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2011年11月22日星期二

On Ka'a Davis with Famous Original Djuke Music Players - Seeds of Djuke

http://onmumusic.com/images/Djukecover.jpg

http://onmumusic.com

http://www.myspace.com/djukeobbo

http://www.myspace.com/ondavis

http://livewiredmusic.org

Origine du Groupe : North America

Style : Afrobeat , Afro Jazz , Free Jazz

Sortie : 2009



From http://www.rockpaperscissors.biz



Musical Nomads Taking Root: Guitarist On Ka’a Davis Builds a Home for Deep Black Grooves that Lead from Jazz Abstraction to Afrobeat



An incessant pulse runs through the African diaspora; it’s the beat that tears the roof off the cerebral avant garde. Classically trained experimental guitarist On Ka’a Davis discovered it while
squatting in the once derelict tenements of the Lower East Side. Davis and his Famous Original Djuke Music Players take this pulse on Seeds of Djuke (LiveWired Music; released April 21, 2009) and
retrace the long-lost taproot of a future music.



“The very first time I saw Sun Ra and his Arkestra was in Central Park,” Davis recalls. “They walked through the crowds, passing right by me. They were all wearing Egyptian make-up on their faces
and I thought, ‘This is the Blackest band I have ever seen in my life. This is Deep Nubian music.’” Two years after this revelation, Davis was playing in the Arkestra himself, living in the
communal setting in Philadelphia that was the social basis for Sun Ra’s group.



Davis traveled far to reach deep: from the R&B and prog rock grooves of his childhood home in Cleveland to the rigorous classical guitar training at Vienna’s Hochschule für Darstellende
Kunst, to the rollicking Roma riffs of the Austrian streets. There, he saw the ripple effect of jazz in a whole new light, discovering the bebop solos of Charlie Parker, the European classical
gestures of Keith Jarrett, the worldly improvisation of John McLaughlin. Busking alongside Roma musicians for pocket money, Davis experienced the “subset culture” of gypsy life, a world that
caused him to reflect on his own complex African American heritage.



Davis eventually wound up on New York’s Lower East Side, where he played for punks in the squatter revolution that transformed the neighborhood in the 1980s. The squatters’ battle to reclaim the
derelict shells of Lower Manhattan had its sonic side, with a groundbreaking (and regulation-defining) micro-broadcasting radio station and infamous shows in myriad basements. It was in the squat
that the outlines of what Davis calls djuke emerged, a music that draws on everything from Afrobeat sensibilities to Spanish classical guitar to space culture.



“The first idea for my music came out of basement rehearsing,” says Davis. “Our building on 13th Street hosted a lot of ‘Squat or Rot’ parties, and all the punks would come. That was the first
beginnings of the music, and ‘I Stayed Cool,’ for example, is an original tune, a Malian blues kind of thing, that survived from my band rehearsals in the squat. Some of the point of view I
express in my music has been tempered by my experience of being in a squat, by my need to express socially conscious ideals.”



As a musical squatter, Davis bivouacked wherever he went, but with djuke, he found an essence beyond genre, the Deep Blackness that united Sun Ra’s remapping of ancient Egyptian culture and
cosmic interpretation of Dogon legends of African space travel with Fela’s defiant poetics and rhythmic discipline.



It powers Davis’ perception of pulse-beat, a call to movement and rhythm that defies genre while defining it. “People learn to identify the beat of a music by genre, by namesake, a reggae
nyabinghi beat, or a mambo, or a rock beat,” Davis explains. “The idea of pulse-beat goes beyond that. It gives me the opportunity to create dance rhythms based on pulsations and the freedom to
work with rhythms that are overlapping, elliptic rhythms if you will, with 3 over 5.” The many shades of the pulse-beat shine on “Yea Yea!” and “No! No Go For It!” — setting  what Davis
calls the “rhythmic cornerstones” of djuke.



Rhythm, for Davis, is about more than percussion; it is rooted in traditions like the “two-guitar” approach in R & B, when the guitars have a rhythmic as well as a melodic mission. This
approach dominates tracks like “Voodoo Ultralux,” where rhythmic parts combine in a fugue that “flows in and out like ocean waves.”



Deep Blackness inspires Davis’ quirky use of English, a personal pidgin and shout-out to Fela’s linguistic medium and message. "By altering the language, I can make it fit phrasing and rhythmic
schemes differently,” Davis notes. “That’s one thing I noticed about Fela's music. The language itself presupposes the rhythmic values of the music. You cannot get the same things in straight
English that you get with a patois.”



The power of patois is in full force on “Ain’t Nobody Teach Nobody Nothin’!” where the message has been transformed into a rhythmic statement that throws meaning in a new light. “I wanted to bend
it a certain way to force people to relate to the music divorced from any ownership of a high-brow identity,” Davis explains, “where everything is neatly said and nicely said and well understood.
I wanted people to have to think about what the words mean."



Deep Blackness is also why Davis adopts a more theatrical stage persona, inspired more by Hendrix or P-Funk than by the tennis shoes and black jeans of the New York experimental music scene. “Les
Paul, in his first efforts, took his electric guitar to a club to demonstrate. It was a block of wood with a guitar neck attached. Nobody was interested. They laughed at it,” Davis recounts. “He
realized if it looked more like a guitar, people would accept it better. So he built his next model with the outside shape of a guitar. He realized that people see the music first before they
hear it.”



Music’s impact on the eyes brought to mind the flamboyance that African American musicians had long employed to heighten their musical presence, a physicality often missing from the musical
avant-garde. “Having a style, a personality on stage has always been a tradition in Black music. It’s always been that either you dressed up looking sharp or you had some kind of atmosphere you
create with your look. I’d like to re-identify with that. It would help the music a lot.”



Reuniting body and soul with the fringe of sonic possibility lies at the heart of djuke, and Davis is building a new music with Seeds of Djuke, drafting “blueprints for future designs in the
music, whether it be harmonic or rhythmic schemes or both.” It brings the beat back to free jazz, getting listeners out on the dance floor. It creates avant-garde music that makes you “pat your
foot, snap your fingers,” Davis laughs, “makes you jump and dance around.”



“Jazz music is the ability to integrate music and dance,” Davis muses. “Charlie Parker recognized that. If I am using elements of the abstract, then the music has to be centered in the
round.”







Tracklist :

1. ...Speaking of You   

2. Yea! Yea!   

3. No! No Go for It!    

4. Ain't Nobody Teach Nobody Nothin'!   

5. Voodoo Ultralux   

6. There, In Theatre    

7. Return-Send    

8. Splendor    

9. Zero, Zero    

10. I Ain't Scared   

11. Na Na Not Me!   

12. Ain't Nobody Teach... (Reprise)

13. Put It To It   

14. We've Been Observing You   

15. I Stayed Cool   

16. Djuke No Go Die   

17. Stars At On

mp3

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