Silent form: embodied structure in transitional jazz performance practice

Lead Research Organisation: Birmingham City University
Department Name: ADM Birmingham Conservatoire

Abstract

This is a 24-month research project that will investigate a period of transition in jazz that spanned the latter part of the 1950s and early 1960s, during which key musicians - including pianist Cecil Taylor, and saxophonists Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane - made music that sought to break down many of the methodological norms established during the preceding decades. The music of this transitional period is generally recognised as a precursor to the 'free jazz' movement of the middle to late 1960s. While it is true that some key proponents of transitional jazz would go on to perform free jazz - and the two types of practice are often conflated (see, for example, Jost (1974)) - there are some key methodological differences. This project will analyse these differences and consider the impact of doing so on the way we understand and contextualise 1) the body of work made by Coleman and Coltrane during this period and 2) the wider implications for the way we understand the subsequent free jazz movement.

The musical, cultural and political impact of the 'free jazz' movement of the middle to late 1960s has been widely studied, but the significance of the music made during this transitional period in jazz remains underrepresented. A primary aim of this project is to increase our understanding of the cultural and historical significance of transitional jazz in terms of its relationship to wider cultural changes that occurred during the period between the late 1950s and early 1960s, as well as the subsequent free jazz movement of the later 1960s. A broader aim of the project is to contribute to the emerging discourse that foregrounds embodied knowledge and group interaction as factors that are fundamental to the understanding of jazz improvisation, and consequently to challenge traditional understanding of the relationship between composition and improvisation. The project will emphasise the value to jazz studies of a research methodology that combines traditional and practice-led methods by highlighting the significance of extra-musical factors that cannot be understood using solely traditional musicological means.

A further aim of the project is to explore ways of communicating practice-led research questions and outcomes to jazz audiences beyond academia. The practice-led research will be closely linked to a series of presentations/concerts in partnership with Birmingham-based organisations Jazzlines and TDE Promotions.

An open-source transcription resource will allow researchers to develop new insight into the methodological practices and group interaction in transitional 1960s jazz practice. Practice-led research will be used to investigate the concept of 'silent form' in order to shed new light on ways that embodied knowledge of standard jazz performance practices can influence free improvisation.

By amassing a portfolio of transcriptions of key early-1960s recordings by the bands of Coleman and Coltrane, by articulating and researching the concept of 'silent form' using both traditional and practice-led methods, and by drawing on the combined expertise of practice-researchers as well as non-academic performers, this project emphasises the embodied knowledge of standard jazz forms as a central component in both the transition towards free jazz as well as subsequent types of jazz performance practice.

By incorporating a systematic study of audience engagement with, and reaction to, the research questions, the study will also enhance our understanding of impact strategies and the relationships between practice and research.

Publications

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Title Birmingham ensemble 1st performance 
Description This concert was the culmination of the Birmingham practice-based project, led by Fletcher and featuring five musicians. It took place at Eastside Jazz Club venue within Royal Birmingham Conservatoire on the 08/12/2022. The concert was approximately 1 hour in duration and featured a full performance of the project compositions that had been developed over two week-long workshop-development activities. The concert was part of a double-bill hosted by TDE Promotions, the other nab being a group of internationally recognised improvise based in London. 
Type Of Art Performance (Music, Dance, Drama, etc) 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact The concert was attended by approximately 45 people, and an audio recording was made. Notable inspects include: - A short musical interaction during the final rehearsal for this concert (07/12/22) had a major impact on the concert itself. Subsequent reflection on this moment within the project research team has led to Fletcher being invited to present a paper based on ideas of musical freedom in improvisation a part of a one-day conference on wider ideas of freedom in Stavanger in March 2023. 
 
Title Composition portfolio for improvising ensemble based on the Silent Form concept 
Description This product is a portfolio of six compositions for improvising ensemble that will form the basis of the forthcoming practice-based phase of the project by using practice-research methods to interrogate key research questions. 
Type Of Art Composition/Score 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact As yet the compositions have not been publicly performed and so no impacts have yet been observed 
 
Title Kitchen Orchestra 1st performance - Stavanger 
Description This concert was the culmination of the Stavanger practice-based project, led by Fletcher and featuring eight musicians from the Kitchen Orchestra. It took place at Too Scene arts centre in Stavanger on the 05/11/2022. The concert was approximately 1 hour in duration and featured a full performance of the project compositions that had been developed over two week-long workshop-development activities. 
Type Of Art Performance (Music, Dance, Drama, etc) 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact The concert was attended by approximately 30 people. A professional audio recording was made and the event was documented by a photographer. At the time of writing the impacts from this activity are still difficult to assess, but the documented outputs will be incorporated into a Research catalogue exposition of the project in due course. 
 
Description This project is still in process, with a scheduled end date of 31st January 2023. As a result, the findings listed below represent only a part of those we anticipate by the end of the project.

The main findings of this award to date have been new knowledge relating to the production of landmark recordings by the Ornette Coleman Quartet between 1958-1961, the result of which is a more nuanced understanding of the transition in jazz performance practices from bebop in the 1950s to the free jazz movement of the 1960s. These findings are the result of a process of immersive listening and transcribing, during which time the project PI made a detailed study of the first five of Ornette Coleman's studio albums. As a result of this study, new patterns relating to the music structure used by the musicians as the improvised was observed.

In addition, new interviews, conducted by the project PI with Bobby Bradford, the last surviving performance colleague of Coleman from the period, have shed new light on this period of jazz performance practice and will serve to rectify certain misconceptions that have dogged the way Coleman's music has been understood by jazz scholars. These first-hand accounts of Coleman's activity in the transitional period covered by the project will be instrumental in clarifying much of the activity undertaken by Coleman and his collaborators during this time.
Exploitation Route The outcomes of the can be used by academic and non-academic researchers and performers of jazz to more fully engage in stem study and performance of transition jazz practice.

The combined analytical/practice-based methodology used in project might be applied to other aspects of music practice in order to better understand extra-musical factors that had previously been underrepresented by tradition research methods.
Sectors Creative Economy,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description One key example of non-academic impact that has emerged during the course of the project has been the adoption of one of the composition-performance techniques by an ensemble not directly associated with the project. One of the members of the Birmingham ensemble has reported that, following a conversation with a bandleader colleague about the former's participation in the project, the latter has begun to use one of the project compositions in their own performances, and has adopted the underpinning methodological technique - based on the Silent Form concept - for developing further new work.
First Year Of Impact 2022
Impact Types Cultural,Policy & public services

 
Description Performer pre-concert interview 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact The activity was the first of a series of ten pre-concert talks that are scheduled to take place before the end of the project. At a public-facing music event organised by TDE Promotions, the PI led an interview with the leader on the performing ensemble to discuss his ideas and concepts for the music that would follow. The purpose of these activities is to find ways to engage audiences for improvised music in new ways with the objective of increasing understanding of the processes and method that musicians use when they improvise.

This event sparked an interesting debate with the audience at the close of the gig, which touched on the importance of increased dialogue between performers and audiences of experimental music.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Pre-concert presentation of research @ Stavanger concert 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Fletcher delivered a short presentation of the main research themes and context for the concert
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Symposium on free jazz in Royal Birmingham Conservatoire 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact A panel of 8 performers, promoters and researchers drawn from across the Midlands region presented short personal reflections on their understanding and experience of free jazz. This was then followed by an open discussion about themes raised in the presentations.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022