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I Want My… : A Conversation with MTV Co-Founder Fred Seibert

In our prior conversation with Fred Seibert, we discussed his role as a young producer and engineer capturing Cecil Taylor and other artists. Despite working with heavyweights like Rudy Van Gelder and Tony May, Seibert ultimately chose not to make music his career. Instead, his focus became, primarily, television. At the beginning of the 1980s, […]

Under Niagara Falls: Producer Fred Seibert on Cecil Taylor’s Complete, Legendary, Live Return Concert

Many artists can make great music. Very few can change the course of musical history. Cecil Taylor was one of the latter. By breaking apart conventions, both on and off of the bandstand, he opened up new realms and possibilities. While Ornette Coleman – another brilliant trailblazer – is often credited with creating free jazz […]

Orbital Rings of Saturn: A Conversation with Tyler Mitchell and Marshall Allen (Part Two)

We continue our conversation with Mitchell and Allen with a deeper dive into Dancing Shadows (Mahakala Music, 2022), including Mitchell’s choice in compositions and the absence of a piano. We also discuss the influence of straight-ahead music and music from different cultures around the globe. And we conclude with thoughts on the influence of the […]

Orbital Rings of Saturn: A Conversation with Tyler Mitchell and Marshall Allen (Part One)

“I never wanted to be a part of planet Earth, but I am compelled to be here, so anything I do for this planet is because the Master-Creator of the Universe is making me do it. I am of another dimension. I am on this planet because people need me.”- Sun Ra Throughout his life, […]

Technology and Community: A Conversation with Greg Spero on The Chicago Experiment and NFTs

In 2001, Ropeadope Records released The Philadelphia Experiment, a unique collaborative effort by three artists from the city of Brotherly Love who built off of their community’s rich musical history to create something new. Part of the project’s success came from the diverse musical backgrounds of its three leads. From hip hop and R&B came […]

Up for the Challenge: A Conversation with Bob James (Part Two)

We ended the first part of our conversation (available here) with Bob James by discussing artists who have sampled his work over the years. Part two begins by examining the influence hip hop has had on his own music. We then continue a tour through the history of the compositions on his forthcoming trio album, […]

Up for the Challenge: A Conversation with Bob James (Part One)

Across his almost six-decade career, Bob James’ music has meant many things to different people. To those who have an interest in Creed Taylor’s iconic CTI Records, the memorable label that incentivized artists to merge jazz with ideas from other genres, James is a familiar name. Between his own significant releases and his contributions to […]

Review: William Parker’s ‘Migration of Silence into and Out of the Tone World [Volumes 1-10]’

Has there ever been a musician whose musical imagination is as universal and as omnivorous as William Parker’s? Perhaps Alexander Scriabin, a composer and virtuoso instrumentalist whose unfinished “Mysterium” was conceived to be performed over a week’s time by an orchestra, choir, dancers, visuals, and incense in the foothills of the Himalaya. Or possibly Don […]

Fela Kuti & Afrika 70’s ‘Zombie’ (1977)

Protest songs, those associated with a movement for social change, have existed at least since the psalms of grassroots Protestant religious revival movements in the United States. Two of the best-known protest songs – Bob Dylan’s “Masters of War” and Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going On”- were by Americans. It is easy to fall into the […]