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Jason Moran (musician)

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Jason Moran
Moran in Aarhus, Denmark
Moran in Aarhus, Denmark
Background information
Born (1975-01-21) January 21, 1975 (age 49)
Houston, Texas, U.S.
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician, composer
InstrumentPiano
Websitejasonmoran.com

Jason Moran (born January 21, 1975) is an American jazz pianist, composer, and educator involved in multimedia art and theatrical installations.[1]

Moran recorded first with Greg Osby and debuted as a band leader with the 1999 album Soundtrack to Human Motion. Since then, he has released albums with his trio The Bandwagon, solo, as a sideman, and with other bands. He combines post-bop and avant-garde jazz, blues, classical music,[2][3] stride piano,[1][4] and hip hop.

Career

Early years

Moran was born in Houston, Texas, and grew up in the Pleasantville neighborhood of Houston. His parents, Andy, an investment banker, and Mary,[5] a teacher, encouraged his musical and artistic sensibilities at the Houston Symphony, museums and galleries, and through a relationship with John T. Biggers and a collection of their own.[1][6] Moran began training at classical piano playing, in Yelena Kurinets' Suzuki method music school,[5] when he was six. However, his father's extensive record collection (around 10,000 in 2004), varied from Motown to classical to avant-garde jazz.[5]

As a boy he developed a preference for hip hop music[7][8] over the piano until, at the age of 13, he first heard the song "′Round Midnight" by Thelonious Monk at home,[9] and switched his efforts to jazz. Monk's childlike melodies, with their many silent spaces, struck him as relatively easy to play and not overly ornate, while the rhythms were reminiscent of hip hop songs, and the harmonies unorthodox.[10] Both jazz and hip hop were part of Houston's skateboarding scene in which he was involved.[11][12]

He attended Houston's High School for the Performing and Visual Arts (HSPVA), graduating in 1993[13] from the jazz program headed by Robert Morgan. In his senior year, he was student director of the school's jazz combo[5] and part of the Texas high school all-state jazz ensemble.[14][15]

Late 1990s

He then enrolled at the Manhattan School of Music, from which he would graduate in 1997 with a BM degree, to study with pianist Jaki Byard.[1][6] The next year he participated in Betty Carter's Jazz Ahead exclusive workshop, composing the piece "Make a Decision"[16] for the final concert.

In 1997, when Moran was a senior at Manhattan School of Music, he was invited to join the band of saxophonist Greg Osby for a European tour, following a conversation that lingered mostly on older piano jazz, and no audition.[1] Osby liked his playing, and Moran continued to play with Osby's group upon their return to the United States, making his first recorded appearance on Osby's 1997 Blue Note album Further Ado. He would subsequently appear on several other Osby albums, and Osby would introduce him to avant-garde pianists Muhal Richard Abrams and Andrew Hill.[17]

His stint with Osby led Moran to sign a contract of his own with Blue Note. His debut Soundtrack to Human Motion was released in 1998. Moran was joined on the album by Osby, drummer Eric Harland (a classmate of Moran's at the Manhattan School, and the one who recommended him to Osby), vibraphonist Stefon Harris and acoustic bassist Lonnie Plaxico.

2000s

Moran's next album, 2000's Facing Left (after a work by Egon Schiele[18]), featured a trio that formed out of Osby's group, New Directions:[1] Moran, bassist Tarus Mateen and drummer Nasheet Waits. Compositions were some of Moran's and some by Mateen, Duke Ellington, Björk and Byard. The trio, which came to be known as The Bandwagon, was joined by saxophonist and pianist Sam Rivers for their next album, Black Stars, which appeared in 2001.[19] Black Stars was included in NPR's "The 50 Most Important Recordings of the Decade."[20]

In 2002, Moran released a solo album, Modernistic, and followed it in 2003 with a live trio album, recorded at New York's Village Vanguard, called The Bandwagon.[21]

That same summer he appeared in the Montreal International Jazz Festival, first partnering with Lee Konitz,[22][23] and then with the trio.[24] In 2004 he played on Don Byron's Ivey-Divey. The Ivey-Divey Trio (sometimes a quartet[25]) toured for a number of years, from the Monterey Jazz Festival 2004 to Montreal's Jazz Festival in 2006[26] to WinterJazzFest in 2009.[27]

Moran's 2005 album Same Mother, an exploration of the blues, brought guitarist Marvin Sewell into the Bandwagon mix.

Moran's 2006 release, Artist in Residence, included a number of selections from different works commissioned by museums, all of which premiered in 2005: "Milestone" is centered on a visual work by Adrian Piper from the Walker Art Center;[7] "The Shape, the Scent, the Feel of Things" was incorporated into a preexisting installation of that name by artist Joan Jonas;[28] and "RAIN", inspired by ring shouts from African American slaves,[19] is a recording of The Bandwagon with guests Marvin Sewell, Ralph Alessi and Abdou Mboup. Critical reception to Artist in Residence has been arguably colder that to his other releases.[29]

Moran's IN MY MIND, premiered in 2007,[30] is a multimedia presentation inspired by Thelonious Monk's 1959 "large band" concert at The Town Hall in New York City. It utilises filmed and taped material of Monk's rehearsal, found in the archive of W. Eugene Smith, and video art by David Dempewolf.[31] A text-laden painting from Glenn Ligon extracted the words "In My Mind" - which Monk says on one of Smith's tapes - as did Moran, incorporating the soundbite into the set. The program is played by The Big Bandwagon:[32] the trio with a largely changeable five piece horn section. The New York Times wrote, "It had a magical balance of theory and intuition, and the crowd stayed fully with it."[33] The February 2009 installation is the subject of a documentary film of the same name.[34]

In April 2007 Moran took the piano in Charles Lloyd's New Quartet, succeeding Geri Allen.[35][36] He was the last member to join the group,[37] which keeps touring (as of 2014), having recorded one studio album and two live ones. Moran and Lloyd recorded a duo album, Hagar's Song, in 2013.

From September 2009 to about 2012 Moran toured with Dave Holland's Overtone Quartet.[38][39]

"Live: Time" is a 2008 complement to the Philadelphia Museum of Art exhibition on The Quilts of Gee's Bend.[40][41] Cane was written for classical wind quintet Imani Winds - among them Moran's college classmate Toyin Spellman.[3] It premiered in October 2008, and appeared[42] in their album Terra Incognita in 2010; it relates to Marie Thérèse Metoyer and Moran's family history in Natchitoches, Louisiana.[43][44] "Refraction" is a ballet Moran scored and accompanied for Alonzo King LINES Ballet in 2009.[45] Four independent short films and a feature documentary appeared in the 2000s with soundtracks by Moran (see below). In addition, he collaborated with Ligon on 2008's The Death of Tom:[46] an abstract, conceptual, video artwork. Reflecting their shared historical interests, Moran contributed a score based on the song "Nobody" by Bert Williams.[47] The work is in the MoMA collection,[48] but he played to it again in a screening in 2011.[49]

2010s

The album Ten,[50][51][52] released in 2010, marked a ten-year interval from the Bandwagon's debut, Facing Left. It features "Blue Blocks" off the Philadelphia Museum commission, "RFK in the Land of Apartheid", from an original score to a documentary film of the same name,[53] and "Feedback Pt. 2", an homage to Jimi Hendrix's performance at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival.[54] Monk's "Crepuscule with Nellie" was recorded at the IN MY MIND tour.[55] Ten also contains a composition by Moran and Andrew Hill, and others by Leonard Bernstein, Jaki Byard, Conlon Nancarrow and Bert Williams.[56] The Downbeat 2010 critics' poll voted Ten "Jazz Album of the Year", while also voting Moran "Pianist of the Year" and "Jazz Artist of the Year".[57] The New York Times chose Ten among 2010 top 10 pop and jazz albums.[58]

Since 2011 Moran has been performing the show "Fats Waller dance party", originally commissioned by Harlem Stage. It became the basis of a 2014 release, All Rise: A Joyful Elegy for Fats Waller, dedicated to Fats Waller and the form of popular entertainment that jazz was in his days.[59] Participants in the fluid roster have included singers Meshell Ndegeocello, in a co-leader position, and Lisa E. Harris, drummer Charles Haynes' ensemble with trumpeter Leron Thomas and trombonist Josh Roseman, saxophonist Steve Lehman and bassist Mark Kelly.

Moran's composition, "Slang", was commissioned for the 2011 Other Minds Festival in San Francisco.[60] In the May 2012 Whitney Biennial, Alicia Hall Moran and Jason curated BLEED, a week-long event that involved many artists and artisans, and aimed to expose artistic processes to the point "it has to be scary".[1][61] Later that year a new performance with Joan Jonas, Reanimation was first staged in dOCUMENTA (13).[62][63][64] In the summer of 2013 and the next, Moran accompanied, with The Bandwagon and guest Jeff Parker, skateboarding shows in SFJAZZ Center.[11][65]

In April 2014 Moran and Imani Winds premiered Jump Cut Rose, which he wrote for the quintet and a piano,[3][66] In May, Looks of A Lot, a theatrical co-production with Theaster Gates on the theme of Chicago artistic history[47] premiered in the city's Symphony Center; participants included The Bandwagon, the Kenwood Academy Jazz Band,[67] Ken Vandermark and Katie Ernst, bassist and vocalist.[68] The same month, the Bandwagon played their composition, "The Subtle One", to a ballet adaptation by Ronald K. Brown.[69][70] In September he appeared twice in the Monterey Jazz Festival: Leading a Fats Waller Dance Party, in a one-piano duo with Robert Glasper,[71] and with Charles Lloyd New Quartet.[72] He was responsible for the music of the multi-nominated 2016 documentary 13th.

In addition to recordings under his own name, Moran has recorded with a range of other musicians including Greg Osby, Steve Coleman, Charles Lloyd, Cassandra Wilson, Joe Lovano, Christian McBride, Von Freeman,[73] Francisco Mela, and Don Byron. He also performed with Marian McPartland,[74][75][76] Lee Konitz,[24] Wayne Shorter (as substitute),[77] Robert Glasper,[78][79] violinist Jenny Scheinman,[80] The Bad Plus,[81] guitarist Mary Halvorson and trumpeter Ron Miles,[82] drummer Herlin Riley,[83] Dave Holland (Overtone Quartet), and Bill Frisell.[40][84]

Teaching and organization

Moran has been on the faculty of the New England Conservatory of Music since 2010, where he coaches two ensembles, teaches lessons, and gives masterclasses. At the Kennedy Center he has been the musical adviser for jazz since 2011, and artistic director for jazz since 2014, occupying the position of Billy Taylor.[85]

Apart from these positions, Moran has organized events such as "713-->212: Houstonians in NYC" in January 2011[86][87][88] and Very Very Threadgill, a two-day festival dedicated to Henry Threadgill,[89] his "favorite composer",[90] in September 2014.

Moran and his family manage the granting of "Moran Scholarship Award", first set in 1994 for jazz students at HSPVA. In 2005 they set in Houston The Mary Lou Chester Moran Foundation, for similar purposes.[91][92]

In 2013 he expressed support for the Justice for Jazz Artists campaign of the American Federation of Musicians.[93]

In 2015 Moran was appointed Honorary Professor at the Rhythmic Music Conservatory (RMC) in Copenhagen, Denmark, where he periodically conducts workshops and master classes.[94]

Awards and honors

Closing 2010, Francis Davis wrote in Village Voice, "Moran's only competition in the Fifth Annual Village Voice Jazz Critics' Poll was Jason Moran. Ten, his first trio album in seven years, won Album of the Year in a landslide, but that's not all. The pianist figured prominently on the runner-up, Rudresh Mahanthappa and Bunky Green's Apex, and Charles Lloyd's Mirror, which finished fourth...Add Paul Motian's Lost in a Dream...that gives the 2010 MacArthur Fellow four appearances in the Top 10"[95]

JazzTimes' 2011 Expanded Critics' Poll voted Moran second place "Artist of the Year" and first place "Pianist of the Year"; the Charles Lloyd New Quartet, "Acoustic Group of the Year" and The Bandwagon fifth place in that category.[96] In 2013, the New Quartet was second place in its category and Moran second in pianists.[97]

Moran won the Jazz Journalists Association's Up-n-Coming Jazz Musician award in 2003. The Down Beat critics' poll voted him Rising Star Jazz Artist, Rising Star Pianist, and Rising Star Composer for three years (2003–05). In 2005, he was named Playboy magazine's first Jazz Artist of the Year. In 2007, he was named a USA Prudential Fellow by United States Artists.[98] In 2010, he was named a MacArthur Fellow.[99][100]

In 2013, Moran held residencies in SFJAZZ, Juilliard, and Molde Jazz Festival.[101]

Another full-length documentary, Grammar about "jazz through Jason Moran" and genre boundaries, is in the making, after first director Radiclani Clytus had found funding in a 2012 kickstarter campaign.[102]

In 2018, Moran received his first museum survey at the Walker Art Center[103] and was written up as an artist-to-watch by Cultured Magazine.[104]

In 2018, Moran wrote the score for 'Between the World and Me' by Ta-Nehisi Coates which premiered at the Apollo Theater. [105]

Family

Moran married Alicia Hall, a mezzo-soprano and artistic collaborator,[1] in 2003.[61] They have worked on several projects together. They live in Harlem[106] and have twins. He has an older and a younger brother.[5][41] Two of his cousins, Tony and Michael Llorens, toured with Albert King playing piano and drums,[107] and were recorded on In Session.[108]

Discography

As leader

Soundtracks

As sideman

References

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  2. ^ Kevin Le Gendre. "Jason Moran Ten Review". BBC.
  3. ^ a b c Brett Campbell (2014-06-04). "Imani Winds and Jason Moran: Minimally Inspired, Major Imprint". San Francisco Classical Voice. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  4. ^ Steve Dollar (2010-06-22). "Jason Moran and the Bandwagon: Ten".
  5. ^ a b c d e David Theis (2004-06-06). "Jazzman returns for a high school reunion". Houston Chronicle.
  6. ^ a b Nate Chinen (September 2003). "Jason Moran: Out Front". JazzTimes.
  7. ^ a b Gehrke, Karl (2006-10-04). "Walker images reside in Jason Moran's jazz". Minnesota Public Radio.
  8. ^ Thomas Conrad (2012-01-18). "Jason Moran takes the Before & After Test". JazzTimes.
  9. ^ "Jason Moran, Interview + Performance [stream]". Studio 360. Kurt Andersen. 2010-07-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
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  33. ^ Ben Ratliff (March 1, 2009). "Music Review - 'In My Mind - Monk at Town Hall, 1959' - Fifty Years Later, Two Different Takes on Thelonious Monk's Historic Town Hall Appearance". The New York Times. Retrieved November 23, 2014.
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  42. ^ Terra Incognita at AllMusic
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  69. ^ Burke, Siobhan (2014-06-04). "A Premiere for Ronald K. Brown's Evidence at the Joyce". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-11-24.
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  73. ^ Dan McClenaghan (2002-11-16). "Von Freeman: The Improvisor (2002)". Allaboutjazz.com. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  74. ^ Rochester, 2002
  75. ^ Monterey, 2004: "Piano legend McPartland: Cool jazz still hot". CNN. September 15, 2004. Retrieved November 23, 2014. "The Monterey Jazz Festival Collection". "47th Annual Monterey Jazz Festival Lineup Announced". j-notes.com. April 6, 2004.
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  83. ^ Fred Kaplan (2012-06-25). "Jason Moran". Stereophile. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
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  85. ^ Pressley, Nelson (2014-05-06). "Kennedy Center upgrading Jason Moran to artistic director for jazz with 3-year renewal". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2014-10-14.
  86. ^ "Robert Morgan and Houston's Jazz Legacy, at 92YTriBeCa". New York Times. 2011-01-17. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  87. ^ Alex Rodriguez (2011-01-13). "Jason Moran Presents "713 --> 212: Houstonians in NYC"". WBGO. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  88. ^ A webcast of Moran and Glasper, playing with a double trio ("Houstonians in NYC: audio streams". Joshua Jackson.), was mentioned in a New York Times' albums of the year list by Ben Ratliff: ref.
  89. ^ Kurt Gottschalk (2014-10-07). "Henry Threadgill: Very Very Threadgill 2014". Allaboutjazz.com. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  90. ^ Nate Chinen (2014-09-28). "Henry Threadgill Festival at Harlem Stage". The New York Times. Retrieved October 21, 2014.
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  92. ^ "The Mary Lou Chester Moran Foundation". texascorporates.com. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
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  94. ^ "RMC appoints Jason Moran | RMC". rmc.dk. Retrieved 2017-09-05.
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  98. ^ "Jason Moran – Fellow Profile". Usafellows.org. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  99. ^ "Jason Moran – MacArthur Foundation". MacArthur Foundation. 2010-01-25. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  100. ^ Jarenwattananon, Patrick (2010-09-28). "Jason Moran Named MacArthur Fellow". NPR. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  101. ^ "Jason Moran - AIR, as well as saxophone legend Charles Lloyd, set to perform at Moldejazz 2013". Molde Jazz. Retrieved 2014-11-24.
  102. ^ "Grammar". Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  103. ^ "Jason Moran". walkerart.org. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
  104. ^ "Artist and Musician Jason Moran Crosses the Divide at the Walker Art Center". Cultured Magazine. 2018-04-23. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
  105. ^ Hughes, Hilary (6 April 2018). "How Jason Moran Met His Musical Match in Ta-Nehisi Coates with 'Between the World and Me'". Billboard. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  106. ^ Giovanni Russonello (2014-09-15). "Jason Moran, Meshell Ndegeocello find their own way to honor Fats Waller". The Washington Post. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  107. ^ Matt Schudel (2011-12-27). "He's Jazzed". Washington Post. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  108. ^ Albert King With Stevie Ray Vaughan – In Session at Discogs
  109. ^ John Fordham (2013-07-25). "Trio 3 + Jason Moran: Refraction – Breakin' Glass – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 November 2014.