Steve Lacy
Duke University Press (Verlag)
978-0-8223-3815-4 (ISBN)
Steve Lacy: Conversations is a collection of thirty-four interviews with the innovative saxophonist and jazz composer. Lacy (1934–2004), a pioneer in making the soprano saxophone a contemporary jazz instrument, was a prolific performer and composer, with hundreds of recordings to his name. This volume brings together interviews that appeared in a variety of magazines between 1959 and 2004. Conducted by writers, critics, musicians, visual artists, a philosopher, and an architect, the interviews indicate the evolution of Lacy’s extraordinary career and thought. Lacy began playing the soprano saxophone at sixteen, and was soon performing with Dixieland musicians much older than he. By nineteen he was playing with the pianist Cecil Taylor, who ignited his interest in the avant-garde. He eventually became the foremost proponent of Thelonious Monk’s music. Lacy played with a broad range of musicians, including Monk and Gil Evans, and led his own bands. A voracious reader and the recipient of a MacArthur “genius” grant, Lacy was particularly known for setting to music literary texts—such as the Tao Te Ching, and the work of poets including Samuel Beckett, Robert Creeley, and Taslima Nasrin—as well as for collaborating with painters and dancers in multimedia projects.
Lacy lived in Paris from 1970 until 2002, and his music and ideas reflect a decades-long cross-pollination of cultures. Half of the interviews in this collection originally appeared in French sources and were translated specifically for this book. Jason Weiss provides a general introduction, as well as short introductions to each of the interviews and to the selection of Lacy’s own brief writings that appears at the end of the book. The volume also includes three song scores, a selected discography of Lacy’s recordings, and many photos from the personal collection of his wife and longtime collaborator, Irene Aebi.
Interviews by: Derek Bailey, Franck Bergerot, Yves Bouliane, Etienne Brunet, Philippe Carles, Brian Case, Garth W. Caylor Jr., John Corbett, Christoph Cox, Alex Dutilh, Lee Friedlander, Maria Friedlander, Isabelle Galloni d'Istria, Christian Gauffre, Raymond Gervais, Paul Gros-Claude, Alain-René Hardy, Ed Hazell, Alain Kirili, Mel Martin, Franck Médioni, Xavier Prévost, Philippe Quinsac, Ben Ratliff, Gérard Rouy, Kirk Silsbee, Roberto Terlizzi, Jason Weiss
Jason Weiss is the author of The Lights of Home: A Century of Latin American Writers in Paris and the forthcoming novel Faces by the Wayside. He is the editor of Back in No Time: The Brion Gysin Reader.
4. Goodbye, New York (Garth W. Caylor, Jr., 1965) 24
5. Faithful Lacy (Philippe Carles, 1965) 33
6. Twenty-six New Jazzmen Put to the Question (1965) 41
7. Steve Lacy Speaks (Paul Gros-Claude, 1971) 43
8. Improvisation (Derek Bailey, 1974) 48
9. Evidence and Reflections (Alain-Rene Hardy and Philippe Quinsac, 1976) 52
10. On Play and Process, and Musiacal Insticnts (Raymond Gervais and Yves Bouliane, 1976) 62
11. In the Spirit (Roberto Terlizzi, 1976) 78
12. The Spark, the Gap, the Leap ( Brian Case, 1979) 84
13. In Search of the Way (Jason Weiss, 1980) 97
14. Songs: Steve Lacy and Brion Gysin (Jason Weiss, 1981) 104
15. Unrecognized Giean? (Xavier Prevost, 1982) 109
16. Futurities (Isabelle Galloni d’Istria, 1984) 111
17. The Solitude of the Long-Distance Player (Gerard Rouy, 1987) 115
18. On Practicing, and Exploring the Instrument (Kirk Silsbee, 1988) 123
19. Art is Made to Trouble (Christian Gauffre, 1990) 133
20. Shop Talk (Mel Martin, 1990) 138
21. It’s Got to Be Alive (Ben Ratliff, 1991)
22. Regarding the Voice: Steve Lacy and Irene Aebi (Jason Weiss, 1993) 146
23. A Petite Fleur for S. B. (Philippe Carles, 1994) 156
24. Sculpture and Jazz (Alain Kirili, 1994) 158
25. One Shouldn’t Make Too Much Noise, There’s Enough Already (Franck Medioni, 1995) 163
26. Living Lacy (Gerard Rouy, 1995) 166
27. Scratching the Seventies (Etienne Brunet, 1996) 167
28. Forget Paris (John Corbett, 1996) 185
29. In the Old Days (Lee Friedlander and Maria Friedlander, 1997) 193
30. The Glorious Thirty (Franck Bergerot and Alex Dutilh, 2000) 208
31. Farewell Paris (Gerard Rouy, 2002) 212
32. Invisible Jukebox (Christoph Cos, 2002) 217
33. Big Kisses from Boston (Franck Medioni, 2003) 226
34. The Art of the Song: Steve Lacy and Irene Aebi (Ed Hazell, 2004) 228
Part 2. Writings by Steve Lacy
1. MEV Notes (ca. 1968) 244
2. Roba (early 1970s) 248
3. Garden Variety (ca. 1974) 249
4. FMP: 10 Years Jubilee (ca. 1979) 250
5. What about Monk? (1980) 251
6. He Flew (1980) 253
7. In the Upper Air: Albert Ayler (1996 256
8. Shiro and I (1997) 257
9. Short Takes (1998) 258
10. Yoshizawa (1998) 260
11. Made in France (2000) 261
12. Song Sources (undated) 266
13. Residency Statement (2004) 267
Part 3. Song Scores
Dreams (1975) 272
Mind’s Heart (1982) 273
3 Haiku (1998) 274
Selected Discography 277
Credits 281
Index 283
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 3
Part 1. Interviews with Steve Lacy
1. Introducing Steve Lacy (1959) 13
2. My Favorite Thing (1961) 17
3. The Land of Monk (1963) 20
Zusatzinfo | 39 b&w photos |
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Verlagsort | North Carolina |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 235 mm |
Gewicht | 454 g |
Themenwelt | Kunst / Musik / Theater ► Musik ► Jazz / Blues |
ISBN-10 | 0-8223-3815-7 / 0822338157 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-8223-3815-4 / 9780822338154 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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