James Brandon Lewis
@ the Love Supreme Jazz Festival
5 July 2024
Click an image to enlarge.
Humbly introducing himself as “just James”,
James Brandon Lewis swiftly proceeded to caress his audience with
his inviting tone, authoritative gospel & blues drenched delivery.
We were left mesmerised and yearning for more. I will definitely
be keeping my ears and eyes focused on further performances from
this immensely gifted and promising saxophonist.
Biography
In 2021, the saxophonist and composer James Brandon
Lewis had a career breakthrough with his tenth album, “The
Jesup Wagon.” Inspired by the mobile agricultural education
efforts of inventor George Washington Carver, the song cycle was
hailed by critics for its dreamlike mosaic of gospel, folk-blues
and catcalling brass bands. It was named Album of the Year at Jazz
Times and Downbeat and a bunch of international jazz magazines,
and it established Lewis as one of the provocative musical voices
of his generation.
Along the way, Lewis drew the attention of many improvising artists,
most notably the saxophonist and jazz deity Sonny Rollins, who doesn’t
offer effusive praise very often. Moved by Lewis’ deep, spirit-seeking
sound, Rollins said “When I listen to you, I listen to
Buddha, I listen to Confucius … I listen to the deeper meaning
of life. You are keeping the world in balance.”
After the praise chorus quieted down, Lewis inevitably
began to think about next moves. It was the waning moments of pandemic
panic, and he knew this much: He was itching to play. He also knew
that he wasn’t interested in undertaking another extra-musical
research project like The Jesup Wagon. He took time to ruminate
on the ten years he’d spent as a musician in New York City,
and the experiences he had leading his own groups while seizing
chances to mix it up with punk bands and hip-hop MCs and free jazz
titans. He thought about the moments when he felt most alive. They
shared a trait: They were not cerebral exercises in high-concept
heaviness. They happened when he was loose, in the moment, running
on pure visceral instinct.
“I come from the generation that went
to school to learn music,” says Lewis, a self-described
seeker and old soul of thirty-nine who did his undergrad at Howard
University in Washington DC and earned his master’s at Cal
Arts, where he studied with Charlie Haden and others. “What
happens in that environment is everything becomes overly complicated.“After
Jesup Wagon” I was aware about how inside my head I tend to
get. I started thinking about the importance of breaking out of
those thought patterns from school. At this point I have a kind
of trained intuition, to know where stuff is supposed to go. I began
to challenge that, and the more I did, the more I became obsessed
with the basics.”
That sent Lewis on what became a thorough, revitalising
purge of his artistic trick bag. He cut out compositional complexities,
focusing instead on earnest, sing-able melodies. He avoided some
of the fancy jazz chords. He explored folk song themes like those
he played with Mark Ribot on the stirring “Songs of Resistance
1942-2018,” which brought him to the attention of musicians
outside of the jazz realm. (Ribot, a longtime admirer, advocated
for ANTI- to sign Lewis, his impassioned message describing Lewis
as a keeper of the legacy of John Coltrane: “James Brandon
Lewis’ solos are like a jumbo jet – you need to give
them plenty of runway space to take off and land.”
Then Lewis meditated on the instrumental configuration
best suited to bringing his new ideas to light. Rather than write
for a large group, or even a horn section, he gravitated to a lean,
unconventional power trio: Tenor sax, electric cello, and drums.
And he swapped the aesthetic manifestos he’d attached to previous
albums (see An Unruly Manifesto) for a simple punk-band-in-the-basement
credo: Chasing energy. Above all else.
This process of stripping away led directly to
Eye of I, Lewis’ bracing, sometimes haunting, arrestingly
diverse Anti Records debut. It’s a record alive with the messy
contrasts of life in the United States circa 2022 – dissonant
one minute and graceful/prayerful the next; animated by anger and
contention as well as the possibility of resolution; holding equal
space for expressions of steadfast faith and wild spontaneous skronkage.
“What I’m interested in is the
dance,” Lewis says, crediting the long-term mentorship
of pianist Matthew Shipp for expanding his awareness of unspoken
aspects of musical conversation. “That’s a fundamental
dynamic – I take some, you give some, we interact, now we
have something, now we can go someplace.” He adds that
the Eye of I “power trio” – Chris Hoffman on cello
and Max Jaffe on drums – is particularly adept at this give
and take: “The first time we played, things just lifted up
right away. Everything that group does just feels fresh.”
“Eye of I” opens with 44 seconds of
gritty, high-throttling low-down groove, an ear pulverising opening
designed to cleanse all traces of ordinary from the palette. From
there, Lewis offers a prayerful cover of Donnie Hathaway’s
“Someday We’ll All Be Free” and then the first
of his disarmingly addictive originals, “The Blues Still Blossoms.”
Though oriented around the primordial flatted-third
blues interval, it is more an incantation than a blues. As Lewis
explains, he sought to avoid all traces of the blues as understood
by academics. “I was thinking about miles of blue fields,
that was the visual in my mind. I wanted a blues that sounded like
it was floating and never ending. And also new, refreshing. The
piece is built on word-like phrasing – I’m not thinking
about time at all…It’s like a breathing walk, or a conversation.
It’s blues after a hard day’s work - it has nothing
to do with form or hitting the right anything. It’s like “OK,
so the work day of “time” is over: Now what do you want
to say?”
That tune and the meditative “Within You
Are Answers” are notable for their sturdy, broad, declarative
themes. These have little in common with intricate maze-like contemporary
jazz composition – and that is intentional. Lewis recalls
that from his earliest experiences with music growing up in Buffalo
New York, he knew, innately, that he had a special aptitude for
melody.
“I went to a Performing Arts high school
where it was required, from 5th or 6th grade, to be in choir. So
I learned to sing, use my voice. That got my ear attentive to melody,
and also the emotive quality of music, how a melody can make you
feel.” Lewis started to play clarinet at age 9, and remembers
learning melodies by ear, from memory. “When that movie
Mr. Holland’s Opus came out, I just loved it, and I still
remember that melody that clarinettist was trying to learn. I was
12. But I can still sing it – it’s been etched in my
mind my whole life.”
Lewis’ melodic identity encompasses ancient
and future, inside and outside, density and openness, church and
street. He’s a master of the short infectious motif, and like
Sonny Rollins, devotes long expanses of his improvisation to the
stretching and refracting and mutating of short phrases. The son
of a minister, Lewis grew up playing in church and hearing the titans
of jazz at home, and then as he got older, encountering Buffalo
artists like the free-jazz saxophonist Charles Gayle and the groove-minded
saxophonist Grover Washington Jr. After moving to New York, Lewis
pursued music in many different lanes, playing regularly with bassists
William Parker and Jamaaladeen Tacuma from Ornette Coleman’s
Prime Time band, as well as trombone player Craig Harris and many
others.
Lewis released his debut as a leader in 2010 and almost immediately
began attracting media attention. “There’s no easy
shorthand for James Brandon Lewis’ musical M.O.,” Rolling
Stone observed. “Ever since his early releases...the saxophonist
has balanced a deep, gospel-informed spirituality with free-jazz
abandon and hard-hitting funk-meets–hip-hop underpinnings.”
Lewis writes at the piano, not the tenor, and
says that on this project, he found himself thinking cinematically
after a conversation he had with saxophonist and composer Henry
Threadgill. “He got me thinking about foreground, middle
ground and background, like in a scene from a movie,”
Lewis says. To reinforce that visual sense, Lewis focused on basic
triads and diatonic harmony - “I don’t call myself
a free musician,” he advises. He adds that to make his
themes stand out even further, he didn’t include conventional
chord symbols or any harmonic guidance on his charts. “I
don’t write any chords on my music. I’m at a place where
I don’t like the weight of complex harmony. There are more
colours available when things are open. I think that’s why
my music has a certain lift to it, because I’m encouraging
the other musicians to explore and bring out the harmonies that
resonate for them.”
One result of that: Eye of I travels through a
staggering range of musical styles and moods, from Donnie Hathaway
to Cecil Taylor to the plaintive gospel cry “Even The Sparrow”
to the anthemic closing throwdown “Fear Not,” a collaboration
with the postpunk group The Messthetics, which features members
of Fugazi.
“The collaboration happened quickly,
in a last-minute way after the rest of Eye of I had been tracked.
Lewis credits his trio with preparing him for the volatile interactivity
of the Messthetics. “It was really just more chasing energy
– instantly it was about the interaction. The trio centers
around ideas of space and renewal – us taking a melody as
a lifeline, the bait, and then from that into a playful dance between
the known and the unknown. That’s what the Messthetics do,
too.”
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