segunda-feira, 18 de junho de 2018

[JZZ] - “The Centennial Trilogy” - O jazz futurista de Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah

Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah é um dos grandes nomes do jazz contemporâneo e em 2017 o rapaz trabalhou em dobro, ou melhor em triplo.



Desde o início do ano, o músico, compositor e produtor anunciou um novo trabalho em formato de trilogia.




São três álbuns que se completam na “The Centennial Trilogy”, em referência aos 100 anos da música “Livery Staple Blues” da Original Dixieland Jass Band, considerada a primeira gravação de jazz da história.

The Original Dixieland Jazz Band - Livery Stable - Barn Yard Blues - 1917
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngZfrjggVlg




Christian Scott - The Centennial Trilogy
(Full Album) [Jazz] - YouTube - 
[2:29:06]



Em março saiu a primeira parte intitulada “Ruler Rebel”, dando sinais dos caminhos modernos que o músico iria trilhar, já experimentados em seu álbum anterior “Stretch Music” de 2015. E é assim que ele intitula o seu estilo, compondo sobre bases eletrônicas e sombrias.



Christian Scott -  Ruler Rebel
(Full Album) [Jazz] - YouTube - [35:45]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDZDiZuchyE


Christian Scott - Stretch Music (Full Album) [Jazz]


“Diaspora” é o nome da segunda parte lançada em junho, criada em beats futuristas influenciados pelo hip-hop e trap.

Christian Scott - Diaspora
[Full Album] - YouTube 
 [49:46]


A terceira e última parte chegou em outubro com o álbum “The Emacipation Procrastination” que fecha o pacote.


Christian Scott -  The Emancipation Procrastination
(Full Album) [Jazz] - YouTube - [01:03:58]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iqets2ZA1a4


“The Centennial Trilogy” trata-se de 31 temas criando fusões do jazz tradicional com gêneros posteriores que tiveram influência direta do jazz como o hip-hop e a música eletrônica. Trilha sonora pra posteridade! Christian Scott é o passado, o presente e o futuro do jazz.

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Fonte: http://www.sopedradamusical.com/o-jazz-futurista-de-christian-scott-atunde-adjuah-e-a-sua-the-centennial-trilogy/







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Two-time Edison award winning, Grammy nominated trumpeter, composer, producer, designer of innovative instruments and interactive media Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah is set to release three albums to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the very first Jazz recordings of 1917.

Collectively titled The Centennial Trilogy, the series is at its core a sobering re-evaluation of the social political realities of the world through sound. It speaks to a litany of issues that continue to plague our collective experiences. Slavery in America via the Prison Industrial Complex, Food Insecurity, Xenophobia, Immigration, Climate Change, Sexual Orientation, Gender Equality, Fascism and the return of the Demagogue.

The first release in the trilogy, Ruler Rebel, vividly depicts Adjuah's new vision and sound - revealing Adjuah to the listener in a way never heard before via a completely new production methodology that Stretches Trap Music with West African and New Orleanian Afro-Native American styles.

Ruler Rebel is set for pre-order on 2/17/17, to coincide with the first annual Stretch Music Festival at Harlem Stage. The Stretch Music Festival, created and curated by Adjuah, explores the boundaries of Stretch, Jazz, Trap, and Alternative Rock with some of music's most poised and fiery rising stars. The festival consists of five days of events, culminating with concerts on February 17th and 18th at Harlem Stage with performances by Butcher Brown, Braxton Cook, Venus, The Bridge Trio, Sarah Elizabeth Charles, and Matthew Stevens.

NPR raves "Christian Scott ushers in new era of jazz." He has been heralded by JazzTimes magazine as "Jazz's young style God" and "the Architect of a new commercially viable fusion." In 2016 Adjuah won JAZZFM's Innovator/Innovation of the year honor along with the Downbeat Critics Poll Rising Star Composer to go along with his many wins for Rising Star Trumpet. Christian is the progenitor of Stretch Music a genre blind musical form that stretches the rhythmic, melodic and harmonic conventions of Jazz to encompass many musical forms, languages, thought processes and cultures. 

The release will be accompanied by Adjuah's award-winning Stretch Music App - The first Interactive media player of its kind, refitted for The Centennial Trilogy.

Fonte: http://republicofjazz.blogspot.com/2017/03/christian-scott-atunde-adjuah-ruler.html

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The Emancipation Procrastination

Christian Scott is back with a crazy new album: The Emancipation Procrastination, the album is the third part of The Centennial Trilogy, while the other two being Ruler Rebel & Diaspora. Released on the Ropeadope Records, Ropeadopes & Christian Scotts Collaboration proves, that Ropeadope records is the cornerstone of modern day jazz music in USA & Christian to be the future of jazz music. Lets not forget to support the great artist & the label and pre-order the album on bandcamp : https://christianscott.bandcamp.com/ Tracklist: 1.The Emancipation Procrastination 2.AvengHer 3.Ruler Rebel [X. aTunde Adjuah Remix] 4.Ashes of Our Forever 5.In The Beginning [Feat. Weedie Braimah] 6.Michele with one L 7.The Cypher 8.Videotape 9.Gerrymandering Game 10.Unrigging November 11.Cages [Feat. Stephen J. Gladney] 12.New Heroes

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3SxzS4mtH9o

Jazz Night in America
Published on Feb 23, 2018

Hear the radio episode: https://n.pr/2GAklFU

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by NATE CHINEN

Spend enough time in New Orleans and you come to understand it as a place for every kind of convergence. The culture hums in an endless exchange, with history forever close at hand. Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah understands this to his core: he grew up immersed in ritual Mardi Gras Indian traditions, and distinguished himself as a jazz trumpeter by his early teens. He's now shaping his own artistic reality, creating what he calls "Stretch Music" — a proud hybrid of styles and approaches, with a strong underlay of groove. In this episode of Jazz Night in America, we'll join him for an electrifying performance at the New Orleans Jazz Market, where he drew from The Centennial Trilogy, an acclaimed recent release. And we'll cut the heart of his mission, as a bridge-builder, an ambassador and an avatar — every bit a son of New Orleans, and in every sense a citizen of the world.

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This set was recorded at the New Orleans Jazz Market on October 24th, 2017 in New Orleans, Louisiana.

SET LIST
2:26 - "Encryption"
8:44 - "The Coronation Of X. aTunde Adjuah"
16:09 - "West Of The West"
30:57 - "The Walk"
41:01 - "Eye Of The Hurricane"
49:32 - "Diaspora"
55:26 - "The Last Chieftain"

MUSICIANS
Christian Scott (trumpet, flugelhorn, bandleader)
Elena Pinderhughes (flute)
Weedie Braimah (congas)
Samora Pinderhughes (piano)
Kris Funn (bass)
Corey Fonville (drums)

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Stretch music, according to New Orleans jazz musician Christian Scott, is an approach that engenders a more absorbent and sensitive kind of jazz. "We are attempting to stretch—not replace—jazz's rhythmic, melodic and harmonic conventions to encompass as many musical forms/languages/cultures as we can," he says on his website. He titled his fifth album after the concept, but this sensibility is visible even in his earliest work as a leader; the title track of 2007's Anthem is jazz in its instrumentation, but it also obeys the rhythms and structures of post-hardcore, a series of contrasting shapes which build an atomically tense and spectral space, like a cathedral at night.

His description of "stretch music" somewhat resembles the omnivorous jazz approaches of bassist/singer Esperanza Spalding and pianist Robert Glasper. It's similarly collaborative and elastic. But Scott's genre splicing is not as mosaic as Glasper's. It’s doesn’t lock different genres together in unusual patterns as much as it melts them down into asymmetrical and indivisible sculpture. It's almost curious to call it "stretch music" when it feels as if jazz isn’t so much expanded here as collapsed into small, oblique jewels.

Later in his mission statement, Scott describes his intention to draw unusual instruments through distortion. This is how Stretch Music begins: A piano, played by Lawrence Fields, struggles through noise, as if pressing and blurring against a force field. Instruments undergo a kind of metamorphosis in Scott’s aesthetic, which is reflected in the album cover: his trumpet bends and warps into elastic shapes.

FONTE: https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/21105-stretch-music/

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