Creative Music Studio: Panel IV - Preserving The Legacy Part II
This excerpt concludes the discussion of the CMS archives. Click here for Part I.
This excerpt concludes the discussion of the CMS archives. Click here for Part I.
This panel discusses the CMS archives and the preservation efforts now underway that will make its recordings, texts, scores, courses and other materials available to the public.
The continuation of the panel on the Creative Music Studio's embrace of non-Western, non-European instruments. Click here for Part I.
This panel explores the Creative Music Studio's embrace of non-Western, non-European instruments and practices with alumni who are important vectors of this pan-cultural synthesis. In the same spirit, it questions and deconstructs the idea of "world music," citing Ravi Shankar's aphoristic comment that "everybody lives in the world."
Moderator Adam Rudolph is a composer, improviser and percussionist whose Organic Orchestra realizes a music notation and conducting system he developed.
This is the second part of a panel moderated by Karl Berger discussing the philosophy of music education at CMS. Participants are Marilyn Crispell, James Emery, Oliver Lake, and Ingrid Sertso. Click here for Part I.
This panel discusses the philosophy of music education at CMS. As moderator Karl Berger puts it, the program gives students "ways to deepen the experience of playing and listening to music, focusing on attention, expression, and communication." The panelists are composer Marilyn Crispell, guitarist and composer James Emery, saxophonist and composer Oliver Lake, and vocalist and CMS founder Ingrid Sertso. Click here for Part II.
The continuation of the panel featuring Karl Berger, Ingrid Sertso, Ilene Marder, Don Davis, and Howard Mandel. Click here for Part I.
Creative Music Studio was founded in 1971 by Karl Berger, a vibraphonist, pianist and composer; his wife, vocalist Ingrid Sertso; and the saxophonist Ornette Coleman. Its musicians came from astonishingly diverse national, generational, and stylistic backgrounds. Yet they came together to play, think, and live music. CMS practice shaped musical ways and ideas that inspired participants to go on to become leading lights in improvised music around the world in the ensuing years. Hundreds of live recordings were produced documenting what was performed there.
Jazz Studies Online: You're from New York. What kept you here when you decided to pursue a career as a jazz musician? What features did the city offer then that others did not? Given that you stayed in New York (or nearby) have your motivations for being here changed?
Jazz Studies Online: You're not from New York originally. What lured you here? What features did the city offer then that others did not? If you've stayed here, have your motivations for being here changed?