
Blank Forms Editions
Don Cherry's New Researches featuring Naná Vasconcelos - Organic Music Theatre: Festival de jazz de Chateauvallon 1972
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In
the
late
1960s,
the
American
trumpet
player
and
free
jazz
pioneer
Don
Cherry
(1936–1995)
and
the
Swedish
visual
artist
and
designer
Moki
Cherry
(1943–2009)
began
a
collaboration
that
imagined
an
alternative
space
for
creative
music,
most
succinctly
expressed
in
Moki’s
aphorism
“the
stage
is
home
and
home
is
a
stage.”
By
1972,
they
had
given
name
to
a
concept
that
united
Don’s
music,
Moki’s
art,
and
their
family
life
in
rural
Tagårp,
Sweden
into
one
holistic
entity:
Organic
Music
Theatre.
Captured
here
is
the
historic
first
Organic
Music
Theatre
performance
from
the
1972
Festival
de
jazz
de
Chateauvallon
in
the
South
of
France,
mastered
from
tapes
recorded
during
its
original
live
broadcast
on
public
TV.
A
life-
affirming,
multicultural
patchwork
of
borrowed
tunes
suffused
with
the
hallowed
aura
of
Don’s
extensive
global
travels,
the
performance
documents
the
moment
he
publicly
jettisoned
his
identity
as
a
jazz
musician,
and
represents
the
start
of
his
communal
“mystical”
period,
later
crystallized
in
recordings
such
as
Organic
Music
Society,
Relativity
Suite,
Brown
Rice,
and
the
soundtrack
for
Alejandro
Jodorowsky’s
The
Holy
Mountain.
The
musicians
in
Don
Cherry’s
New
Researches,
hailing
from
Brazil,
Sweden,
France,
and
the
US,
converged
on
Chateauvallon
from
all
over
Europe.
The
five-person
band
Don
and
Moki
Cherry,
Christer
Bothén,
Gérard
“Doudou”
Gouirand,
and
Naná
Vasconcelos
performed
in
an
outdoor
amphitheater
and
were
joined
onstage
by
a
dozen
adults
and
children,
including
Swedish
friends
who
tagged
along
for
the
trip
and
Det
Lilla
Circus
(The
Little
Circus),
a
Danish
puppet
troupe
based
in
Christiania,
Copenhagen.
The
platform
was
lined
with
Moki’s
carpets
and
her
handmade,
brightly
colored
tapestries,
depicting
Indian
scales
and
bearing
the
words
Organic
Music
Theatre,
dressed
the
stage.
As
the
musicians
played,
members
of
Det
Lilla,
led
by
Annie
2
Hedvard,
danced,
sang,
and
mounted
an
improvised
puppet
show
on
poles
high
up
in
the
air.
The
music
in
the
Chateauvallon
concert
aspired
to
a
universal
language
that
would
bring
people
together
through
song.
In
a
fairly
unprecedented
move,
Don
abandoned
his
signature
pocket
trumpet
for
the
piano
and
harmonium,
thereby
liberating
his
voice
as
an
instrument
for
shamanic
guidance.
The
show
opens
with
him
beckoning
the
audience
to
clap
their
hands
and
sing
the
Indian
theta
“Dha
Dhin
Na,
Dha
Tin
Na,”
and
the
set
cycles
through
uplifting
and
sacred
tunes
of
Malian,
South
African,
Brazilian,
and
Native
American
provenance
including
pieces
that
would
later
appear
on
Don’s
albums
Organic
Music
Society
and
Home
Boy
(Sister
Out)
all
punctuated
by
outbursts
of
possessed
glossolalia
from
the
puppeteers.
“Relativity
Suite,
Part
1”
notably
spotlights
Bothén
on
donso
ngoni,
a
Malian
hunter’s
guitar,
prior
to
Vasconcelos
taking
an
extended
solo
on
berimbau.
A
vortex
of
wah-like
microtonal
rattling,
Vasconcelos’s
masterful
demonstration
of
this
single-
stringed
Brazilian
instrument
is
a
harbinger
of
his
work
to
come
as
a
member,
with
Don,
of
the
acclaimed
group
Codona.
The
sounds
of
children
playing
on
the
ensemble’s
achingly
tender
rendition
of
Jim
Pepper’s
oft-covered
beacon
of
spiritual
optimism,
“Witchi
Tai
To,”
lends
the
proceedings
an
especially
intimate,
domestic
glow.
Given
the
context
of
the
star-studded
international
jazz
festival,
the
concert’s
laid
back,
communal
vibe
feels
like
an
attempt
by
the
Cherrys
to
show
Don’s
jazz
audience
that
he
was
moving
on.
At
the
same
time,
however,
Don
was
extending
a
warmhearted
invitation
for
them
to
come
along
for
the
ride.
With
liner
notes
by
Magnus
Nygren.
Track
list:
1.
Intro:
Dha
Dhin
Na,
Dha
Tin
Na
2.
Butterfly
Friend
3.
Elixir
4.
Amazwe
5.
Interlude
with
Puppets
6.
Ganesh
7.
Elixir
Reprise
/
Witchi
Tai
To
8.
Resa
9.
Relativity
Suite,
Part
1
10.
Berimbau
Solo
11.
Interlude
/
North
Brazilian
Ceremonial
Hymn
12.
Elixir
Reprise
/
Ganesh
13.
Ntsikana's
Bell
/
Traditional
Melody
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