For pianist, composer and Guggenheim fellow Myra Melford,
the personal and the poetic have always been intimately and deeply connected.
Raised outside Chicago in a house designed by the renowned architect Frank
Lloyd Wright, Melford grew up literally surrounded by art. Where most of us
find the beauty in our childhood homes through the memories and associations we
make within its four walls, Melford saw early on that aesthetic expression
could both be built from and be a structure for profound emotions.
Over the course of a career spanning more than two decades,
Melford has taken that lesson to heart, crafting a singular sound world that
harmonizes the intricate and the expressive, the meditative and the assertive,
the cerebral and the playful. Drawing inspiration from a vast spectrum of
cultural and spiritual traditions and artistic disciplines, she has found a
“spark of recognition” in sources as diverse as the writings of the
13th-century Persian poet Rumi and the Uruguayan journalist Eduardo Galeano;
the wisdom of Zen Buddhism and the Huichol Indians of Mexico; and the music of
mentors like Jaki Byard, Don Pullen, and Henry Threadgill.
The latest incarnation of this ever-evolving
cross-disciplinary dialogue is Language of Dreams, which will premiere in November
2013 at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. The multi-media work is inspired
by Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano’s Memory of Fire trilogy, a history of the
Americas told through indigenous myths and the accounts of European colonizers.
The piece will combine music for Melford’s quintet Snowy Egret with narration
by a multi-lingual actor, dance by Los Angeles-based choreographer Oguri, and
video by Bay Area filmmaker David Szlasa.
While Language of Dreams is her most ambitious project to
date, it is not the first time that Melford has constructed a piece from such a
wealth of disciplines. In 2006, the Walker Arts Center premiered Knock on the
Sky, a piece inspired by Albert Camus’ essay “The Myth of Sisyphus” and Kobo
Abe’s novel Woman in the Dunes, in which Melford collaborated with New York
City–based choreographer/dancer Dawn Akemi Saito and Austrian architect Michael
Haberz.
Snowy Egret, Melford’s latest working group, made its debut
in 2012. The quintet comprises some of creative music’s most inventive and
individual voices: trumpeter Ron Miles, guitarist Liberty Ellman, bassist Stomu
Takeishi, and drummer Tyshawn Sorey. Melford’s spacious, contemplative,
exploratory compositions have long attracted and almost demanded such
forward-thinking artists. Her past ensembles have included Be Bread, with Cuong
Vu, Ben Goldberg, Brandon Ross, Stomu Takeishi, and Matt Wilson; The Same
River, Twice, with Dave Douglas, Chris Speed, Erik Friedlander, and Michael
Sarin; Crush, with Takeishi, Vu, and Kenny Wolleson.
Melford also currently is one-third of the collective Trio M
with bassist Mark Dresser and drummer Matt Wilson; their most recent CD, The
Guest House, was one of 2012’s most acclaimed releases. She also performs in
the duo ::Dialogue:: with clarinetist Ben Goldberg and will release her first
solo album in October 2013, a collection of work inspired by the paintings of
the late visual artist Don Reich.
Melford’s musical evolution has long run in parallel with
her spiritual search, a personal journey that has led her to Aikido, Siddha
Yoga, and the wisdom traditions of the Huichol people of Mexico’s central
highlands. Sonically, that quest is expressed via her wide-ranging palette,
which expands from the piano to the harmonium and electronic keyboards or to amplifying
barely audible sounds in the piano’s interior. Her playing can build from the
blissful and lyrical to the intense and angular, with accents from Indian,
African, Cuban and Middle Eastern musics or the cerebral abstraction of
European and American jazz and classical experimentalism.
While Melford’s music continually reaches toward a state of
transcendence, it still remains deeply rooted in the blues traditions she heard
growing up in the Chicago area. In 1978, she first encountered violinist Leroy Jenkins,
her introduction to the AACM, whose boundary-free, adventurous approach to jazz
remains an influence. She would go on to study with Jenkins, together forming
the collective trio Equal Interest with multireedist Joseph Jarman in 1997.
Melford moved to the east coast in 1982 and began performing
in New York City’s thriving Downtown scene, making her recorded debut as a
leader in 1990; she has since released more than twenty albums as a leader or
co-leader and appeared on more than 40 releases as a side-person. In 2000, she
spent a year in North India on a Fulbright scholarship, immersing herself in
the region’s classical, devotional, and folk music. Melford relocated to the
west coast in 2004, joining the faculty of the University of California, Berkeley
as an associate professor of contemporary improvised music. There, she engages
students in the theory and practice of improvisation, employing diverse
creative strategies.
Her work has earned Melford some of the highest accolades in
her field. In 2013 alone, she was named a Guggenheim Fellow and received the
Doris Duke Charitable Foundation’s Performing Artist Award and a Doris Duke
Residency to Build Demand for the Arts for her efforts to re-imagine the jazz
program at San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. She was also the
winner of the 2012 Alpert Award in the Arts for Music. She has been honored
numerous times in DownBeat’s Critics Poll since 1991 and was nominated by the
Jazz Journalists Association as Pianist of the Year in 2008 and 2009 and
Composer of the Year in 2004.
No comments:
Post a Comment