Showing posts with label Drums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drums. Show all posts

Monday, May 6, 2013

Risk, Courage, Trust, and Forgiveness in Improvised Music


April was a busy month (including a CD release on Teal Creek Music !), so I'm now just getting to posting for Demolition Duo's April 5th performance-workshop at Lewis and Clark College. There was a lot to digest from our visit at LC, but here are a few highlights.

We presented two different sessions at LC, one for Professor Jeff Leonard’s jazz appreciation students, and another for Beth ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Szczepanski’s jazz theory class. We opened up each session with a
long free improvisation. You can check out one of the improvisations on my SavageFlute youtube channel (in parts 1 and 2). The students at Lewis and Clark were interested in our decision-making processes. Some questions included, how do you decide what instrument to play (including individual parts of the drum kit?) How do you know when to begin (or when not to begin) a new musical idea? How do you decide when to use different instrumental techniques? And what are those techniques?

There was also a recurring theme of how to bridge free improvisation concepts and styles into more traditional styles. Ken and I feel that we presented this well, making it clear that many of the musical considerations required an effective free improvisation are part of effective playing in straight-ahead jazz, classical styles, and other musical genres.

One student (who played bass) asked, “are there ways to practice this type of improvisation?” Ken answered with some specific practice techniques, such as taking the first ten minutes to play an improvised solo with or without restrictions (e.g. play just with the  bow, or just with your pinky), or try improvising using “centricity,” where everything one plays leads back or relates in some way to one specific pitch, but not necessarily in a ii, V, I sort of relationship (traditional, functional harmonic relationships).

Another student asked, “What are you thinking about through the  course of any song?” I replied, "I listen to what my duet partner or the rest of the group doing, and then I may make the decision to play in a supportive roll or a contrary roll. I 'get out on a limb,' play something that I'm not sure if I can execute technically as a performer--there's an audience component in this as I want to do it well for the audience." Ken responded to this thread by saying that, “the music will take you to someplace technically where you’ve never been before."

In summing up many of the ideas presented in the workshop, Ken and I both discussed the need  for courage, trust, and forgiveness, both for yourself and for the others with whom you are playing.  We also stressed the need for taking musical risks, and that any free improvisation is full of risk taking from the very beginning.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Demolition Duo 2013


Happy New Year to all! I received a holiday gift from the Regional Arts and Cultural Council (RACC) at the end of 2012 in the form of a grant award for the Demolition Duo. The "Demolition Duo is the improvised fire music of John Savage and Ken Ollis...the duo engages in an ecstatic dialogue...a mercurial, improvised conversation between the two musicians" [Creative Music Guild, Portland, OR]. The grant will fund four performance-workshops at Portland area colleges and universities between February and May of 2013. The lucky schools are: Portland State University, Reed College, Clackamas Community College, and Lewis and Clark College (specific dates to be announced). Though not directly under the auspices of the grant, we will also give a clinic and perform at Western Oregon University on February 28th. (the concert is at 7:30pm, free admission, in the Smith auditorium, room 121).

I’ve decided to use this blog to chronicle Demolition Duo activities, including links to audio and video from our engagements at the various schools. I might include a few rehearsals, too. The Demolition Duo was busy this year and had a number of performances including the Creative Music Guild’s Outset Series and the 32nd annual Cathedral Park Jazz Festival. We also recorded an album, and hope to have it released in the near future. Please allow me to (re)introduce ourselves:

photo by Sue Zalokar
Flutist, saxophonist, and composer John C. Savage has been compared to Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Herbie Mann, Noah Howard, and Ian Anderson. Known equally as “a thoughtful and rigorous improviser,” and “a badass, knock-down-drag-out force to be reckoned with” (The Willamette Week), Savage lived in New York City for many years performing with, among others, The Savage 3, Billy Fox, (The Uncle Wiggly Suite) the electroacoustic duo Cartridge, The Brooklyn Qawwali Party (eponymous release), and the Andrew Hill Big Band (A Beautiful Day). Savage continues to be a sought-after soloist and collaborator on both coasts working with a wide variety of artists, including the NYC-based Kitsune Ensemble (The Kaidan Suite and Amanogawa) and Portland’s Demolition Duo. Savage holds a Ph.D. from New York University in music performance and teaches flute at Western Oregon University. www.johncsavage.com

Ken Ollis is a drummer and composer from Portland, OR. He has performed extensively throughout the US, Canada, and Europe, and has played with a variety of musicians including: Kenny Werner, Ingrid Jensen, Julian Priester, The Drifters, Bud Shank, John Stowell, Darrell Grant, John Gross, Dan Balmer, Chata Addy, Rob Blakeslee, Rich Halley, Glen Moore, and many others.  Most recently, his projects have included work with Dominique Eade, Heather Masse (from The Wailin’ Jennys), Aoife O'Donovan (from Crooked Still), Pepe and The Bottle Blondes, Paxselin Quartet, Demolition Duo, and several other groups. Ken also regularly performs in collaboration with painters, poets, dancers, and cinematographers. His compositions are featured in the repertoire of the Paxselin Quartet, the Portland Jazz Composers Ensemble, PDX Ensemble, The Chamber of Commerce, and in his own groups.  His debut CD, Confluence, features Ollis’s original compositions performed skillfully by a fantastic ensemble.  Ken currently teaches at Portland State University and George Fox University, and has taught a multitude of clinics throughout the country. He holds an M.M. in jazz performance. 
www.kenollis.com