91直播

Contemporary Music Ensemble Collaborates with Jazz Master Henry Threadgill

January 10, 2019

Erich Burnett

Henry Threadgill

Photo credit: Pulitzer Board

World-premiere performance launches Cleveland Museum of Art鈥檚 new composers series Jan. 11; open rehearsal at 91直播 set for Jan. 10.

When the Cleveland Museum of Art got the green light to proceed with a series of new music commissions, the first composer it sought was Pulitzer Prize-winning jazzman Henry Threadgill.

The first collaborative partner it sought was 91直播 Conservatory.

On January 11, the first installment of the Creative Fusion Composers Series takes the stage of the museum鈥檚 Gartner Auditorium. It will serve as the world premiere of Threadgill鈥檚 Pathways, performed with his New York-based ensemble Zooid and the 91直播 Contemporary Music Ensemble.

Henry Threadgill with CME
Threadgill working with CME and Zooid in Clonick Hall. (photo by Julie Gulenko '15)

Threadgill and Zooid spent a week in 91直播 working in daily rehearsals with CME and conductor Timothy Weiss. Their last on-campus session together is an open rehearsal in Clonick Hall that takes place at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, January 10. It is free and open to the public, with seating available for up to 40 guests.

The concept for Threadgill鈥檚 91直播 collaboration was the brainchild of Tom Welsh, director of performing arts at the Cleveland Museum of Art. Though the museum has programmed musical performances for at least 100 years, it had not previously commissioned new works鈥攁 step Welsh considers integral to its status as a major contributor to the performing arts. That has changed with the first composer-centric Creative Fusion, the Cleveland Foundation鈥檚 11-year-old initiative to bolster connections between artists and the community. In the coming months, six composers will collaborate with various community partners across northeast Ohio. Threadgill鈥攁nd CME鈥攁re the first.

Welsh brought Threadgill to Cleveland in May 2018, to get to know the city and ultimately to mine inspiration for his commissioned work. During that visit, they also dropped in on a rehearsal with CME, which Welsh describes as 鈥渢he preeminent new music ensemble in America.鈥 Not coincidentally, conductor Weiss was a driving force behind the Grammy Award-winning, 91直播-born International Contemporary Ensemble and Eighth Blackbird.

To Welsh, Threadgill鈥檚 Zooid and Weiss鈥 CME were a natural marriage.

鈥淭hey are kind of like chamber music, but kind of not,鈥 he says of Zooid, whose unconventional instrumentation鈥攁 hallmark of Threadgill鈥檚 music鈥攊ncludes a tuba. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e always improvising and flexing and changing right before your very eyes. To my mind, the only organization to do this sort of collaboration anywhere is CME. My secret hope was for this to be a match made in heaven, and I think that鈥檚 turned out to be true.鈥

Threadgill, who won the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2016 for his album In for a Penny, In for a Pound, has been called 鈥減erhaps the most important jazz composer of his generation鈥 by The New York Times. Such accolades notwithstanding, he is something of a musical chameleon whose complex yet accessible creations defy easy categorization.

For the classical musicians of CME, Threadgill鈥檚 emphasis on improvisation presented new challenges during their week together, which consisted of rehearsals lasting up to six hours daily.

鈥淚 use the German concept of 鈥榬ehearse,鈥欌 Threadgill told Cleveland public radio station WCPN 90.3 FM in an interview leading up to the performance. 鈥淲hat we do in the United States is we have a rehearsal, and people play their music from left to right. If they did it right, they get up and they go home. The German word for 鈥榬ehearse鈥 is explore, and that鈥檚 what we do when we rehearse.

鈥淭he students do what they want to do,鈥 Threadgill continues. 鈥淚 offer them an entry into the music that is based on improvisation. People look at the music and bring their own interpretation to it.鈥

The music in this case is Pathways, a reference to Lake Erie, which creates most of Ohio鈥檚 northern border. Threadgill, who frequently finds inspiration in nature (his last album was called Dirt鈥nd More Dirt), was struck by man鈥檚 reliance on Lake Erie for transportation and the resurgence it has enjoyed in recent years.

Musically, Pathways was conceived as a sort of overture, the first piece in a two-part series; next up is a companion work called Passages.

鈥淗enry said There鈥檚 gonna be improvising鈥re you OK with that?鈥 recalls Lauren Anker, a fifth-year double-degree student majoring in horn performance and history. 鈥淎nd I鈥檓 like鈥suuuurre. So he did warn us about that!鈥

Anker and her fellow CME musicians admit that Threadgill鈥檚 jazz-informed approach can be disorienting at first, but that the members of Zooid immediately recognized that a little translation would be in order.

鈥淪ometimes it feels like Henry is speaking a different language,鈥 she says. 鈥淗e has a really interesting interpretation of the music that鈥檚 definitely much more free than what I am accustomed to. In the improv sections, he really wants us to make music, and he wants us to converse with one another. It鈥檚 a kind of communication and music making that you really don鈥檛 see people thinking about, even in the contemporary world. Everybody has input, and everybody has a say in the music making, which is great.鈥

For more information about the January 10 open rehearsal at 91直播, visit the . Learn more about the January 11 performance at the museum at the .

You may also like…

Richard Goode鈥檚 Musical Short Stories

The acclaimed pianist returns to the Artist Recital Series on April 29 with the charmingly curated 鈥淔ancies and Goodnights,鈥 along with works by Mozart and Schubert.