About Me
Burnt Sugar the Arkestra Chamber began as a grand and noble idea that begat a quite foolhardy
enterprise - update Miles Davis Bitches Brew for the 21st century with players who were conversant in a plethora of
post-modern musical tongues. What it has become since then is one of the few modern music groups to freely mash-
up any and all forms of vocal and instrumental music like it ain’t nobody’s business if they do. Burnt Sugar got the
nerve to claim Morton Feldman, Brian Eno and Steve Reich as progenitors alongside Billie Holiday, Jimi Hendrix
and Vladislav Delay.Their player-ranks have been known to include devotees of Steve Lacy and Steve Coleman, Irish
fiddlers, AACM refugees, Afropunk rockers, staunch beboppers, feminist hiphoppers, doowoppers, funkateers and
rodeo stars of the digital divide.
Just as Bitches Brew combined acoustic and electric improvisers with electronic manipulation, Burnt Sugar
bridges the gap between digital music making and live, orchestral performance. From the outset the concept was to
combine the Bitches Brew approach with an adaptation of Butch Morris’ ground breaking Conduction System for
Improvisers which utilizes over 25 hand and baton gestures to rearrange and compose symphonic, trans-genre suites
of music in real time. The band’s cheeky motto quickly became ‘We Never Play Anything The Same Way Once’ and
for the next 7 years of recording and performing they never tried to live that artistic ideal down.
In late August 1999 the band’s founding members gathered in a Hell’s Kitchen rehearsal studio to explore
the possibilities of this conceit at Greg Tate’s behest. After a few weeks of jamming the band made its debut at the
legendary CBGBs. The band at that time consisted of Vijay Iyer and Bruce Mack on keyboards, Rene Akan, Morgan
Craft and Kirk Douglas (now with The Roots) on guitars, Jared Nickerson and Jason Di Matteo on electric and
acoustic bass, Swiss Chris and Qasim Naqvi on drums, vocalist Eisa Davis and violinist Simi. In December of that
year the nascent band recorded the groups first, and some say, best, album, Blood On The Leaf - first of many on
their own truGROID imprint.
About that recording Rolling Stone’s David Fricke said:
“A multiracial jam army that freestyles with cool telekinesis between the lustrous menace of Miles Davis’
On The Corner, the slash-and-om of 1970s King Crimson, and Jimi Hendrix’ moonwalk across side three
of Electric Ladyland.â€
While The Village Voice’s Robert Christgau wrote:
“Its electric Miles with soul, Maggot Brain with a PHD, the Hendrix Evans band of dreams, the
underwater funk some hear in A.R. Kane.â€
In the UK publication The Wire, critic Hua Hsu had this to say:
“Guitarists Rene Akan, Morgan Michael Craft and Kirk Douglas manage to sound massive, yet patient:
not at all how you’d imagine a three guitar cockfight. At times there is a corrosive edge to their playing,
the way the little ripples of funk rage along the periphery. Similar to the way Eddie Hazel bubbled and
scraped his way through “Maggot Brain†(another important reference here), the trio occupy sonic space
without dominating it. Vijay Iyer’s versatile ivory skills approximate violence one moment, pristine beauty
the next, and the occasional cello contributes a surreal lushness.â€
In 2000 the group began sessions for their epic three-disc sophomore release That Depends On What You
Know made up of the discs Fubractive Since Antiquity, The Crepescalarium and The Sirens Return. By that time, the
band had come to include trumpeter Lewis Flip Barnes, percussionist Tia Nicole Leak, saxophonist Micah Gaugh,
flautist Satch Hoyt, cellist Julia Kent, vocalists Lisala Beatty and Justice Dilla-X. Upon the triple albums release in
late 2001 they were once again showered with kudos from the press and showed their versatility with compelling
and inventive renditions of material originally recorded by Thelonious Monk, Chaka Khan, Jimi Hendrix and Curtis
Mayfield.
2000 was also when Burnt Sugar performed at a 12 hour Miles Davis tribute concert at Symphony Space
which won them these kudos from The New York Times’ Ann Powers.
“The sharp display of talent at Symphony Space’s Wall To Wall Miles tribute was complimented by Burnt
Sugar’s expansive freeleaning set. Led by Gregory Tate, this enormous band incorporated whispered vocals,
whistling, dulcimer, and more, held together by the funky bass playing of Jared Michael Nickersonâ€
In 2002 they were invited to collaborate with choreographer Gabri Christa on a dance-adaptation of
Stravinsky’s The Rites of Spring which would have its premiere at Central Park Summerstage that summer. That
occasion also marked Butch Morris first appearance with the band that had been making informal use of his
conduction system for improvisers.
In 2002 the band received a prestigious $75,000.00 touring grant from Art International, a prestigious
award given that year in music only to Burnt Sugar and the innovative American string quartet, Ethel. With these
resources at their disposal the group would tour England, Spain, France and The Netherlands, over the next three
years. They would also in this period record their most ambitious project to date, The Rites, a collaboration with
Tate’s conducting mentor Butch Morris, former Miles Davis guitarist Pete Cosey and bassist extraordinaire Melvin
Gibbs. The formidable turntablist Pan-Arabic DJ Mutamassik also joined the band for this special album, as did
violinist Mazz Swift and cellist Okkyung Lee. Artist, musician and turntablist Christian Marclay declared it one of
the year’s ten best for 2002 in Artforum.
Burnt Sugar’s next studio recording, the double CD, Black Sex Yall Liberation And Bloody Random Violets
dropped in 2004. It featured the band debut of the brilliant alto saxophonist Matana Roberts and virtuoso tenorman
Petre Radu-Scafaru. It was quickly followed in 2005 by Not April In Paris, their first live album, taken from a
completely improvised 80 minute concert they did in Paris the year before. At the beginning of 2006 they put out
another live set, If You Cant Dazzle Them With Your Brilliance Then Baffle Them With Your Blisluth from shows in
Bordeaux, San Sebastien Spain and at New York’s Tonic and at the legendary Vision Festival.
Hot on its heels in the spring came the double CD set, More Than Posthuman - Rise Of The Mojosexual
Cotillion, a more vocal, lyric and dance-oriented album than their previous ones. The band closed out its 2006
recording glut with Chopped And Screwed Volume2 - Rarities, Remixes, Out Takes And Conductions, a strange brew
of material culled from remanipulations of More Than Posthuman, newly minted collabs with Butch Morris and
laptop music Tate scored for his sci-fi film project Black Body Radiation ( a 40 minute narrative feature about a
future New York populated by various Muslim sects and mystic-extraterrestials.)
Tapped by the Black Rock Coalition to organize a tribute concert to progressive Black popular composers
for Lincoln Center’s Out of Door’s festival, Burnt Sugar staged a concert that featured over 30 singers and
musicians performing provocative live remixes of songs by Grace Jones, Miles Davis, Jimi Hendrix, Aretha Franklin,
Parliament-Funkadelic, Arthur Lee and Love, Prince, Slave, Living Colour and the Wu Tang Clan.
The fall of 2006 found Burnt Sugar getting busy all over-- a week-long residency at the University of
Dayton in Ohio, a show at The Arab American Institute in Detroit, a throwdown at Washington DC’s Kennedy
Center (for the 3rd time!) capped off by an appearance New York’s fabled City College for the First Annual Upsouth
Black Literary Festival. Late 2006 was also when Burnt Sugar made their debut at Finland’s Tampere Jazz Festival
and received some of the most effusive critical raves of its 7 year career.
“Surprisingly, the most interesting visitor from the other side of the Atlantic turned out to be the 15-
membered Burnt Sugar which, with its two vocalist virtuosos, is not easy to describe. This post-everything
fusion orchestra offered depth and surprises, and luckily most of the notions did not get lost in the big mass
of sound.â€
~ Mikko Majander / Uutispa¨iva¨ Demari
“The 15-membered Burnt Sugar The Arkestra Chamber from New York, founded by the young Greg Tate,
must be elevated to the big band elite. The sparkling sounds, with a strong, dark rhythm, crowned the
concert of the Sunday afternoon.â€
~ Jouko Huru / Kansan Uutiset
The conductor Gregory Tate and Burnt Sugar demonstrated what kind of heights the ‘Conducted
Composition’ technique, developed by Butch Morris, might reach at its best.
Music’s history is full of great explorers such as Morris, Rameau and Scho¨nberg, who are not able to make
their own discoveries swing like their best followers do. But like Rameau had his Bach and Scho¨nberg had
Berg, so has Morris now his Tate.â€
~ Jari-Pekka Vuorela / Aamulehti
In true Burnt Sugar style the release of More Than Posthuman, their most vocal-centric studio project,
occurred as the live band began to mutate into a horn riddled beast. The group now features a full-on brass and
wind section that includes 2 bari, 2 alto, and 2 tenor saxophones, trumpet, trombone, flute and occasionally even
tuba and didgeridoo. 2007 will see the release of two Best-Of collections by Burnt Sugar comprised of material from
all 12 of their discs and another live album from a stellar show at Minneapolis’ Walker Arts Center in 2005. Come
December, they will embark upon sessions for yet another epic studio recording. Maybe even a 13 disc box set.
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..[endif]BURNT SUGAR is a territory band, a neo-tribal thang, a community hang, a society music guild aspiring to the condition of all that is molten, glacial, racial, spacial, oceanic, mythic, antiphonal and telepathic.All our love to Chaka Khan, Nina Simone, George Clinton and the P-funk All Stars, Lady Day,Miles Davis, Eddy Hazel, A.R. Kane, Sun Ra, Jimi Hendrix, Duke Ellington
and Betty Davis for opening the gates of paradise and pushing us through.Butch Morris's Conduction System for orchestral improvisation is the preferred mode of channeling for this Gotham based ensemble of pan-ethnic sound warriors. Everyone of them is a border crossing trans-national whether they'll admit it or not.
Spontaneous combustion being an occupational hazard in Gotham, Burnt Sugar is how we keep it real, surreal, arboreal, aquatic, incendiary. If only because we might be mistaken for the world's second fully improvisational acid-funk band.To quote Arthur Jafa, we don't strive to be original, but Aboriginal. Like the songlines and the dreaming, like Tracey Moffatt and The Last Wave, like Cubase and Cabrini Green. One foot in the prehistoric, the other in the post human. In this journey, you're the journal and we're the journalists. Houston, Houston, do you read?.