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Members include Lester Bowie, (born 1941, Frederick, MD, raised StLouis, MO), trumpet, cornet, percussion, "little instruments," divorced, remarried, fourchildren; Joseph Jarman, (born Sept. 14, 1937, Pine Bluff, AR), raised Chicago, IL,saxophones, percussion, "little instruments," Education: Wilson Junior College, Chicago, IL,School of the Art Institute, Chicago, IL Malachi Favors Maghostut, (born August 22, 1937,Chicago IL,) acoustic bass, electric bass, percussion, "little instruments,")Education: Wilson Junior College, Chicago,IL. Roscoe Mitchell, (born August 3, 1940,Chicago, IL), saxophones, percussion, "little instruments," Education: WilsonJunior College; Famoudou Don Moye, (born 1946, Rochester NY), drums,percussion, "little instruments," Education: Wayne State University, Detroit, MI Addresses: Home-Lester Bowie, Joseph Jarman, Brooklyn, NY; Malachi Favors Magostut, Famoudou DonMoye, Chicago, IL; Roscoe Mitchell, Madison, WI; Management and Record Company-Art Ensemble ofChicago Operations, A.E.C.O. Productions, PO Box 53429, Chicago, IL 60653.

Called "the premier avant garde free improvisational ensemble of the day" by the New York Times' John Rockwell,the Art Ensemble of Chicago (AEC) has been a major force in experimental music since the middle 1960s. The group'smusic combines elements of traditional and avant garde jazz, African music, modern classical music, and popular formssuch as blues, rock and reggae, with other art forms like performance art and theater. All AEC members play more thanone instruments, including percussion, and they switch instruments frequently during performances. Bird calls, bicyclehorns, kazoos and thousands of other "little instruments" also make up part of their sonic arsenal and have helped erasemany traditional jazz boundaries and introduce another element of fluidity into their work. Finally, the Art Ensemblehas provided a model for cooperative musical endeavors, first within the Association for the Advancement of CreativeMusicians (AACM), and second as a performing unit that, despite fluctuating finances and the diverse interests and far-flung personal projects of its members, has remained intact for more than thirty years.

The At Ensemble's roots lie in the turbulent jazz world of Chicago of the mid-1960s. At a time when the nightclubjazz scene was dying, a group of young musicians organized by pianist Muhal Richard Abrams, started playing informalweekly sessions together. The group, which became known as the Experimental Band, attracted promising, youngChicago musicians like Jack DeJonette, Anthony Braxton, and Henry Threadgill, as well as three students from WilsonJunior College, Roscoe Mitchell, Joseph Jarman, and Malachi Favors.

Musical Experiments

The Experimental Band's music was heavily influenced by the "free" playing of players on the forward-most fringesof jazz: Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, Albert Ayler, Eric Dolphy, and Cecil Taylor. Playing avant garde jazz inChicago, practically guaranteed the Experimental Band would not find any paid gigs. But it also meant that they couldplay whatever and however they wanted in their weekly rehearsal sessions. The group soon became tightly knitmusically; it would have a lasting impression on the artistic lives of its young musicians. "In having the chance to workin the Experimental Band with Richard and the other musicians there, I found the first something with meaning/reasonfor doing," Art Ensemble member Joseph Jarman told Sam Ottenhoff, "That band and the people there was the mostimportant thing that ever happened to me."

In May 1965, the group, again led by Abrams, founded a nonprofit musicians' cooperative, the Association for theAdvancement of Creative Musicians. The organization's purpose was to organize opportunities for public performanceof members' music and to help ensure that member musicians worked. AACM groups began playing theaters,coffeehouses, churches, bars and universities around Chicago.

Bassist Malachi Favors and sax players Joseph Jarman and Roscoe Mitchell, of the Art Institute, met in the AACMscene. Favors, whose playing was heavily influenced by Chicago bassists Israel Crosby and Wlibur Ware Jarman, wasan early participant in the Experimental band sessions. Jarman's interests ranged over many art forms: he wrote poetry,studied the theater, played a variety of reed instruments, and he incorporated them all in his concerts. Mitchell beganplaying sax and clarinet as a teenager. In the early 1960s, he met Albert Ayler playing in the Army band. He heard hisfirst Ornette Coleman records around that time as well, but by his own admission neither Coleman nor Ayler struck aparticularly strong chord at first. "I didn't quite understand, because I was caught up in Art Blakey, the Jazz Messengers,things like that," he told Downbeat's John Corbett. " Some of what [Ayler] was playing I didn't understand until a bluesgot played; when he played the first couple of choruses relatively straight, that started to make a connection to me."

New Jazz Sounds

Delmark Records producer Chuck Nessa heard Mitchell play a concert in 1966. The next day Mitchell had aDelmark contract. The record he made, Sound, had, in critic John Litweiler's words, "a monumental impact." It turnedits back on the "energy music"-"all out blowing," in Chuck Nessa's words to Sam Ottenhoff-being played by Coltraneand Ayler. Silence was as important to Mitchell's music as sound. Sound and his Mitchell's second album Congliptiousseemed to point to a new path for jazz, at a time when the prevailing free jazz was being increasingly seen as a dead end.

The group on those two groundbreaking LPs consisted of Roscoe Mitchell on reeds, Malachi Favors on bass, RobertCrowder on drums, and a young trumpet player from St. Louis, Lester Bowie. Bowie had played with a number of R&Bartists, including Little Milton, Ike Turner; Oliver Sain and the soul singer Fontella Bass, who was also Bowie's wife.In 1965, he moved to Chicago where he was doing session work at Chess Records and playing advertising jingles, whena Chess employee took Bowie to one of the Experimental Band's rehearsals. The Art Ensemble of Chicago's thirtiethanniversary booklet quoted Bowie: "I never in my life met so many insane people in one room!" But within a few dayshe and Roscoe Mitchell were playing together. After Sound was completed, Bowie had his own record session and madeNumber 1/Number 2 accompanied by Mitchell, Favors, and Jarman.

A short time later the four men formed the Art Ensemble-the group on Congliptious was called Roscoe Mitchell'sArt Ensemble. For about two years they played gigs under that name, they first became known as the Art Ensemble ofChicago in Paris. They played coffeehouses and university venues, primarily in and around Chicago. Many things aboutthe group were unheard of at the time. They were a jazz quarter without a drummer; the members took turns playingpercussion. They fused aspects of traditional jazz with cutting edge experiments. At the same time, however, theyincorporated a heady amount of humor in their music, with the so-called "little instruments" introduced by JosephJarman: toy musical instruments, bicycle horns, bird calls, rattles, kazoos and other diverse noise-makers. The ArtEnsemble made avant garde music that you could have fun listening to.

Jarman brought theater to Art Ensemble performances: They might parade around the hall before or during aconcert. Once they booked one site and performed at a completely different one. Another time, as the audience entered,they were given paper bags to wear over their heads. Jarman and Favors took to wearing traditional African clothingand painted faces during performances. At the height of the civil rights movement the gesture was highly confrontationaland together with the Art Ensemble's revolutionary music, helped identify them with radical black politics. "Guerrillajazz," is what critic Gary Giddins called their music. And that political element was highlighted by the motto theyadopted: Great Black Music: Ancient to the Future.

Expatriate Musicians

Lester Bowie explained to L. "Chicago Beau" Beauchamp what led the Art Ensemble to move to Paris in 1969. "Wewanted to be professional musicians playing jazz. We found that we had a unique style ... a unique way of playingtogether, and we wanted to do that exclusively for our whole living. We felt the only way we could do that would beto pick up as a unit and start developing out concepts together, somewhere else. Since some people had expressedinterest in us in France, and we had records out over there, and they were pretty popular, France was the natural choice."In June 1969, the group told their last concert audience "America is in your hands now," packed up, and sailed forEurope. They were a sensation from the time they arrived in Paris. In two years there, they recorded eleven albums,including A Jackson In Your House and Message To Our Folks, did three film scores, made countless radio andtelevision appearances, and had a constant schedule of concerts, many sponsored by the French government.

Once in France they found a drummer, Don Moye. Moye had come to Europe in May 1968 with the Detroit FreeJazz Band, had studied native drumming in North Africa and played in Paris with Steve Lacy, Pharaoh Sanders andSonny Sharrock. His arrival changed the direction of the Art Ensemble's music and brought mixed responses from thegroup's fans. Some lamented that Moye's often furious drumming eliminated the large role silence had come to play inArt Ensemble music; others appreciated Moye's unifying presence, especially during the Art Ensemble's more abstractmoments.

The group returned to the United States in April 1971, determined to work together on large scale productions andto pursue their individual projects. With the high praise they had won from jazz critics while in Paris, they also decidedto start demanding performance fees in line with their new reputation. Bowie told Downbeat's Larry Birnbaum "Wedamn near died." They were able to find a meager two to three gigs a year. Most of their time was spent rehearsing andworking on their own projects. They played their homecoming concert at the University of Chicago in 1972, aperformance Delmark Records released as Live at Mandel Hall. Much of the group's income came from governmentgrants-an NEA grant supported the production of Fanfare for the Warriors (Atlantic), for example-and universityworkshops they offered. Their fortunes finally picked up after a long-term engagement at the Five Spot in New Yorkand a well received west coast tour.

Group Projects, Individual Projects

In 1978 the Art Ensemble formed their own label AECO. The idea for the label was not a new one Don Moye toldDownbeat's Birnbaum at the time. "The label has been in existence for about six years, at least on paper. We've beencompiling and cataloging our music ever since we've been together, but it's only now that we've been able to pulltogether all the necessary factors, the economic factor, the time element, etc." AECO's first release-and its only ArtEnsemble recording-was a performance at the Montreux Festival in 1974. Since then it has released solo work byJarman, Favors and Moye.

Blending group and individual work is an important part of the Art Ensemble's basic philosophy. "We've got ourbasic structure to the point where it continues on and people still have time to develop their own individual careers andrealize some of their personal projects," Moye told Downbeat's Birnbaum. "That's one of the necessary elements of afunctional cooperative, to allow everyone room for personal development and expansion." Lester Bowie agreed. "Allthe members of the Art Ensemble have special areas of expertise-so between us we can operate over a wide range ofmusic. We have five different people with five different lives and sets of experiences which are brought in to make upthe music," he told Mike Hennessey on the occasion of the Art Ensemble's thirtieth anniversary. "This isn't a band wherea leader dictates the way everything should be done."

In the late seventies the Art Ensemble also signed a recording contract with the label ECM. The deal that wasconsidered a minor controversy in some quarters. Why was a group whose music and persona was so intimately boundup with black music and experience, who often explicitly rejected ties to the white classical musical heritage, on a labelcomprised mainly of white European artists? Such questions were put to rest when the Art Ensemble released some oftheir most acclaimed work on ECM, including, Full Force and Urban Bushmen.

New Directions

In the middle 1980s the group signed with the Japanese label DIW, where they have recorded ever since. Theirrecordings with DIW have taken the group into hitherto unexplored territory. On Ancient to the Future: Dreaming ofthe Masters Vol. 1 the Art Ensemble interpreted the work of other composers for the first time, music by Otis Redding,Bob Marley, Jimi Hendrix, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, and Duke Ellington. It was followed up with two other Dreaming ofthe Masters albums, one dedicated to John Coltrane and one to Thelonious Monk. The latter was a landmarkcollaboration with another master, Cecil Taylor. It was only the second time the Art Ensemble had recorded with a pianoplayer. Their 1990 release, Art Ensemble of Chicago Soweto, was another collaboration, this one with the AmabuthoZulu Male Chorus.

In the 1990s the members of the Art Ensemble have devoted more and more of their time to personal projects:Roscoe Mitchell's Sound Ensemble and Note Factory, Lester Bowie's Brass Fantasy and the Leaders, Malachi FavorsMaghostut's Projections, and Famoudou Don Moye and Sun Percussion Summit. Joseph Jarman retired from the groupcompletely in the mid-nineties. But after thirty years and more than forty albums-not counting bootlegs-the ArtEnsemble has not given up the ghost-it continues to perform occasionally as a quartet, in the United States and Europe.

While realizing the Art Ensemble will never achieve mass popularity, Malachi Favors believes there is a potentialfor greater interest in their music. In America, Favors told Downbeat's John Litweiler, "we have different music fordifferent purposes, but it just so happens that the sex part of music-the rock or rhythm & blues-is overdone.Travelling in the States, the response in the colleges and the different places where we play has been tremendous. Peopleare waiting to hear what the artist has to say, and eventually they come around to hearing what's going on in the music.... if people could hear our music, they would respond."

by Gerald Brennan

The Art Ensemble of Chicago's Career

Mitchell, Jarman, Favors, and Bowie meet as members of the Association for the Advancement of CreativeMusicians in the middle 1960s; form the Art Ensemble c. 1968; moved to Paris name is changed to Art Ensemble ofChicago, 1978; Moye joins group in Paris the same year.

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