© -Steven
Cerra , copyright protected; all rights reserved.
“Kuroda's aim is to express
the concept of motion. Using the bicycle as the primary object, he soon added
umbrellas. The idea came from a scene in a Hitchcock film.
Maybe it was the sense of
mystery created by the visual absence of people, or maybe he simply felt that
umbrellas would add mass to his compositions. Other changes in composition have
developed over the years: in his early works, the bicycles and umbrellas were
floating in vacant space. He then added trees, walls, fences, walkways, with
the static structures emphasizing the rushing movement.
He uses a variety of
different intaglio printing processes to achieve contrast in his lines some sharp
and thin, others thick and blurred" and in his background or colour
areas" some smooth and uniform, others dappled or textured.”
- Hanga Ten, Contemporary Japanese Print
Website
Kuroda is one of the most
important Japanese printmakers living today. He became famous in 1979 when the Cleveland Museum
of Art organized the exhibition: 21 Young Contemporary Japanese Printmakers.
Kuroda suggests that things
move so quickly in Tokyo
that he wants to reflect the speed and movement in his bicycles. The umbrella
is a very traditional symbol of Japan .
- The Verne Collection Website
Shigeki Kuroda, a long
favorite at Luber Gallery, with his whizzing bicycles. He uses the bike image
in the foreground, and is forever designing new environments for them to drive
through.
- The Gilbert Luber Gallery Website
“If I were given Lee Konitz's
name in a word association test, my automatic corollary term would be
‘integrity.’ At thirty-four, Lee is still firmly self-contained, direct and
laconic in speech, and impregnably committed to his own way of personalizing
the jazz language. The winds of change that keep most of the jazz world in a
perpetual state of hurricane alert (as poll winners are toppled and ‘hippies’
change their definitions of what's ‘in’) have left Konitz unruffled. He keeps
deepening the direction he has chosen, works where he can providing he has
complete musical freedom, and teaches one day a week. In the past few years, as
‘funky,’ ‘soulful,’ hard,’ and various forms of experimental jazz have nearly
monopolized the foreground of jazz publicity, Konitz has become part of what
Paul Desmond calls ‘the jazz underground.’
Yet Konitz's jazz conception
is so singular and provocative that his influence is still felt, especially in Europe .
Nor certainly has that influence disappeared in America .
Konitz has set standards of melodic continuity and freshness of line that are
respected by musicians who are otherwise widely dissimilar to him in approach;
and I'm sure that as the scope of jazz improvisation continues to expand, the
worth of
in retrospect and he himself
will again be considered an important part of the foreground of jazz exploration.
In this set of performances,
which are among the most consistently resourceful Konitz has ever recorded,
his distinctive qualities are brought into especially clear focus. If, for one
thing, jazz at its most stimulating is indeed ‘the sound of surprise,’ Lee's
playing here is constantly fresh and unpredictable.
He avoids standardized
‘licks’ and limp cliché with persistent determination and instead constructs so
personal and imaginatively flowing a series of thematic variations that the
five standards he has chosen become organically revivified. Konitz goes far
inside a tune, and unlike many jazzmen who skate on the chord changes or ‘wail’
on the melodic surface of a song, Konitz reshapes each piece entirely so that
it emerges as a newly integrated work with permutations of form and expanded
emotional connotations that are uniquely different from the results obtained by
any previous jazz treatment of the piece. …
Consider the command of his
instrument that Konitz must have to execute the swiftly moving and subtly
interrelated ideas that make each of his performances in this album so
pregnant with invention. In addition to the remarkable clarity of Konitz's
supple and ingenious lines, he also is intriguingly skillful in the molding of
series of climaxes of varying intensities so that a topographical musical map
of each performance would show considerably more complexity and variety than is
true of the majority of jazz improvisations. Underneath this multi-layered
logic of ideas is a firm, complementary resilient rhythmic line that is an
integral part of the total design of Konitz's structure. He does not, in short,
depend on the rhythm section to swing him but instead fuses with drums and bass
so that a rare feeling of tripartite unity of execution emerges from these
tracks.”
Nat Hentoff, original liner notes to Motion:
Lee Konitz
One of my first
impressions of Jazz was the sense of motion I felt while listening to the
music.
This feeling of
movement was enhanced when I began playing Jazz because I played it on the
drums with all four limbs going at the same time, just about all the time.
No other musician experiences
Jazz in quite the same way as the drummer.
I’ve been on bikes,
in cars, small and large planes and helicopters, and on amusement park thrill
rides – none of them compares to the feeling of motion generated by a Jazz
group “in full flight” [sorry for the mixed metaphor].
One of the most
jarring experiences I’ve ever had with motion in Jazz was my first listening to
a Verve LP featuring alto saxophonist Lee Konitz with Sonny Dallas on bass and
Elvin Jones on drums that was recorded during the late summer, 1961.
The name of the
recording was – you guessed it – Motion: Lee Konitz [released on CD
as Verve 314 557 107-2].
The original LP
was comprised of the five [5] tunes that Lee, Sonny and Elvin recorded on August
21, 1961 . The CD
set is on three discs that contains this music plus a number of other tracks
made around the same time with Dallas on bass and Nick Stabulas on drums that
Konitz labels as “equally compelling.”
Prior to Motion:
Lee Konitz, I had been accustomed to hearing Lee on recordings that
featured a straight-ahead “Cool” style of Jazz. His improvisation on these
recordings from the 1950s was very linear, fluid and heavily influenced by
pianist Lennie Tristano’s harmonic conception of the music.
That all changed
on Motion:
Lee Konitz.
Here, Lee’s solos
were very intense and jagged. They were made to sound even more so by his
choppy phrasing which stopped and started so often that they forced he
listeners’ ears to constantly move in new and different directions.
The rhythmic pulse
that drummer Elvin Jones lays down behind Lee on Motion: Lee Konitz was
also relatively new to me, sometimes, startlingly so.
With its many
accented triplets and other syncopations, Elvin’s drumming interrupted the even
flow of time then characteristic of most modern Jazz.
Elvin along with
Tony Williams revolutionized modern Jazz drumming by altering its motion away
from a linear, metronomic time. Instead of pulling the listener forward, Elvin’s
drumming pushed, shoved and bounced the listener in all directions.
Elvin and Tony
gave the rhythmic prism of Jazz different angles of acceptance and, as such,
changed the manner in which the listener perceived it.
As trumpeter,
composer and bandleader Wynton Marsalis once remarked: “Change the rhythm and
you change the music.”
Lee, Sonny and
Dallas are constantly changing the rhythm on Motion: the motion is
still there, but it is unsettled, jagged and implied. It seems to become
multi-dimensional, almost like the sense experienced when closing one’s eyes
while riding on a roller coaster.
Lee Konitz had
this to say about the music on Motion in the liner notes to the
original LP:
“When asked on a
radio show to comment on one of his records, Lester Young replied: ‘Sorry.
Pres, I never discuss my sex life in public.’ Bless his sweet soul!
After over twenty
years of playing, I find that music is like a great woman: the better you treat
her. the happier she is.
There's not much
for me to say about my music -I play because it's one of the few things that
make sense to me.
When I left
Chicago to come to New York in '48 I had been playing in my own way for a few
years, but for various reasons was unable to understand what it was I had hold
of. A woman can be very elusive! Then came the first recordings, the little
reputation and the working all over the place and practically losing contact
with my whole playing feeling.
Fortunately for
me, I never really made it professionally, so I've had the chance to relax and
get a little insight into my life. Freud said something like it all happens in
the first four years of our life and we spend the rest of the time trying to
figure out what happened. I guess I've always had some kind of feeling to
play; now I'm trying to eliminate as much as I can of what it is that prevents
it from happening
I've been
recording since 1949; I have always tried to improvise — lots of different
settings — some things made it for me, some didn't. This particular record
means something to me.
It was made one
afternoon the end of August with Elvin Jones and Sonny Dallas. This was the
first time the three of us had played together: in fact, I Remember
You was the first tune of the session. We just played what would be the
equivalent of a couple sets in a club and got these five tune* for the album. Elvin loves to play and gets lots of things going on and the time is always
strong; he really is something else. Sonny, to me, is one of the best bass
players around. So I was fortunate to have a good strong rhythm section.
Playing with bass and drums give* me the most room to go in whichever direction
I choose; a chordal instrument is restricting to me.
The thing that I like about this set is that everyone is trying to improvise. The music will speak for itself.”
I was reminded of
Lee Konitz’s Motion as a result of a recent viewing of the art of Shigeki
Kuroda and after reading this annotation about it on Hanga Ten, a contemporary
Japanese print website:
“Kuroda's aim is
to express the concept of motion. Using the bicycle as the primary object, he
soon added umbrellas. The idea came from a scene in a Hitchcock film.
Maybe it was the
sense of mystery created by the visual absence of people, or maybe he simply
felt that umbrellas would add mass to his compositions. Other changes in
composition have developed over the years: in his early works, the bicycles and
umbrellas were floating in vacant space. He then added trees, walls, fences,
walkways, with the static structures emphasizing the rushing movement.
He uses a variety
of different intaglio printing processes to achieve contrast in his lines some
sharp and thin, others thick and blurred" and in his background or color
areas" some smooth and uniform, others dappled or textured.”
Upon further
research, I located this information about Kuroda on the Ren Brown gallery website - www.renbrown.com
“Born in 1953 in
Yokohama, Japan, Shigeki Kuroda’s medium are etching, drypoint, mezzotint
& aquatint and mixed media, watercolor paintings
Kuroda is an exciting artist with a distinctive style and subject matter all his own. After graduating fromTama Art University , he began creating intaglio prints in
1976. He did further study in the United States in 1984, under the auspices of a Japanese
Government Fellowship.
The works are readily recognizable, usually depicting blurred riders on bicycles, carrying umbrellas. Kuroda has been exploring this theme in a variety of ways, combining the sharp lines of drypoint etching with the softer tones and textures of aquatint, to create vivid prints.
Kuroda is an exciting artist with a distinctive style and subject matter all his own. After graduating from
The works are readily recognizable, usually depicting blurred riders on bicycles, carrying umbrellas. Kuroda has been exploring this theme in a variety of ways, combining the sharp lines of drypoint etching with the softer tones and textures of aquatint, to create vivid prints.
Although the figures remain similar in each work, the mood is altered by the backgrounds. In each, the artist gives the viewer a sense of the hurried speed of the cyclists, while exploring variations in line, color, texture, composition, mood, and the use of secondary imagery. He says the theme began as an exploration of the circle—horizontal in the umbrella or vertical in the wheel.
Since 2003, Kuroda has done some small prints of flowers, birds and other animals, occasionally with mezzotint. By different techniques applied to a copper plate, Kuroda manages to combine effects in such a fashion as to enchant the viewer. His work has received critical acclaim wherever he has exhibited--both in
Given my perceived symbiotic relationship in the work of Konitz and Kuroda, I thought it might be fun to put them together in a Jazz/Art video montage.
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