The Denver Post

Jason Moran pays tribute to an early jazz ancestor

- By Seth Colter Walls

In the 1910s alone, composer, pianist and bandleader James Reese Europe seemed to do enough living for multiple lifetimes.

He started that decade at the Clef Club in Harlem, an organizati­on that fielded its own group and worked to improve labor conditions for Black musicians throughout New York City. Not long after, Europe brought his 125- member Clef Club Orchestra — and the syncopated styles of Black American composers — to Carnegie Hall. In 1914, Europe provided new music for star dancing couple Vernon and Irene Castle while also taking his group into the studio to record for the Victor Recording Company.

During World War I, he was Lieutenant Europe: Along with other members of the all- Black 369th Infantry, he pushed to be allowed to fight while also leading a regimental band — known as the Harlem Hellfighte­rs — that amazed audiences abroad. After a triumphant return to New York, in early 1919, his wardrilled ensemble recorded material for the Pathe label, including a vivacious take on Carl Bethel and

Sandy Coffin’s “That Moaning Trombone.” Later that year, one of Europe’s band members stabbed him with a knife during an intermissi­on. ( He thought Europe had disrespect­ed him.) The bandleader died later that night.

All this took place long before Louis Armstrong’s first recordings with King Oliver, which helped to codify and claim the “jazz age” for the Roaring ‘ 20s. But a new, Europefocu­sed recording by pianist and composer Jason Moran — titled “From the Dancehall to the Battlefiel­d” — rewinds jazz’s history a bit and brings Europe’s sound into a relationsh­ip with successive waves of jazz and contempora­ry music.

“They talk about ‘ Jazz is dead,’ like it’s not everywhere or there’s something wrong with it,” Moran said in a recent interview. “But if you’re listening, the music is everywhere.”

Moran cited a riff — synthetica­lly rendered yet clearly big band- derived — that powers the Harry Styles song “Music for a Sushi Restaurant.” “That swing is still associated as the rhythm of this country,” Moran added. And for him, that tradition is greatly indebted to James Reese Europe’s bands in the 1910s.

“It’s hitting the stage, and hitting the mass of our people in New York City. But it’s also tied up in the vaudeville era, you know — and blackface. It’s emerging right at that time, and it’s scary,” Moran said. “So, I think he’s having that push- pull with it. And I think he reaches the other side of the conversati­on by claiming: ‘ This is a Black music that we have to cherish. And we should be looking at our own kind of ensembles to manage that.’”

On the new recording, Moran’s band channels some of that original Europe energy, and deploys herculean efforts during Moran’s own arrangemen­t of “That Moaning Trombone.” That track — in its hard- charging refinement, and finely judged inflection­s of tempo and dynamics — proves a worthy modern testament to Europe’s handling of large ensembles.

“What isn’t mentioned enough about Europe’s band is: They are incredible technician­s,” Moran said. “When I show this music to people and say, ‘ Can we get it like they do on the record?,’ inevitably they are like, ‘ No, we can’t.’” ( Moran allows that his take on “Trombone” is his attempt to reach that summit: “Kudos to the horns for really working together on that.”)

Elsewhere, Moran deviates strategica­lly from recorded history. During Europe’s “Ballin’ the Jack,” Moran fuses the song with motifs from post- bop pianist Geri Allen’s “Feed the Fire,” before executing an elegant pivot back to “Jack.”

That mashup format reflects Europe’s own taste in medleys, as well as the real- time remixing that Moran has long executed with his trio, the Bandwagon. (“Thank god for the Bronx, and figuring out that two turntables can work this way,” he said, when asked whether “Ballin’ the Jack / Feed the Fire” was indebted to turntablis­m.)

Elsewhere, Moran embellishe­s the up- tempo tune “Castle House Rag,” filling it with nervy rhythmic repetition­s — and pianistic lines that are, by turns, soulful and avant- garde in nature ( and sometimes both at once). “It’s very Threadgill, the way it opens up,” he said, referring to Pulitzer Prize- winning composer and performer Henry Threadgill, who is also a Europe aficionado. ( Tuba player Jose Davila, a regular in Threadgill’s bands, lends a sense of drive to Moran’s new album.)

Other modern sounds show up for cameos on the recording: The breathing meditation “Zena’s Circle”

comes from composer and conceptual­ist Pauline Oliveros. Moran once invited her to lead a Deep Listening session during his first season of programmin­g at the Park Avenue Armory. “Selfishly, I wanted to give it to the Bandwagon,” he said. “But I also wanted people to experience it.”

If the range of references on this album seems vast, that’s also a testament to Europe’s capaciousn­ess, and his influence on Moran. Since departing from the Blue Note label to produce his own recordings on the Bandcamp platform,

Moran has become a master of the unexpected feint. The sounds of “From the Dancehall to the Battlefiel­d” consistent­ly surprise and delight; backwardma­sked percussion on a performanc­e of “St. Louis Blues” might send you reeling back in more ways than one. The studio effect suggesting time travel — heard prominentl­y in the cymbals — feels like something out of a 1970s Funkadelic stew; the W. C. Handy tune is, itself, of even deeper vintage. ( Connecting all this is playing that feels utterly contempora­ry.)

But Moran is being more than simply clever; he is an artist with an eye for connection­s among the past, present and future. On “All of No Man’s Land Is Ours,” Moran bends the end of one motif so that it ends in a less- celebrator­y fashion than it does on Europe’s recording. ( Moran’s version sounds like a phrase out of Thelonious Monk.)

“I imagine that when they talk about ‘ No Man’s Land,’ it’s with mystery,” Moran said, thinking about Europe and his players. “What do enslaved people think about what ‘ no man’s land’ means? I want to go forward and backward on the idea. Where do we feel our boundaries are?”

 ?? GIONCARLO VALENTINE — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The pianist and composer Jason Moran at home in New York, Jan. 17, 2023. Moran’s latest album is inspired by pioneering, 1910s jazz of James Reese Europe.
GIONCARLO VALENTINE — THE NEW YORK TIMES The pianist and composer Jason Moran at home in New York, Jan. 17, 2023. Moran’s latest album is inspired by pioneering, 1910s jazz of James Reese Europe.

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