Sandhills Reunion "Just Angels" live in Victoriaville
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-------------------------------Jazz and the spoken word have been linked at least since the Beats. Jerry Granelli was an aspiring teenage drummer in San Francisco in the late 50s, when Ginsberg, Ferlinghetti, Rexroth and Patchen declaimed to the accompaniment of local players in clubs like the Cellar and the Blackhawk, and he got to improvise a bit with most of them. In the late 70s at the Naropa Institute in Boulder, where he founded the music department, Granelli often collaborated with Ginsberg, Burroughs and Anne Waldman in improvised concerts. His fascination with words led to the 1993 jazz instrumental CD A Song I Thought I Heard Buddy Sing, inspired by Michael Ondaatjes experimental novel about Buddy Bolden, Coming Through Slaughter. His new project Sandhills Reunion is a multi-layered interweaving of words and music that Granelli calls an audio movie or play.The text, written and performed by actor/playwright/singer Rinde Eckert, is a glancingly linked sequence of reflections, imaginings, internal monologues and one historically accurate dialogue (Twenty Questions for an Outlaw) using the persona of Billy the Kid as a thematic touchstone and the Sandhills region of northwestern Nebraska as the landscape of memory and desire. By turns rowdy, comic, ironic, nostalgic, angry and melancholy, it presents the unnamed speakers psyche in the context of American reality and myth (complete text included in the booklet). The music, composed and played by a newly formed ensemble of trusted Granelli collaborators, counterpoints and boldly colours the words with its timbres and rhythms. It conjures up its own locations within the bands collectively imagined synthesis of blues, jazz, rock, funk, the popular and the more esoteric music of the 20th century from raunchy bars to uptown refinement, chamber music to the avant-garde.From the bands first performance to making the final synthesis of music and text took 2 _ years. Jerry comments: I knew that to get the sound I wanted wed need Lee Townsend to produce the work. We discussed the overall concept, basically recording it like shooting a film just gathering material, then putting it all together in the mix. I asked the members of the band to write not specifying what to write, but implying what I was hearing. I didnt write a lot of music myself but was kind of the vision holder, maybe the director, always working with Lee. The next step was finding the text, the voice. Ive had a long relationship with Rinde. Id originally planned to use Ondaatje excerpts, but in the end he suggested creating his own text for the project.The musicians never heard any texts. Part of the reason for this is that I wanted the music to stand alone, not as a servant to the words. The idea was that we would have two strong elements that come together to produce a third thing, a new form. So the listener might pay attention one time to the music and next time to the text, and once to the feeling of both. (The SACD surround mix literally adds another dimension, suspending the listener within the aural web of musical and vocal associations.)Rinde adds: I had just come back from a residency in Nebraska when I started to write. Images of the Sandhills were still fresh, in particular the roundup and branding in which Id taken part. I remembered my boyhood fascination with cowboys. But, of course, I was out of place. I suppose the appearance of Billy the Kid in that prairie heartland could be seen as a metaphor for my own youthful memories and my enduring sense of alienation and dislocation in this culture. Whatever the nature of the psychological ground, this poetic conceit was fertile. I could imagine a rancher, in his proper place, at home with his wife, his responsibilities, his particular fate, dreaming of a kind of powerful other self, at home in the world, errant, romantic, or alien. This irony seems consistent with the music, with its urbane wit and its kind of formal simplicity and beauty.The complete interview with Jerry Granelli and Rinde Eckert and bios of the musicians appear at www.songlines.com/Sandhills.html and www.songlines.com/Sandhillsbios.html
For more information: www.songtone.com, www.rindeeckert.com