these comments are necessarily "insulting toGod," as some stations claim they are. One can agree that Pink's lyrics are depressing; in all fairness, however,whether or not you are a strong religious follower, there is something every listener can take away from Caesar Pink and the Imperial Orgy. Where would music be today if artists did not share their innermost thoughts and experiences? Pink has certainly led a life worth talking about, even if it is a bit depressing at times.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Success in Michigan

Our battle with Portage TV in Michigan has ended with success!

To recap; the trouble started when the local TV station cancelled a planned broadcast of The Imperial Orgy TV Show series because "Two girls were looking at each other as if they couldn't wait to kiss."

The confrontation became increasingly more contentious until I communicated to the town's mayor and board of supervisors. The next morning the manager of the TV station called and had a whole new attitude and was happy to broadcast the show.