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Paul
Motian was born in Philadelphia in 1931 and from the age
of two, he grew up in Providence, Rhode Island. His first musical
attraction was the guitar. As he explains to Downbeat "because
I liked cowboy movies - the guy puts his guitar around his neck,
strums, sings - that looks like fun, I thought, 'I want to do
that'". But his musical interests switched to the drums:
he soon graviated to a neighbourhood drummer by the age of 12 he
was taking his first lessons.
Paul played in school bands until his high school graduation in
1949. He played local gigs around Providence before catching on
with a band that toured New England playing stock big band
arrangements. But he was as well listening to bebop innovators
like Charlie Parker, Max Roach, Bud Powell and Dizzy Gillespie.
Soon the Korean War forced him to join the Navy which he left at
the age of 24. He moved to New York the same year and began
playing professionally. "There used to be a lot of
sessions in New York", Paul told Downbeat "there
were chances to play. At the 'Open Door' near where NYU is now,
they had sessions during the week and on weekends Monk or Bird.
One night Arthur Taylor didn't show up, and Bob Reisner, who was
running the sessions said, 'Go, get your drums, you can play with
Thelonious'. I ran home, got the drums, ran back, played with
Thelonious and at the end of the night he gave me $10. I was the
happiest guy in the world".
Around this time Motian met Bill Evans. They played together in
Tony Scott's group. Soon Paul had extended work with Lennie
Tristano. He also recorded with George Russell and had
opportunities to play with masters as Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane. The now legendary Bill Evans
trio with Scott LaFaro (1959/64) broke new ground in terms of how
the group members shared musical functions - blurring the
distinctions between soloist and accompainists; heightening the
standards for group interplay in the process. It has proven to be
one of the most pervasively influential groups in Modern Jazz
history. Throughout the 50's and 60's, Paul frequently worked
with group leaders like Coleman Hawkins, Oscar Pettiford, Charles
Lloyd, Pharoah Sanders, Mose Allison and folk-singer Arlo Guthrie
(at Woodstock). In fact Paul sometimes regrets today that he
turned down the opportunity to become the second drummer in
Coltrane's group - the seat that was eventually taken by Rashied
Ali.
The 60's found Motian along with other drum innovators like Elvin Jones, Tony Williams, Blackwell, Billy Higgins and Roy Haynes developing an approach to jazz drumming that
captured the pulse of the music - providing meter without the
explicit repetition of earlier styles. Motian mastered the
nuances of color, texture and melody that take the function of
the drums well beyond that of time and propulsion of the group
into the more challenging realms of composition and utilizing
space.
In the late sixties, Motian began playing with Keith Jarrett
aside of Charlie Haden. After several years as a trio, Dewey Redman joined the group. This quartet has also endured
as one of the major musical forces of its time. The quartet broke
up in 1976, but in the ensuing years, Paul has continued to work
with bassist Charlie Haden in a number of musical settings. Throughtout the
70's and 80's, Motian's status as group leader, composer and
recording artist grew and matured. His first two records as a
leader, Conception Vessel and Tribute (both on ECM)
featured such friends and musical associates as Jarrett, Haden,
Leroy Jankins, Sam Brown and Carlos Ward.
By 1980, Paul was eager to move on. "I wanted guitars",
he said. Pat Metheny reccomended Bill Frisell. Ed Schuller (bass), Joe Lovano and Billy Drewes (saxophones) rounded the newly
formed quintet up. With the expanded format Motian's music became
more colorful and complex. Paul, occasionally still performing
with this group, began concentrating on the distilled trio
edition with Frisell and Lovano.
The trio's first recording It Should Have Been a Long Time Ago
(ECM) was followed by Motian's debut on jMT: Monk in Motian.
It features the trio with Geri Allen and Dewey Redman as its
guests. The creative output of Motians trio with the leading
guitar innovator of the 1980's and one of the most sought-after
saxophonists of today's jazz scene lead to nine productions in
the last six years on jMT.
Paul Motian On Broadway (Volumes I, II and III) is
Motian's remarkable tribute to the early tradition of jazz, his Electric
Bebop Band gives a vivid and electric interpretation of Bebop
standards and "Bill Evans" reflects his first trio
experience with the Bill Evans trio. On all these recordings the
trio is joined by high-ranking and estabilished musicians like
Charlie Haden and Lee Konitz as well as by young newcomers like Joshua Redman of the Electric Bebop Band.
The Paul Motian trio in its pure form appears on two productions:
on the 1991 live album In Tokyo and on jMT's recent
release Trioism.
Biography courtesy of jMT
Productions, Munich D.
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