Composer, multi-instrumentalist and bandleader Henry Threadgill has been a
seminal figure in the vanguard of contemporary instrumental music since the
early-70's. He has created a body of music that includes more than 150
recorded works which, while firmly rooted in America's Great Black Music
tradition, often integrate forms and instruments historically associated with
chamber or orchestral music. It's no surprise that Threadgill won Best Composer
honors in Down Beat's International Jazz Critics Poll in 1990, 1989 and 1988,
when he placed in 11 categories and had two albums nominated as Record of the
Year. A more remarkable tribute to his talent and craft is the fact that he
received the composer award in 1988 and 1989 from Down Beat's Readers as
well.
Threadgill's music has been performed by some of the most acclaimed and
adventurous instrumental ensembles of the past two decades: the trio Air,
which emerged from the core membership of Chicago's visionary cooperative
the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (A.A.C.M.) to
become one of the most influential bands of the '70s and early '80s; the
resourceful seven-piece Sextett he formed in the early '80s and led
through the advent of the '90s; such speciality units as X-75, his
20-piece Society Situation Dance Band and his Marching Band; and his
current group, Very Very Circus. He has also received diverse commissions
ranging from music for small ensembles such as the Roscoe Mitchell and Rova
Saxophone Quartets, to larger works for the American Jazz Orchestra "Salute
to Harold Arlen", the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Next Wave Festival and
the Brooklyn Philharmonic.
Born in Chicago in 1944, Threadgill began playing music when he was five,
inspired by an aunt who was a classical pianist and vocalist. He started
taking piano lessons when he was nine and picked up the saxophone when he
entered high school, starting out on tenor and additing the alto when he
began playing in a church band. He cites tenor saxophonists Lester Young
and Wardell Gray as early influences, followed by Gene Ammons, John Coltrane,
and Sonny Rollins. Saxophonists Johnny Hodges, Charlie Parker, Eric Dolphy
and Ornette Coleman were later inspirations on alto. Threadgill continued his formal musical education at Wilson Junior College and received a degree in
flute and composition from the American Conservatory of Music. It was at
Wilson that he first met Muhal Richard Abrams, an important mentor whose
Experimental Band of the early-'60s would evolve into the A.A.C.M.
Threadgill played with Abrams band briefly, but eventually decided to
concentrate on playing in church orchestras, dance bands and college
ensembles before going into the army where he was a musician in the infantry
in Vietnam from 1967 to 1968.
After returning to the U.S., Threadgill finished his service based near St.
Louis where he spent most weekends with Oliver Lake, Julius Hemphill and other members of another cooperative, the Black Artists Group (B.A.G.). Upon his
discharge in 1969, he returned to Chicago, sought out Abrams, joined the
A.A.C.M. and met bassist Fred Hopkins and percussionist Steve McCall. The
three formed the trio Air in 1972 and the ensemble went on to record a dozen
critically-acclaimed albums and tour throughout North America, Europe and
Japan before disbanding in 1985.
Threadgill moved to New York City in 1975 and quickly became an integral and
influential member of creative circles flourishing in lower Manhattan's lofts
and clubs. He also began connecting with writers, poets, dancers, actors and
artists active in the "downtown" scene, an experience he cites as a major
influence on his development as a composer and musician. Black musicians began
to be invited to partecipate in different projects and began working with
dance and theater companies and Threadgill would write music for them that
was instrumental but not necessarily jazz; it could be whatever he wanted it
to be, whether that meant improvised or composed. He still looks to dance and
theatre - as well as to the worlds of radio, film and video - for inspiration
and stimulation today. Feeling the general climate for music in New York has
become more conservative in recent years, Threadgill is constantly taking
advantage of opportunities to take his band out on the road. His two "Great
American Tour" found him visiting more than two dozen cities in the U.S. and
Canada with the "Sextett" in 1984 and "Very, Very Circus" in 1991 and he
performs annually at leading jazz festivals in North America, Europe and
Japan.
Threadgill sees himself as an artist in a state of constant change, and views
his creative process as an ever-evolving one. "I don't perceive what I'm doing
in a finite sense, but on a certain level my music can be seen as part of a
continuum", he explains. "Take the groups I've worked with, for example. "Air"
came about a personal way when three people who played certain instruments
made a creative connection. With the "Sextett", I consciously wanted strings,
brass and percussion - the three components of an orchestra - represented so
I chose the instrumentation first and found the people later. With "Very, Very
Circus" I'm looking for a whole different type of texture, something similar
to what Miles Davis was doing when he "went electric" and recorded "Bitches
Brew", or what Ornette did when he formed the group "Prime Time". But I've
also combined the tuba, one of the earliest instruments in jazz and the
forerunner of the bass, with the electric guitar, a comparatively recent
instrument. So in "Very, Very Circus" I've got a new ensemble that can look
both forward and backward and pay its respects to various traditions while
building upon them. This is what I hope my music has always done and will
always continue to do".
April 1991
Biography courtesy of Saudades Tourneen.
- DISCOGRAPHY
- With AIR
:
- Air Song (Why Not) - Air Raid (Why Not) - USO Dance (Douglas/Casablanca)
- Open Air Suit (Arista/Novus) - Montreux Suisse Air (Arista/Novus)
- Air Lore (Arista/Novus) - Air Time (Nessa) - Live Air (Black Saint)
- Air Mail (Black Saint) - New Air-Live at Montreal International Jazz
Festival (Black Saint) - New Air-Air Show #1 (Black Saint)
- 80^ Below 82 (Island/Antilles)
- With X-75
:
- Volume I (Arista/Novus)
- With THE HENRY THREADGILL SEXTETT
:
- When Was That (About Time) - Just The Facts and Pass the Bucket (About Time)
- Subject to Change (About Time) - You Know The Number (RCA/Novus)
- Easily Slip Into Another World (RCA/Novus) - Rag Bush and All (BMG/Novus)
- With FLUTE FORCE FOUR
:
- So Hot ... Could See Jenkins Boys (Black Saint)
- With VERY VERY CIRCUS
:
- Spirit of Nuff Nuff (Black Saint) - Too Much Sugar For a Dime (Axiom/Island)
- Carry The Day (Sony/Columbia) - Songs Out of my Trees (Black Saint)
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