
OTOROKU
Blue Notes - Blue Notes For Johnny
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-
OTOROKU
is
proud
to
present
the
first
vinyl
reissue
of
Blue
Notes
for
Johnny
-
a
defining
statement
by
one
of
the
greatest
ensembles
in
the
history
of
jazz.
Recorded
in
mid-1987
by
Blue
Notes
-
then
reduced
to
the
trio
of
Dudu
Pukwana
on
alto
sax,
Louis
Moholo-
Moholo
on
drums
and
Chris
McGregor
on
piano
-
it
encounters
the
band
25
years
after
their
founding
embarking
on
an
inward
meditation
through
collective
music
making
dedicated
to
Johnny
Dyani,
their
former
bandmate
and
friend.
Blue
Notes
were
founded
in
Cape
Town
in
1962,
and
stand
among
the
most
important
ensembles
in
the
history
of
jazz.
Artistically
brilliant
and
groundbreaking
-
gathering,
within
a
few
short
years,
a
devoted
following
that
included
Don
Cherry,
Steve
Lacy,
Abdullah
Ibrahim,
Dexter
Gordon,
Kenny
Drew,
Keith
Tippett,
Evan
Parker,
John
Stevens
and
numerous
others
-
they
were
also
the
first
widely
visible
multiracial
band
in
South
Africa.
As
a
mixed
race
band
under
apartheid,
this
group
of
friends
and
like-minded
artists
-
Chris
McGregor,
Mongezi
Feza,
Dudu
Pukwana,
Nikele
Moyake,
Johnny
Dyani
and
Louis
Moholo-Moholo
-
existed
within
a
context
that
viewed
their
mere
existence
as
a
dangerous
and
subversive
act.
In
1964
they
joined
an
exodus
of
musicians
leaving
for
Europe
and
eventually
settled
in
London
the
following
year.
Sadly,
not
long
after
arriving
and
facing
continued
economic
peril,
the
group
buckled.
Johnny
Dyani
left
to
join
Don
Cherry’s
band.
Moholo-Moholo
and
Dyani
followed
suit
and
joined
Steve
Lacy
on
tour,
and
the
remaining
members
morphed
into
a
number
of
ensembles
that
eventually
grew
to
become
Chris
McGregor's
Brotherhood
Of
Breath.
Following
the
death
of
Mongezi
Feza
in
1975
the
remaining
members
of
the
group
had
come
back
together
to
record
Blue
Notes
For
Mongezi,
reigniting
a
sporadic
period
of
activity
over
the
coming
years.
Following
the
untimely
passing
of
Johnny
Dyani
in
late
1986,
the
last
three
members
of
the
original
line-
up
-
McGregor,
Pukwana
and
Moholo-Moholo
-
reformed
to
pay
tribute
to
yet
another
of
their
fallen
brothers.
Blue
Notes
for
Johnny,
the
group’s
second
musical
memorial
to
a
band
member,
incorporates
a
considerably
broader
range
of
touchstone
and
practices
than
its
predecessor,
nodding
toward
the
band’s
foundations
in
be-bop
and
post-bop
without
abandoning
where
they
had
journeyed
along
the
way.
Internalising
equal
elements
of
hard-bop,
modalism,
and
free
improvisation,
it
is
a
startling
creative
statement,
imbued
with
a
tension
that
renders
an
equally
radical
and
sophisticated
challenge;
a
furious
tide
-
slow
in
pace
and
it
slow
to
reveal
itself
-
masquerading
in
gentler
forms.
A
celebration
and
a
memorial.
Joyous
and
tragic.
A
real
time
resurrection
of
personal
experience,
Blue
Notes
for
Johnny
dodges,
dances,
and
transforms
across
its
two
sides,
refusing
to
be
nailed
down.
As
the
trio
pushes
against
each
other,
bristling
tonal
and
rhythmic
collisions
leave
the
impression
that
something
is
bound
to
explode,
without
ever
fully
letting
go.
Blue
Notes
for
Johnny’s
memorialisation
is
unwittingly
doubled
by
capturing
the
final
time
that
the
Blue
Notes
would
come
together
in
the
studio.
Both
Dudu
Pukwana
and
Chris
McGregor
would
pass
away
three
years
later
in
1990,
leaving
Moholo-Moholo
-
who
continues
to
carve
a
groundbreaking
trajectory
across
the
world
of
jazz
-
as
the
last
surviving
member.
The
album
remains
as
a
journey
between
an
imaged
future
and
the
beginning
of
it
all.
Six
friends
meeting
and
communing
through
sound.
Six
friends
who
had
triumphed
against
the
odds,
becoming
some
of
the
greatest
creative
voices
of
their
generation.
Six
friends
who
were
five,
then
four,
and
then
three,
before
they
were
done.
Friends
who
never
failed,
in
whatever
form,
to
come
together
and
play.
It
is
a
story
begun
60
years
ago
that
remains
just
as
prescient
today.
DUDU
PUKWANA
/
alto
sax.
CHRIS
McGREGOR
/
piano.
LOUIS
MOHOLO
/
drums.
This
2022
re-
issue
has
been
made
with
permission
and
in
association
with
Ogun
records.
Transferred
from
the
original
masters
and
featuring
an
exact
reproduction
of
the
original
artwork.
Remastered
by
Giuseppe
Ielasi.
All
music
by
the
Blue
Notes.
All
music
published
by
Ogun
Publishing
Co.
Cover
design
by
Ogun.
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