is he wearing a napalm death-shirt? that's what i like about him: napalm death, kh stockhausen, mozart, ornette, sex pistols, korean...what ever music... ....fascinating guy!
@drwinkle101 Also, this kind of music (IMHO) increases the sensitivity of the "educated" ear, because it teaches you to hear the nuances inherent in raw sound, and hearing the way those sounds interact with each other can teach you a lot about the underlying principles of common practice music. Doesn't mean you have to like it of course, but remember that not liking something doesn't make it bad either. Also, how does one "play music properly?"
@0ooiioo0 yeah he is alive and i find it even more bizarre to follow what he is creating while he is alive, cause we know that his work will last (some of his pieces / or his work as a whole, as an example of artistic productivity!); i cant help thinking, when seeing him and co playing live: 'is that a masterpiece we're hearing now? / that will be venerated when he is not here anymore?..' it's strange; he creates so much that he is obviously an alien in the present!
OMG!!! Wayne Krantz @5:30 w/ the red Ibanez!he's influenced also by John Cage & the whole 'chance' stuff, as well as Miles' electric period.Very telling what he says: in the end this ensemble is more about the musician's personalities, then about the 'music' proper.
@thinkingevil You are probably right. Painkiller was groundbreaking, but is over. Hey, we can't all hang in there while an artists tests their next batch of tricks. John did great work in the 90's, but other artists lead the pack today.
@drwinkle101 I don't think that musical meaning stems from structure at all. Structure may help one comprehend a piece of music, but individual moments can be incredibly meaningful, regardless of the context.
Personally, I feel like finding John Zorn is like stumbling across Frank Zappa all over again.......as far as enjoying the music as opposed to appreciating WHAT it is and where it's come from could of course be worlds apart, but hell if it's to be dismissed. I'd be ashamed of the general public if such open minds were to be cast aside.
@mmlight I seldom leave comments... but you're wrong. Keep in mind, you're perspective is subjective! And to make a sweeping negative public wash of his fervent and consistent work is... a drag....
@mmlight i agree. i like the book of angels series, but that's because he gives the bands a certain amount of freedom to interpret his pieces as they wish. otherwise, he has been mostly repeating his ideas for the last decade. his classical music has improved i think, but everything else has gone backwards, and i don't understand why he still insists his music is avantgarde when it's just more of the same. it's even more puzzling than his idea that avantgarde should be a 'genre'.
John Zorn : On The Edge 11.5.23 1303pm strange, isn't it....? they begin to rehash a certain set of notions they had - musicians, writers, even comedians.... as though they could not build on those certain set of notions... his way of composing reminds me of that south American guy Copernicus and his free for all style of music making...
@drwinkle101 You're quite incorrect about unconventional players being unable to play or write "properly." Marc Ribot would be an excellent case in point. In many circumstances, the players who abandon tradition do so because they know it inside out and want something new. I.e. Webern and Ligeti knew Renaissance counterpoint as well as almost anybody in history, yet they chose to go a different route. Also, check Zorn and Frith in "step across the border part 2" if you doubt his abilities.
@mmlight I hear you. To me tho, this makes you sound like a frustrated and expectant consumer as opposed to a patient audience of an artist's ebb and flow and personality etc. You're displeased, but John's work will yet be long and it's merits will see true light in plenty time, to your eyes or not.
@mmlight maybe Zorn owns his own apartment? ;-) But yes, i agree, a lot of musicians and artists can no longer afford to live in N.Y proper. e.g Abel Ferrara, Michael Gira etc. Marc Ribot write an interesting article about the way the scene is changing downtown and how the future looks bleak. it was quite depressing really.
@thinkingevil Yes, I could be 'wrong', but John seems to have ran out of steam. I don't hear collectors talk about his records like in the 90's. Glad he created The Stone. Maybe not much of a fan anymore. It's okay, I and many of us already spent our money on his records. btw: His site could use this crazy thing called 'music samples' before we buy. Same with Mode records. Come on, it's 2011 for god's sake!
@Xzariox Madness -- and I have worked with the insane -- is noisy, dirty, and simultanously both boring and dangerous. I did not say that Zorn is mad. I said that to abandon structure in a work of art is to abandon conscious meaning, and this leads to meaningless disorder comparable to that in dreams. The idea that dreams are a kind of madness was expressed by Kant, Schopenhauer, Freud, Jung. Kant said: "The lunatic is a wakeful dreamer".
John zorn for pres most def ,, I think our music industry needs to be re-evaluated - this guy should be getting ( artist of the year awards ) here what im saying? everything is all half -ass backwards and all the credit goes to the phony people .
@Drblooter99 Zorn can swing, and he can play the sax better then anybody. Only, swing and playing the sax the traditional way, is only a small part of what he does. You are terribly mistaken.
@RappoldXJay It's a mistake because it encourages him to make more music that desensitises and regresses the educated ear. I believe that players who abandon consistency in form and rhythm could not write and play music properly in the first place.
@RappoldXJay Bailey's working class. So what? Even if we assume a "rule" of avant types from relatively privileged backgrounds, rules have exceptions. Zorn's mother was a university professor and his father ran a classy hairdressing business. Zorn played guitar, piano, flute and saxophone as a child. He could do this because his parents bought the instruments. He went to Webster, a private university, because his parents paid for it. And I'm sure Zorn's crew in this vid aren't from the Bronx.
@lamentate07 The period of radical invention from New York's base of talented musicians is over. Not for lack of talent but economics and social climate. Money dominates culture now. Artists will continue to create but the margins of support wane. Hard to create natural events when the culture is having 'health issues'..
@lamentate07 I'm sure the main thing John cares about now is paying the rent in NYC. Some of the musicians have said NY is more expensive to live in than ever. Happened to SF and drove away much of it's artist talent. But to John's music, I'm sure he is ready to take the check for anything at this point.
Zorn and Derek Bailey are free themselves from structure and rhythm, just as you fall asleep and dream. Other people's dreams are mad, meaningless and boring, and so is music like this. It's great for them to play, but we make a mistake thinking such an unconscious product is worth listening to.
I hear ya , its just the industry has the culture all backwards is all im saying. They praise fashion instead of art then confuse and brainwash the public about whats what .
@RappoldXJay Musicians like Zorn are niche, but make a living from producing rubbish while other people get a pittance for cleaning the studio toilets and other useful work. I believe two things: that Zorn and Bailey were limited musicians who went "avant" not for money but for approval and prestige in a small, murky pond. Second: people who claim to enjoy this stuff have the idea that they are going "beyond jazz", or "post jazz", which makes them feel even cleverer.
I like Johns music, and how much of it he has made, but it seems his best work is behind him now. We have soundtrack and trad jewish rock stuff. Fine, but not memorable like Naked City or Painkiller. No, John has become a party to all and master of none.
@RappoldXJay Pre-experimental Bailey the session player did mundane pop for Kathy Kirby and the like, hardly "accomplished". As to Zorn's proper music, it's undistinguished and boring to me. My central point is that people like Bailey can play and write in formal ways, but they knew they weren't competition for their contemporaries, so they got "subversive" and deformalised. Same thing in unreadable post-structural novels by writers who were not much good at plot, character and dialogue.
@RappoldXJay I play a bit of amateur jazz, can't play fast solos, and don't do fusion. One possible source of resentment you left out: I might not like middle class tossers having had all the advantages of family financial support and a proper musical education, who squander it doing -- yes again! -- rubbish like this.
john zorn is an innovator
is he wearing a napalm death-shirt?
that's what i like about him: napalm death, kh stockhausen, mozart, ornette, sex pistols, korean...what ever music...
....fascinating guy!
U can't be universal otherwise :)
@drwinkle101 Also, this kind of music (IMHO) increases the sensitivity of the "educated" ear, because it teaches you to hear the nuances inherent in raw sound, and hearing the way those sounds interact with each other can teach you a lot about the underlying principles of common practice music. Doesn't mean you have to like it of course, but remember that not liking something doesn't make it bad either. Also, how does one "play music properly?"
genius like no other
love the pfp
@@halfwaythreeway thank you! likewise :3
wendy carlos is an inspiration to me
@@moletrane277 as she should be for us all. kudos :3
2:13 Yeah that choke is crucial to the sound. Reminds me of Nigel tuning the violin during his guitar solo in Spinal Tap.
Oh my god, the dream!!
@0ooiioo0 yeah he is alive and i find it even more bizarre to follow what he is creating while he is alive, cause we know that his work will last (some of his pieces / or his work as a whole, as an example of artistic productivity!); i cant help thinking, when seeing him and co playing live: 'is that a masterpiece we're hearing now? / that will be venerated when he is not here anymore?..' it's strange; he creates so much that he is obviously an alien in the present!
Favorite human
This part of Derek Bailey's documentary? Marvelous to see this footage. Thanks for posting...
The COBRA game looks like a lot of fun
Great! thank you very much!
OMG!!! Wayne Krantz @5:30 w/ the red Ibanez!he's influenced also by John Cage & the whole 'chance' stuff, as well as Miles' electric period.Very telling what he says: in the end this ensemble is more about the musician's personalities, then about the 'music' proper.
Nope. Mark Howell
@@stephanieartz2578 Ok, dude looks a lot like Krantz IMO.
@thinkingevil You are probably right. Painkiller was groundbreaking, but is over. Hey, we can't all hang in there while an artists tests their next batch of tricks. John did great work in the 90's, but other artists lead the pack today.
Can you please provide some names of such artists I can explore?
nice insight on the cobra pieces
@drwinkle101 I don't think that musical meaning stems from structure at all. Structure may help one comprehend a piece of music, but individual moments can be incredibly meaningful, regardless of the context.
where can I buy the album? hahahhaha
Good observation indeed.
this whole documentary can be seen on ubuweb. also the violinist looks like mark mckinney of kids in the hall fame
Personally, I feel like finding John Zorn is like stumbling across Frank Zappa all over again.......as far as enjoying the music as opposed to appreciating WHAT it is and where it's come from could of course be worlds apart, but hell if it's to be dismissed. I'd be ashamed of the general public if such open minds were to be cast aside.
cool Napalm Death shirt !
@mmlight I seldom leave comments... but you're wrong. Keep in mind, you're perspective is subjective! And to make a sweeping negative public wash of his fervent and consistent work is... a drag....
@mmlight i agree. i like the book of angels series, but that's because he gives the bands a certain amount of freedom to interpret his pieces as they wish. otherwise, he has been mostly repeating his ideas for the last decade. his classical music has improved i think, but everything else has gone backwards, and i don't understand why he still insists his music is avantgarde when it's just more of the same. it's even more puzzling than his idea that avantgarde should be a 'genre'.
John Zorn : On The Edge 11.5.23 1303pm strange, isn't it....? they begin to rehash a certain set of notions they had - musicians, writers, even comedians.... as though they could not build on those certain set of notions... his way of composing reminds me of that south American guy Copernicus and his free for all style of music making...
@drwinkle101 You're quite incorrect about unconventional players being unable to play or write "properly." Marc Ribot would be an excellent case in point. In many circumstances, the players who abandon tradition do so because they know it inside out and want something new. I.e. Webern and Ligeti knew Renaissance counterpoint as well as almost anybody in history, yet they chose to go a different route. Also, check Zorn and Frith in "step across the border part 2" if you doubt his abilities.
@mmlight I hear you. To me tho, this makes you sound like a frustrated and expectant consumer as opposed to a patient audience of an artist's ebb and flow and personality etc. You're displeased, but John's work will yet be long and it's merits will see true light in plenty time, to your eyes or not.
@mmlight maybe Zorn owns his own apartment? ;-) But yes, i agree, a lot of musicians and artists can no longer afford to live in N.Y proper. e.g Abel Ferrara, Michael Gira etc.
Marc Ribot write an interesting article about the way the scene is changing downtown and how the future looks bleak. it was quite depressing really.
and now 10 years later it's even more depressing.
@richcapo
i reckon people like Stan Getz and Mingus were just as arrogant. But they weren't a waste of space like Zorn is. They could play.
What's the name of the documentary??
@thinkingevil Yes, I could be 'wrong', but John seems to have ran out of steam. I don't hear collectors talk about his records like in the 90's. Glad he created The Stone. Maybe not much of a fan anymore. It's okay, I and many of us already spent our money on his records. btw: His site could use this crazy thing called 'music samples' before we buy. Same with Mode records. Come on, it's 2011 for god's sake!
î love the naked city
@Xzariox
Madness -- and I have worked with the insane -- is noisy, dirty, and simultanously both boring and dangerous. I did not say that Zorn is mad. I said that to abandon structure in a work of art is to abandon conscious meaning, and this leads to meaningless disorder comparable to that in dreams. The idea that dreams are a kind of madness was expressed by Kant, Schopenhauer, Freud, Jung. Kant said: "The lunatic is a wakeful dreamer".
John zorn for pres most def ,, I think our music industry needs to be re-evaluated - this guy should be getting ( artist of the year awards ) here what im saying? everything is all half -ass backwards and all the credit goes to the phony people .
indeed ben
sounds like my me and my friends jamming after dropping acid
Dropping acid, that's like... cool, and with friends too, wauw gee.
@Drblooter99 Zorn can swing, and he can play the sax better then anybody. Only, swing and playing the sax the traditional way, is only a small part of what he does. You are terribly mistaken.
What does he mean with 'hardcore' music?
Hardcore punk
whole lotta blocking goin' on...blocking of the restroom, blocking of gigs, blocking of careers.
@RappoldXJay
It's a mistake because it encourages him to make more music that desensitises and regresses the educated ear. I believe that players who abandon consistency in form and rhythm could not write and play music properly in the first place.
@RappoldXJay
Bailey's working class. So what? Even if we assume a "rule" of avant types from relatively privileged backgrounds, rules have exceptions. Zorn's mother was a university professor and his father ran a classy hairdressing business. Zorn played guitar, piano, flute and saxophone as a child. He could do this because his parents bought the instruments. He went to Webster, a private university, because his parents paid for it. And I'm sure Zorn's crew in this vid aren't from the Bronx.
@lamentate07 The period of radical invention from New York's base of talented musicians is over. Not for lack of talent but economics and social climate. Money dominates culture now. Artists will continue to create but the margins of support wane. Hard to create natural events when the culture is having 'health issues'..
@lamentate07 I'm sure the main thing John cares about now is paying the rent in NYC. Some of the musicians have said NY is more expensive to live in than ever. Happened to SF and drove away much of it's artist talent. But to John's music, I'm sure he is ready to take the check for anything at this point.
Zorn and Derek Bailey are free themselves from structure and rhythm, just as you fall asleep and dream. Other people's dreams are mad, meaningless and boring, and so is music like this. It's great for them to play, but we make a mistake thinking such an unconscious product is worth listening to.
He's clearly influenced by John Cage and Miles, in terms of how he orchestrates these so-called 'living compositions'
From Anthony Braxton, too
I hear ya , its just the industry has the culture all backwards is all im saying. They praise fashion instead of art then confuse and brainwash the public about whats what .
@RappoldXJay
Musicians like Zorn are niche, but make a living from producing rubbish while other people get a pittance for cleaning the studio toilets and other useful work. I believe two things: that Zorn and Bailey were limited musicians who went "avant" not for money but for approval and prestige in a small, murky pond. Second: people who claim to enjoy this stuff have the idea that they are going "beyond jazz", or "post jazz", which makes them feel even cleverer.
I like Johns music, and how much of it he has made, but it seems his best work is behind him now. We have soundtrack and trad jewish rock stuff. Fine, but not memorable like Naked City or Painkiller. No, John has become a party to all and master of none.
napalm death?
@RappoldXJay
Pre-experimental Bailey the session player did mundane pop for Kathy Kirby and the like, hardly "accomplished".
As to Zorn's proper music, it's undistinguished and boring to me.
My central point is that people like Bailey can play and write in formal ways, but they knew they weren't competition for their contemporaries, so they got "subversive" and deformalised. Same thing in unreadable post-structural novels by writers who were not much good at plot, character and dialogue.
then go to a stan getz video then you zalapandanweezel eleshguts
@RappoldXJay
I play a bit of amateur jazz, can't play fast solos, and don't do fusion.
One possible source of resentment you left out: I might not like middle class tossers having had all the advantages of family financial support and a proper musical education, who squander it doing -- yes again! -- rubbish like this.
Omar Rodriguez Lopez Is Similar To Zorn. Except Omar Isn't As Knowledgeable About Music As Both Are Creative.