星期四在米勒店

Brian Jones
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引用次数: 0

摘要

73岁高龄的爵士小号手/作曲家/乐队指挥约翰·德地仍然是一个精力充沛的漩涡:不停地演奏,不停地作曲,不知疲倦地教学。作为享誉世界的标志性音乐家,D 'earth是一位才华横溢的后波普小号手,声音粗大,对和声有着丰富的知识,对节奏有着精湛的感觉。D 'earth是那种在任何一个大城市的爵士乐舞台上都会引起人们注意的演奏者,但在弗吉尼亚州夏洛茨维尔爵士社区的小范围内,D 'earth是影响力的支柱。简而言之,D 'earth是弗吉尼亚中部爵士乐环境的核心和灵魂。除了作为表演者的技巧,德地还是一位受人尊敬的老师和导师。作为弗吉尼亚大学的爵士表演总监,D 'earth无疑帮助了数百名有前途的年轻音乐家驾驭机构学习的变迁。但最终巩固他的遗产的,是德伊尔在学院之外的教师工作。30多年来,D 'earth一直在夏洛茨维尔市中心一家受人喜爱的小酒馆Miller 's主持每周周四晚上的演出。米勒每周四的工作室是一个实验室——一个音乐工作室——德德earth在这里与他的学生和同事们滔滔不绝。在米勒的舞台上,德德把专业人士和业余爱好者放在一起,初学者和专家放在一起。每个人都独奏,所有的演奏者都加入到集体音乐的相互作用中,每个音乐家在团队中都有自己的声音。这个项目让D 'earth参与了一系列的访谈,探索他对爵士乐教学法的整体方法。除了质疑D 'earth的具体教学体系之外,我还探究了他对学院爵士乐的陷阱和优势的看法,即兴创作如何建立社会、政治和经济联盟,以及音乐在新自由主义时代既可以作为抵抗形式又可以作为生存策略的方式。我的首要议程是讨论夏洛茨维尔的爵士乐生态如何受到2017年8月12日事件的影响,当时一场被误导的“团结右翼”集会以希瑟·海耶(Heather Heyer)的悲惨死亡而告终,给夏洛茨维尔市带来了政治动荡和种族动荡。最后,我与D 'earth一起剖析米勒的现象,试图解释这个特殊的地方是如何作为一个表演环境和重要的教学空间运作了这么长时间,并产生了如此丰富的创造力和音乐洞察力。
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Thursday at Miller's
At seventy-three years old, jazz trumpeter/composer/bandleader John D’earth remains a vortex of swirling energy: gigging constantly, ceaselessly composing, and tirelessly teaching. An iconic musician with a world-class reputation, D’earth is a gifted post-bop trumpeter with a fat sound, a dense knowledge of harmony, and a virtuosic sense of rhythm. D’earth is the type of player that would demand attention in any major metropolitan jazz scene, but within the small confines of the Charlottesville, Virginia jazz community, D’earth is a pillar of influence.  Simply put, D’earth is the heart and soul of the central Virginia jazz milieu.  Beyond his skills as a performer, D’earth is a revered teacher and mentor. As the Director of Jazz Performance at the University of Virginia, D’earth has certainly helped hundreds of promising young musicians navigate the vicissitudes of institutional learning. But it is D’earth’s work as a teacher outside the academy that will ultimately cement his legacy. D’earth has been leading a Thursday night weekly gig at Miller’s, a beloved tavern in downtown Charlottesville, for over thirty years. Miller’s on Thursdays is a laboratory—a musical workshop—where D’earth holds forth with both his students and his colleagues. On the Miller’s bandstand, D’earth puts professionals next to amateurs, beginners alongside experts. Everyone solos, all players add to the collective musical interplay, and each musician has a voice within the group.  This project engages D’earth in a series of interviews exploring his holistic approach to jazz pedagogy. Beyond interrogating D’earth’s specific teaching system(s), I inquire into his views about both the pitfalls and advantages of jazz in the academy, how improvisation can build social, political, and economic alliances, and the ways in which music can act as both a form of resistance and a strategy for survival in neoliberal times. At the forefront of my agenda is a discussion on how the jazz ecology of Charlottesville was affected by the events of August 12, 2017, when a misguided “Unite the Right” rally ended in the tragic death of Heather Heyer, bringing political upheaval and racial turmoil to the city of Charlottesville. Finally, I dissect the Miller’s phenomenon with D’earth, attempting to explain how this particular location has operated as both a performance environment and important pedagogical space for such a remarkably long time and yielded such a wealth of creativity and access to musical insight.
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Lonnie Liston Smith The Victoria Spivey Collection “Hard” or “Soft” Buddy Bolden’s Photo Thursday at Miller's
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