ACCESS TO EACH ARTIST CAN BE FOUND IN THE 'BLOG ARCHIVE' (ARTISTS LISTED IN WEEKLY CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER) AND IN THE ‘LABELS’ SECTION (ARTIST NAMES, TOPICS, ETC.) ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE HOME PAGE. CLICK ON THESE RESPECTIVE LINKS TO ACCESS THEIR CONTENT:
https://soundprojections.blogspot.com/
https://soundprojections.blogspot.com/2017/03/oliver-lake-b-september-14-1942.html
PHOTO: OLIVER LAKE (b. September 14, 1942)
Oliver Lake
(b. September 14, 1942)
Artist Biography by Chris Kelsey
Lake began playing drums as a child in St. Louis. He first picked up the saxophone at the age of 18. Lake received his bachelor's degree in 1968 from Lincoln University. From the late '60s to the early '70s he taught school, played in various contexts around St. Louis, and led -- along with Julius Hemphill and Charles "Bobo" Shaw, among others -- a musicians' collective, the Black Artists' Group (BAG). Lake lived in Paris from 1972-1974, where he worked in a quintet comprised of fellow BAG members. By 1975, he had (along with most of his BAG colleagues) moved to New York, where he became active on what was called by some the "loft jazz" scene. In 1976, with Hemphill, Hamiet Bluiett, and David Murray, he founded the World Saxophone Quartet. Over the next two decades, that band reached a level of popularity perhaps unprecedented by a free jazz ensemble. Its late-'80s albums of Ellington works and R&B tunes attracted an audience that otherwise might never have found its way to such an esoteric style.
Lake continued working as a leader apart from the WSQ, making excellent small-group albums in the '70s and '80s for Arista/Freedom and Black Saint. In the '80s, Lake led a reggae-oriented band, Jump Up, that had a significant degree of pop success, though its artistic appeal faded in comparison with his jazz work. In the '90s, Lake continued to stretch creatively; a duo album with classically trained pianist Donal Fox set him free to explore the more fanciful side of his musical personality. Late-'90s concerts with the WSQ, his own groups, and such duo mates as the hyper-dextrous pianist Borah Bergman showed that Lake was still on top of his game.
The saxophonist continued performing and recording as both a leader and collaborator into the 21st century, forming Trio 3 with bassist Reggie Workman and drummer Andrew Cyrille (releasing such albums as 2002's Open Ideas on Palmetto and 2008's Berne Concert [in collaboration with pianist Irène Schweizer] and 2009's At This Time [in collaboration with Geri Allen] on Intakt); recording with the String Trio of New York (2005's Frozen Ropes on Barking Hoop); and issuing such recordings as Cloth by the Oliver Lake Big Band in 2003, Oliver Lake Quartet Live (featuring Dine' [Navaho tribe] vocalist and flutist Mary Redhouse) in 2006, and Makin' It by the Oliver Lake Organ Trio in 2008 (the latter three Lake-led sessions released by the Passin' Thru label).
https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/oliverlake
Oliver Lake
Born in Marianna, Arkansas in 1942, Oliver moved to St. Louis at the age of two. He began drawing at the age of thirteen (and paints daily, using oil, acrylics, wood, canvas, and mixed media), and soon after began playing cymbals and bass drum in various drum and bugle corps. At 17, he began to take a serious interest in jazz. Like many other members of BAG and its Chicago-based sister organization, the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), Lake moved to New York in the mid-'70s, working the fertile ground of the downtown loft scene and quickly establishing himself as one of its most adventurous and multi-faceted artists. A co-founder of the internationally acclaimed World Saxophone Quartet with Hemphill, Hamiet Bluiett and David Murray in 1977 (and recently celebrating its 26th anniversary with an album of Jimi Hendrix pieces for Justin Time Records), Oliver continued to work with the WSQ and his own various groups - including the groundbreaking roots/reggae ensemble Jump Up - and collaborating with many notable choreographers, poets and a veritable Who's Who of the progressive jazz scene of the late 20th century, performing all over the U.S. as well as in Europe, Japan, the Middle East, Africa and Australia.
While he has continued to tour regularly with his own groups, collaborations and guest appearances - in the last three months of 2003, he performed in Europe, Japan and various U.S. cities - Oliver recognized the changing trends and new challenges facing creative artists, especially those working in the jazz tradition. Always a strong proponent of artist self-empowerment and independence, in 1988 Lake founded Passin' Thru, Inc., a 501(c)(3) non-profit, dedicated to fostering, promoting and advancing the knowledge, understanding and appreciation of jazz, new music and other disciplines in relation to music.
http://panopticonreview.blogspot.com/2013/09/oliver-lake-b-september-14-1942.html
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Oliver Lake (b. September 14, 1942):
Innovative Alto Saxophonist, Flautist, Composer, and Poet
HAPPY BIRTHDAY OLIVER LAKE!
All,
OLIVER LAKE (b. September 14, 1942) is an outstanding alto saxophonist, flautist, arranger and composer who began his professional career in the early 1960s in St. Louis, Missouri and has gone on to become one of the seminal and most creatively versatile musicians and composers of the last 40 years. An original co-founder of the critically acclaimed and now legendary World Saxophone Quartet (along with his longtime cohorts and colleagues David Murray, Hamiett Bluiett, and the late, great Julius Hemphill) Lake has also led many ensembles of his own in duo, trio, quartet, quintet, septet, octet and large orchestral formats, as well as playing a pioneer role and excelling in solo improvisational settings. As a longtime devoted fan and supporter of Oliver's highly eclectic and always dynamic music(s) in both avant-garde and more traditional context, I have been fortunate to witness how Lake has played a pivotal role in the creative development and global expansion of contemporary black creative music in many different genres and styles that is always solidly rooted in Oliver's fierce and joyous commitment to the very highest standards of the music.
Lake's music was also integral to a twice weekly radio program that I founded, hosted and worked a number of years for as a DJ which featured contemporary black creative music on Detroit's public radio outlet WDET-FM called SOUND PROJECTIONS. My theme song for the program was none other than the title track's extraordinary composition "Heavy Spirits" by Lake that he played with his amazing ensemble of the mid and late '70s period. Produced on the Arista label this 1975 recording was played on every single program for the entire five year period of the show and never failed to elicit a wide range of deeply appreciative reactions and responses from listeners (especially painters, poets, other musicians, and dancers). Thus in the spirit of SOUND PROJECTIONS and all that it stood for (and tried to stand for) I share with you the following link to "Heavy Spirits" the main title track of the recording entitled as well as an image of the beautifully designed original artwork that adorned the cover of the Arista LP. ENJOY...
Kofi
Reggie Workman-bass
Andrew Cyrille-Drums
Oliver Lake--Alto saxophone
https://roulette.org/event/oliver-lake-2/
The Oliver Lake Reunion Trio
The Oliver Lake Reunion Trio featuring Pheeroan akLaff and Michael Gregory.
Oliver Lake: reeds, Pheeroan akLaff: drums, Michael Gregory: guitar
Live taping for Roulette TV.
Oliver Lake:”It’s all about choices,” states modern Renaissance Man Oliver Lake to explain his expansive artistic vision. An accomplished poet, painter and performance artist, Lake has published a book of poetry entitled Life Dance, has exhibited and sold a number of his unique painted-sticks at the Montclair Art Museum, and has toured the country with his one-man performance piece, Matador of 1st and 1st. But it’s his extraordinary talents as composer, saxophonist, flautist and bandleader that have brought him world-renown. Although his greatest reputation exists in the world of jazz, Lake’s amazingly eclectic musical approach is best expressed by his popular poem SEPARATION: put all my food on the same plate!
Whether composing major commissioned works for the Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra and the Brooklyn Philharmonic; creating chamber pieces for the Arditti and Flux String Quartets, the Amherst Sax Quartet and the San Francisco Contemporary Players; arranging for pop diva Bjork, rocker Lou Reed and rap group A Tribe Called Quest; collaborating with poets Amiri Baraka and Ntozake Shange, choreographers Ron Brown and Marlies Yearby, Native American vocalist Mary Redhouse, Korean kumongo player Jin Hi Kim, and Chinese bamboo flute player Shuni Tsou; doing unique performances with MacArthur Award recipients, actress/author Anna Devere Smith and writer/law professor/political commentator Patricia Williams; sharing the stage with hip-hop artist Mos Def and pop star Me’shell Ndegeocello; or leading his own Steel Quartet, Big Band and cooperative ensembles the World Saxophone Quartet and Trio 3; Oliver views it all as parts of the same whole: dixieland, be-bop, soul, rhythm & blues, cool school, swing, avant-garde jazz, free jazz, rock, jazz rock…
Pheeroan akLaff has performed internationally since 1975. He is known for his ability to transform the drumset into an orchestral force supporting the many ensembles he has led or accompanied. (Including a stint with New York City Opera in the premier of “X” by Anthony Davis.) He has conducted educational workshops in several countries of Africa and Asia. His latest CD as a leader/composer is entitled Global Mantras (Modern Masters 1998), a World Beat Jazz extravaganza with Asian and African American themes. It features Oliver Lake, Michael Cain, Scott Robinson, Josh Roseman and a cast of celebrated virtuosos.
Born Michael Gregory Jackson in New Haven, Connecticut, Michael began to play guitar at the age of seven. In his teens he often performed his own material during solo gigs and band appearances. Among Michaels early influences were Jimi Hendrix, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Son House, Led Zeppelin, Joni Mitchell and Igor Stravinsky. His father exposed him to Wes Montgomery, Mahalia Jackson, Les Paul, Mary Ford, and early George Benson, and Michael’s musical destiny began to take shape.
Progressive improvised music composer and trumpeter, Wadada Leo Smith, influenced Gregory to look beyond the boundaries of rock, folk and mainstream jazz, and soon Michael was playing avant-garde music with Smith and such other notables as pianist Anthony Davis, saxophonists Julius Hemphill, David Murray and Oliver Lake. During this period, Gregory notes, “I learned that it was ok to try different things, to experiment. If I had a song that was going one way, it was all right to make it go in another direction or to add diverse elements. I’ve allowed myself to be creatively and stylistically liberated.”
VIDEO: https://vimeo.com/11144849
Oliver Lake pt. 1
The Oliver Lake Reunion Trio featuring Pheeroan akLaff (drums) and Michael Gregory (guitar).
The artistic scope of the renowned saxophonist, composer, painter, and poet, Oliver Lake, is unparalleled. An extensive resume of his collaborations includes work with the Brooklyn Philharmonic, Flux String Quartet, Bjork, Lou Reed, A Tribe Called Quest, Mos Def, Me’shell Ndegeocello, Anthony Braxton, James Blood Ulmer, William Parker, Vijay Iyer, Reggie Workman, Andrew Cyrille, and a veritable who’s who of the jazz vanguard. Oliver’s efforts extend far beyond the music, which include creating the non-profit Passin’ Thru organization, becoming a mainstay at Pittsburgh’s City of Asylum, publishing two books of poetry, and frequently producing visual artwork for exhibitions across the country.
Pheeroan akLaff has performed internationally since 1975. He is known for his ability to transform the drum set into an orchestral force supporting the many ensembles he has led or accompanied. (Including a stint with New York City Opera in the premier of "X" by Anthony Davis.) He has conducted educational workshops in several countries of Africa and Asia. His latest CD as a leader/composer is titled Global Mantras (Modern Masters 1998), a World Beat Jazz extravaganza with Asian and African American themes. It features Oliver Lake, Michael Cain, Scott Robinson, Josh Roseman, and a cast of celebrated virtuosos.
Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Michael Gregory Jackson began to play the guitar at the age of seven. In his teens, he often performed his own material during solo gigs and band appearances. Among Michael’s early influences were Jimi Hendrix, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Son House, Led Zeppelin, Joni Mitchell, and Igor Stravinsky. His father exposed him to Wes Montgomery, Mahalia Jackson, Les Paul, Mary Ford, and early George Benson, and Michael's musical destiny began to take shape. Progressive improvised music composer and trumpeter, Wadada Leo Smith, influenced Gregory to look beyond the boundaries of rock, folk, and mainstream jazz, and soon Michael was playing avant-garde music with Smith and such other notables as a pianist, Anthony Davis, and saxophonists, Julius Hemphill, David Murray, and Oliver Lake. During this period, Gregory notes, "I learned that it was ok to try different things, to experiment. If I had a song that was going one way, it was all right to make it go in another direction or to add diverse elements. I've allowed myself to be creatively and stylistically liberated."
Aired on rTV: 2007
Performance: April 22, 2007
Produced by Jim Staley
Directed by Matt Mehlan
VIDEO: https://vimeo.com/11147702
Oliver Lake pt. 2
https://www.facebook.com/oliverlakejazz
Oliver Lake - Life Dance Of Is
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Lake
Oliver Lake
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lake taking a bow at Other Minds in San Francisco, 2016
Oliver Lake (born September 14, 1942)[1] is an American jazz saxophonist, flutist, composer, poet, and visual artist. He is known mainly for alto saxophone, but he also performs on soprano and flute.[2] During the 1960s, Lake worked with the Black Artists Group in St. Louis.[1] In 1977, he founded the World Saxophone Quartet with David Murray, Julius Hemphill, and Hamiet Bluiett.[2] Lake worked in the group Trio 3 with Reggie Workman and Andrew Cyrille.[2] Lake has appeared on more than 80 albums as a bandleader, co-leader, and side musician. He is the father of drummer Gene Lake. Lake has been a resident of Montclair, New Jersey.[3]
Awards and honors
- Guggenheim Fellowship (1993)
- Mellon Jazz Living Legacy Award (2006)
- Doris Duke Performing Artist Award (2014)
Discography
As leader
- Heavy Spirits (Arista/Freedom, 1975)
- Passing Thru (Passin' Thru, 1974)
- Holding Together (Black Saint, 1976)
- Ntu: Point from Which Creation Begins (Arista/Freedom, 1976)
- Buster Bee (Sackville, 1978)
- Life Dance of Is (Arista Novus, 1978)
- Shine! (Arista Novus, 1979)
- Clevont Fitzhubert (Black Saint, 1981)
- Prophet (Black Saint, 1981)
- Jump Up (Gramavision, 1982)
- Plug It (Gramavision, 1983)
- Expandable Language (Black Saint, 1985)
- Gallery (Gramavision, 1986)
- Dancevision (Blue Heron, 1986)
- Impala (Gramavision, 1987)
- Otherside (Gramavision, 1988)
- Again and Again (Gramavision, 1991)
- Boston Duets (Music & Arts, 1992)
- Virtual Reality (Total Escapism) (Gazell, 1992)
- Zaki (hat ART, 1992)
- Edge-ing (Black Saint, 1994)
- Dedicated to Dolphy (Black Saint, 1996)
- Matador of 1st & 1st (Passin' Thru, 1996)
- Movement, Turns & Switches (Passin' Thru, 1997)
- Kinda' Up (Justin Time, 2000)
- Talkin' Stick (Passin' Thru, 2000)
- Have Yourself a Merry... (Passin' Thru, 2001)
- Cloth (Passin' Thru, 2003)
- Dat Love (Passin' Thru, 2004)
- Live (Passin' Thru, 2005)
- Urban Rumination (Metaphysical, 2005)
- Lake/Tchicai/Osgood/Westergaard (Passin' Thru, 2006)
- Makin' It (Passin' Thru, 2008)
- For a Little Dancin (Intakt, 2010)
- Plan (Passin' Thru, 2010)
- Lakes at the Stone (Passin' Thru, 2011)
- Wheels (Passin' Thru, 2013)
- All Decks (Intakt, 2013)
- What I Heard (Passin' Thru, 2014)
- To Roy (Intakt, 2015)
- Live at the Downtown Music Gallery NYC (2016)
- Right Up On (Passin' Thru, 2017)
With Trio 3
- Live in Willisau (Dizim, 1997)
- Encounter (Passin' Thru, 2000)
- Open Ideas (Palmetto, 2002)
- Time Being (Intakt, 2006)
- Wha's Nine: Live at the Sunset (Marge, 2008)
- Berne Concert (Intakt, 2009)
- At This Time (Intakt, 2009)
- Celebrating Mary Lou Williams–Live at Birdland New York (Intakt, 2011)
- Refraction – Breakin' Glass (Intakt, 2013)
- Wiring (Intakt, 2014)
- Visiting Texture (Intakt, 2017)
As sideman
With Björk
- Debut (One Little Indian, 1993)
- Celebrating Wood and Metal (MTV, 1997)
- Surrounded (One Little Indian, 2006)
- Point of No Return (Moers Music, 1977)
- Steppin' with the World Saxophone Quartet (Black Saint, 1979)
- W.S.Q. (Black Saint, 1981)
- Revue (Black Saint, 1982)
- Live in Zurich (Black Saint, 1984)
- Live at Brooklyn Academy of Music (Black Saint, 1986)
- Plays Duke Ellington (Elektra Nonesuch, 1986)
- Dances and Ballads (Elektra Nonesuch, 1987)
- Rhythm and Blues (Elektra Musician, 1989)
- Metamorphosis (Elektra Nonesuch, 1991)
- Moving Right Along (Black Saint, 1994)
- Breath of Life (Elektra Nonesuch, 1994)
- Takin' It 2 the Next Level (Justin Time, 1996)
- Four Now (Justin Time, 1996)
- Selim Sivad: a Tribute to Miles Davis (Justin Time, 1998)
- M'Bizo (Justin Time, 1999)
- Requiem for Julius (Justin Time, 2000)
- 25th Anniversary: The New Chapter (Justin Time, 2001)
- Steppenwolf (Justin Time, 2002)
- Experience (Justin Time, 2004)
- Political Blues (Justin Time, 2006)
With others
- Pheeroan Aklaff, Global Mantras (ModernMasters, 1998)
- Dee Alexander, Songs My Mother Loves (Blujazz, 2014)
- Karl Berger, Live at the Donaueschingen Music Festival (MPS, 1980)
- Karl Berger, New Moon (Palcoscenico, 1980)
- Borah Bergman, A New Organization (Soul Note, 1999)
- Black Artists Group, In Paris, Aries 1973 (self-issued in 1973; reissued by Aguirre in 2018)
- Samuel Blaser, Early in the Morning (Outnote, 2018)
- Joseph Bowie, Joseph Bowie & Oliver Lake (Sackville, 1976)
- Anthony Braxton, New York, Fall 1974 (Arista, 1975)
- Alex Cline, For People in Sorrow (Cryptogramophone, 2013)
- Jerome Cooper, For the People (hat Hut, 1980)
- Marilyn Crispell, Circles (Victo, 1991)
- Andrew Cyrille, My Friend Louis (DIW, 1992)
- Andrew Cyrille, Ode to the Living Tree (Venus, 1995)
- Ted Daniel, In the Beginning (Altura Music, 1997)
- Ted Daniel, Innerconnection (NoBusiness, 2014)
- Defunkt, Live in Europe (Music Avenue, 2002)
- Dave Douglas, Metamorphosis (Greenleaf Music, 2017)
- Lisle Ellis, Sucker Punch Requiem: Henceforth (2008)
- Laika Fatien, Nebula (Verve, 2011)
- Donal Fox, Gone City (New World, 1997)
- Dennis Gonzalez, Idle Wild (Clean Feed, 2005)
- Ross Hammond, Our Place On the Wheel (Prescott, 2020)
- Craig Harris, Souls Within the Veil (Aquastra Music, 2005)
- Billy Hart, Enchance (Horizon, 1977)
- Julius Hemphill, One Atmosphere (Tzadik, 2003)
- Human Arts Ensemble, Whisper of Dharma (Universal Justice, 1972)
- Michael Gregory Jackson, Clarity (Bija, 1977)
- Michael Gregory Jackson, Karmonic Suite (Improvising Artists 1978)
- Bill Laswell, Bill Laswell & Material (Golden Stars, 2005)
- Abbey Lincoln, Who Used to Dance (Verve/Gitanes, 1997)
- Mark Masters, Farewell Walter Dewey Redman (Capri, 2008)
- Material, One Down (Elektra/Celluloid, 1982)
- Mediaeval Baebes, Undrentide (BMG, 2000)
- Meshell Ndegeocello, The World Has Made Me the Man of My Dreams (Bismillah, 2007)
- Meshell Ndegeocello, The Spirit Music Jamia: Dance of the Infidel (Universal/EmArcy, 2005)
- Tatsuya Nakamura, Song of Pat (Nadja, 1976)
- Lou Reed, Set the Twilight Reeling (Warner Bros., 1995)
- Archie Shepp, Phat Jam in Milano (Dawn of Freedom 2009)
- Solidarity Unit, Inc., Red, Black & Green (Universal Justice Records, 1972; Eremite, 2008)
- Bernadette Speach, Without Borders (Mode, 1988)
- String Trio of New York, Frozen Ropes (Barking Hoop, 2005)
- Sunny Murray, Apple Cores (Philly Jazz, 1978)
- Malachi Thompson, Freebop Now! (Delmark, 1998)
- Malachi Thompson, Talking Horns (Delmark, 2001)
- Trio Transition, Trio Transition with Special Guest Oliver Lake (DIW, 1988)
- James Blood Ulmer, Are You Glad to Be in America? (Rough Trade, 1980)
- James Blood Ulmer, Free Lancing (Columbia, 1981)
- Bennie Wallace, The Art of the Saxophone (Denon, 1987)
- Reggie Workman, Synthesis (Leo, 1986)
External links
- Official website
- Oliver Lake collection, 1974-2009 at the Library of Congress
- Portraits of Oliver Lake by Dominik Huber / dominikphoto.com
https://www.oliverlake.net/
https://www.oliverlake.net/bio/
Bio
The artistic scope of renowned saxophonist, composer, painter, and poet Oliver Lake’s half-century-long career is unparalleled. An extensive resume of his collaborations includes work with the Brooklyn Philharmonic, Flux String Quartet, Bjork, Lou Reed, A Tribe Called Quest, Mos Def, Me’shell Ndegeocello, Anthony Braxton, James Blood Ulmer, William Parker, Vijay Iyer, Reggie Workman, Andrew Cyrille and a veritable who’s who of the jazz vanguard. Oliver’s efforts extend far beyond the music, with his creation of the non-profit Passin’ Thru organization, becoming a mainstay at Pittsburgh’s City of Asylum, publishing two books of poetry and frequently producing visual artwork for exhibitions across the country.
Lake’s breadth of disciplines can be traced back to his formative years with the Black Artists Group, the innovative St. Louis collective of musicians, poets, dancers and painters he helped architect over 35 years ago. As a co-founder of the internationally acclaimed World Saxophone Quartet (with fellow luminaries David Murray, Julius Hemphill and Hamiet Bluiett), Oliver firmly established himself in the “Loft” jazz scene of the 1970’s in New York City, and has since produced a body of work that is both expansive and versatile enough to avoid falling solely into the trappings of the “avant-garde” and “free” labels. The fact that his work can stand on compositional merit alone, all while he has etched a place for himself as one of the elite saxophone players and improvisers of recent times, is a testament to Oliver Lake’s stature as an artist.
Lake’s output as an exacting and unequivocally original composer has long been celebrated, highlighted by commissions awarded from the Library of Congress, the Rockefeller Foundation ASCAP, the International Association for Jazz Education, Composers Forum and the McKim Foundation. He has been the recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship and was also presented with the Mellon Jazz Living Legacy Award at the Kennedy Center in 2006.
In 2014, Oliver was honored with what is arguably the greatest recognition of his artistry and vision to date, becoming one of only nineteen grantees appointed for the prestigious Doris Duke Artist Award, a multi-year grant awarded to American artists in the fields of jazz, theater and dance.
A trailblazer through and through, Oliver Lake continues to produce in the vociferous, uncompromising way he only knows how to, currently immersed in the work of such adventurous ensembles as the Oliver Lake Organ Quartet, Oliver Lake Big Band and Trio 3.
http://soundprojections.blogspot.com/…/geri-allen-b-june-12…
Saturday, November 29, 2014
Geri Allen (b. June 12, 1957): Outstanding pianist, composer, arranger, teacher, and ensemble leader
Geri Allen and the Celebration Ensemble Suite For Eric Dolphy 1989--Featuring Oliver Lake and Pheeroan Ak Laff:
VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8OBC44YTBPQ
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Oliver Lake takes over Oakland’s Duende
Oliver Lake is the kind of musician you can build an entire festival around. Though best known as a scorching alto saxophonist, he’s a prolific creative force who is also a widely published poet, painter and performance artist who toured nationally with his one-man show “Matador of 1st and 1st.”
His musical output is similarly expansive. Since releasing his first album in 1971, “NTU: Point from Which Creation Begins” (Soul Jazz), the St. Louis-raised saxophonist has created music for an encyclopedic array of settings inside and outside jazz, from organ trios and string quartets to big bands and symphony orchestras. He’s toured with Meshell Ndegeocello, written arrangements for Björk, and composed scores for choreographers Ronald K. Brown and Marlies Yearby.
In a major booking coup for the new restaurant and jazz club Duende in Oakland’s burgeoning Uptown district, Lake settles into the space for an unprecedented four-night residency that pairs him with some of the Bay Area’s most prodigious improvisers. He opens Friday with pianist Myra Melford, performs Saturday with reed expert Phillip Greenlief and guitarist Ross Hammond, and joins forces with Art Ensemble of Chicago wind master Roscoe Mitchell on Sunday. He closes the residency Monday with a trio set featuring drummer Scott Amendola and bassist Todd Sickafoose.
“I’m quite excited about playing every night with different great musicians,” says Lake, 70, from his home in Montclair, N.J. “I haven’t played with Roscoe for such a long time. Even with Myra it was years and years ago, when I was living in Brooklyn. And I love connecting with younger players, like the new collaboration with Scott and Todd.”
Since opening in January, Duende has rapidly filled a gaping hole in the Bay Area’s jazz scene by welcoming leading left-of-center artists from the Bay Area and points east. The club is a joint undertaking between Paul Canales, the music-loving former head chef at Oakland’s celebrated eatery Oliveto, and Rocco Somazzi, the most significant jazz presenter in Southern California over the past 15 years.
Before moving to Oakland last year to launch Duende, Somazzi had opened a series of essential L.A. jazz venues and launched the acclaimed Angel City Jazz Festival, which is where he first heard Lake as part of a 2011 concert organized by percussionist Alex Cline exploring music by Roscoe Mitchell (an event documented on a Cryptogramophone CD/DVD “For People in Sorrow”).
“I knew of Oliver, but he doesn’t make it out to the West Coast that often, and that was the first time I saw him play,” says Somazzi, 41, who grew up in Lugano, Switzerland. “He has a very strong presence, very charismatic. I knew we wanted to do something with him in the future.”
While Somazzi booked Nels Cline for a four-night run in the club’s first weeks, the guitarist’s reign as L.A.’s favorite cult guitarist ended years ago when he joined Wilco, and his rock star status practically guaranteed standing room only crowds. Lake is a jazz giant with an international following, both as a solo artist and with the pioneering World Saxophone Quartet, but his low profile on the West Coast means that Duende is taking a risk with the unorthodox programming.
“There aren’t too many artists who can sustain a residency with four or five nights in a row like this,” Somazzi says. “But Duende is not that big, and Lake is such a creative force he can work with different musicians every day. We decided to keep things simple, a series of duets, and I suggested a trio for the last show. It can be a great format. I hope it’s a sustainable idea.”
Sunday’s encounter between Lake and Mitchell is particularly freighted with history. They first met around 1967, when Lake was a questing young player looking for a scene. Mitchell was already a member of the avant-garde Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, or AACM, and the pioneering Art Ensemble of Chicago.
Lake returned to St. Louis thinking he would open a branch of the AACM there, but ended up helping launch a new organization, the Black Artists Group, or BAG, that brought together dancers, musicians, poets and other artists with a similarly self-reliant ethos.
“There was such an emphasis on creating original music, creating your own sound,” Lake says. “I felt like bebop had been played so greatly by other musicians before me, and I wasn’t so talented in reinterpreting it. I had the most potential in trying to explore my sound and original compositions. That’s what the AACM was doing, and after I saw it in practice, that’s what we did.”
OLIVER LAKE RESIDENCY
Music
View complete discography at AllMusic, Discogs, and Wikipedia. For mail order purchases write to Passin' Thru Records, 209 Orange Rd., Montclair, NJ 07042.
Releases:
https://soundcloud.com/oliver-lake/to-roy
Oliver Lake: "All About Choices"
For the reedist, composer, poet, performance artist, and entrepreneur Oliver Lake, "it's all about choices." The New York Times praises both his "robust and piercing sound" and his "acres of experience in the self-sustaining avant-garde," as a co-founder of both the revolutionary Black Artists Guild, a cross-disciplinary African-American alliance, and the World Saxophone Quartet, a pioneering co-led experimental ensemble. Oliver has also founded his own record label and non-profit arts organization, Passin' Thru.Oliver grew up in St. Louis, and began his involvement in the arts in his early teens - both as a visual artist and a musician. After developing a serious interest in jazz and receiving early encouragement at the hands of the singular trumpeter and AACM member Lester Bowie, Oliver moved to New York in the mid 1970s. In addition to his work with the World Saxophone Quartet and Trio 3 (an ensemble which he co-leads with the bassist Reggie Workman and the drummer Andrew Cyrille), the renaissance man has been commissioned by everyone from the Brooklyn Philharmonic to Björk, from the Arditti String Quartet to A Tribe Called Quest. He's collaborated with poets (Amiri Baraka, Ntozake Shange), choreographers (Ron Brown, Marlies Yearby), actors and authors (Anna Deavere Smith, Patricia J. Williams), and pop stars (Mos Def, Me'shell Ndegeocello). Oliver has recorded over thirty albums as a leader and countless others as a co-leader or sideperson.Oliver has been involved at The Jazz Gallery for years, and served for a time as a mentor to the young composers in our commissioning program. We really look forward to welcoming him back with two separate trios this Friday, October 26th and Saturday, October 27th. Friday's performance will feature the dual drummer configuration of Reggie Nicholson and Bill McCleland, while you can expect to hear his organ trio with Jared Gold and the drummer Chris Beck on Saturday. You don't have to take our word for it - both events have been selected as Critics' Picks by The New York Times and Time Out New York.Watch a video of the Oliver Lake Big Band performing at The Jazz Gallery in 2007.
Life Dance Of Is (1979)
This is an excerpt from "Life Dance Of Is" performed in 1979. Featuring Oliver Lake, Laurie Carlos and Johnette O'Kelley. Extremely rare live performance footage of this unique theatre piece. enjoy!
No Tears Project - Oxford Project by Oliver Lake (Live at Jazz St. Louis):
No Tears Project - Oxford Project by Oliver Lake
(Live at Jazz St. Louis)
The No Tears Project ensemble premiered this new set of music and poetry written by Oliver Lake at Jazz St. Louis on April 28 & 29, 2023 during the four-day No Tears Project St. Louis residency presented in partnership with Oxford American, National Park Service, and Jazz St. Louis. Follow No Tears Project at:
Website: oxfordamerican.org/no-tears-project Instagram: @oxfordamerican
All Music and poems written by Oliver Lake include:
"Oxford Project" Standing Your Ground
Alleged Choke Hold (I Can't Breathe)
LDT - Long Dirty Toenails
Pre-Existing Conditions
We're Too Tall
NO TEARS PROJECT ENSEMBLE:
Christopher Parker - piano
Kelley Hurt - voice
Treasure Shields Redmond - voice
Darrian Douglas - drums
Rodney Jordan - bass
Bobby LaVell - tenor saxophone
Marc Franklin - trumpet and flugelhorn
Chad Fowler - alto saxophone
Oliver Lake - Shine
Arista/Novus 1979
(All compositions by Oliver Lake)
OLIVER LAKE ENSEMBLE:
Michael Gregory Jackson: Electric Guitar
Pheeroan Ak Laff: Drums
Oliver Lake: Alto saxophone, Flute
Abdul Wadud: Cello (tracks: A1, A2)
Anthony Davis: Piano (tracks: A1, A2)
Carl Ector: Violin (tracks: A1, A2)
George Taylor: Violin (tracks: A1, A2)
Michael Gregory Jackson: Vocals (tracks: B1, B2)
Tracklist:
A1 Kuon Ganjo (Infinity, Really This Moment)
A2 Reference
B1 Lodius
B2 Shine!
Dancevision (full album)
Oliver Lake And Jump Up [1986]:
Oliver Lake - music & talk (with Hamiet Bluiett) - Arts For Art - 3/7/14
June 16, 2014
Oliver Lake & Hamiet Bluiett interviewed by James Brandon Lewis Under_line Salon - March 7 2014 http://www.artsforart.org/support.html
Oliver Lake: Breaking the Rules in Composition
March 28, 2018
Oliver Lake, Andrew Cyrille, Santi Debriano - at The Stone, NYC - October 22, 2014:
Otherside (August 1988):
All compositions by Oliver Lake
OLIVER LAKE QUINTET:
Oliver Lake: alto saxophone
Geri Allen: piano
Anthony Peterson: guitar
Fred Hopkins: bass and
Andrew Cyrille: drums
Meet Oliver Lake:
June 15, 2015
The artistic scope of renowned saxophonist, composer, painter and poet Oliver Lake's half decade-long career is unparalleled. From collaborations with the Brooklyn Philharmonic, Flux String Quartet, Bjork, Lou Reed, A Tribe Called Quest, Mos Def and Me'shell Ndegeocello, to his co-founding of the Black Artist Group (BAG) and the highly acclaimed World Saxophone Quartet, creation of his non-profit Passin' Thru organization, becoming a mainstay with Pittsburgh's City of Asylum, publishing two books of poetry and frequently having original artwork displayed in exhibitions across the country, Oliver Lake views it all as part of the same whole. Lake has been a recipient of the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship and has received commissions from the Library of Congress, the Rockefeller Foundation ASCAP, the International Association for Jazz Education, Composers Forum, the McKim Foundation, the Mary Flagler Cary Trust, the Lila Wallace Arts Partners Program, and in 2006, was honored to receive the Mellon Jazz Living Legacy Award at the Kennedy Center. Most notably, Oliver was recently selected to receive the prestigious 2014 Doris Duke Artist Award, a multi-year grant awarded to only 19 American artists in the fields of jazz, theater and dance. As such, the coming years promise to be exciting and filled with bold new artistic endeavors. Oliver continues to remain focused and immersed in his work with his Organ Quartet, Big Band, Trio 3 and a multitude of other performers and ensembles. For more informations, visit oliverlake.net & facebook.com/oliverlakejazz **Shot and edited by Kanata Ide