When you look at John Zorn’s creative output it is hard to believe that a day has only 24 hours. He has launched dozens of projects, among lots of others bands like Masada, Bar Kokhba or The Dreamers, projects like Radical Jewish Culture, his series of 21st century mystical works, or his soundtracks. He is the head of the Tzadik label and the artistic director of The Stone (a non-profit performance space for experimental music in New York), he publishes books and so forth.
In an interview with Jazz Times Zorn once said that
the term “jazz” was meaningless to him. When he made music, a lot of things came
together and that was why the music sometimes tended to be more classical,
sometimes a little bit more jazz, sometimes more rock, sometimes it didn’t
fall anywhere, you could not categorize it, he said it didn’t really belong
anywhere, but it was unique and different because it came out of his heart. He
said that the tradition he felt closest to was the avant-garde, experimental
music - or maybe more general - creativity and productivity, even radicalism. Zorn
has no TV, he doesn’t read magazines or newspapers, he has no family (except
the musical one). His only purpose is to create art.
An important part of his cosmos is cooperation. He likes to work with people
constantly if they share his ideas, for example Bill Frisell, Cyro Baptista,
Joey Baron, Dave Douglas, Uri Caine, Marc Ribot, Greg Cohen, Mark Feldman, Erik
Friedlander, Trevor Dunn, Mike Patton and many others. He likes to think of his
collaborators as “a community the way we see the bebop community (...) in the
’50s or the existentialist community (…) in Paris or the abstract
expressionists in the ’40s in New York”. They inspire each other, they
sometimes live together, they simply communicate. This
philosophy is reflected in his latest releases as well.
Today begins a week "rounding up" several of John Zorn's releases from the past year.
© stef
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