Past Awardees
2004 Living Legacy Award Winner
Randy Weston
After contributing four decades of musical
direction and genius, Randy Weston remains
one of the world's foremost pianists and composers today, a true
innovator and visionary.
Encompassing the vast rhythmic heritage
of Africa, his global creations musically continue to inform and
inspire.
"
Weston has the biggest sound of any jazz pianist
since Ellington and Monk, as well as the richest
most inventive beat," states jazz critic Stanley Crouch, "but
his art is more than projection and time;
it's the result of a studious and inspired intelligence...an intelligence
that is creating a fresh
synthesis of African elements with jazz technique".
Randy Weston's
latest recording ANCIENT FUTURE (Mutable Music)
is a 2 disc solo piano recording that combines 16
solo piano recordings with 7 solo piano recording
from 1984 that was released as BLUE on 1750
Arch Records produced by Thomas Buckner.
"
In African music," Randy Weston observed in a 1998 interview, "there
aren't the categories of the past, the present and the future. Music
is a timeless thing." He proves it every time he touches a
piano or puts pencil to composition paper. Weston descends from
a long line of seers who build on what the ancestors left us to
create music of startling originality-music of the future. This
is why Ancient Future (a title lovingly borrowed from Dr. Wayne
Chandler's new book Ancient Future: The Teachings and Prophetic
Wisdom of the Seven Hermetic Laws of Ancient Egypt) so perfectly
defines Weston's approach to music and life. Like Dr. Chandler's
book, Weston's music reveals the wisdom of the ancient world, where
art, science, and spirituality were one, where music was not entertainment-for-sale
but a life force at the core of civilization itself. Weston demolishes
distinctions between traditional and modern, composition and improvisation,
enveloping us with what really counts: the music's spiritual essence.
And what better way to capture the spiritual dimensions of this
great music than Weston, in his solitude, singing, praying, meditating,
and shouting, through the medium of Bösendorfer piano, which
he transforms into a giant talking drum or a 97-string kora?
"
Ancient Future" is a meditation on music's origins. "I
thought about Osiris," Weston recalled, "when he was assigned
to teach man about civilization and he used
music to do it." Spare,
contemplative, "Ancient Future" is evocative of William
Grant Still's "Africa (A Poem for Orchestra in Three Movements)" (1928).
The
1990's witnessed a string of recording on
Verve Records that exhibit Randy Weston’s pioneering musical
aspiration. In 1999 SPIRIT! THE POWER OF MUSIC,
RANDY WESTON AFRICAN RHYTHMS QUINTET AND THE
GNAWA MASTER MUSICIANS OF MOROCCO was released,
1998 saw the release of KHEPERA in which Randy
Weston makes the connection between African
and Chinese music, 1997 saw the release
of EARTH BIRTH featuring Randy Weston with
The Montreal String Orchestra, 1996 saw the
release of the critically acclaimed "SAGA" recording.
In 1993’s VOLCANO BLUES, Randy Weston teams up with longtime
collaborator Melba Liston, and criss-crosses
the Atlantic chronicling the originations
and destinations of the genre of African-American
Music.
In 1992 Randy Weston recorded The Splendid
Master Gnawa Musicians of Morocco. Never in
the history of Moroccan culture have their
ever been nine hag'houges (guinbres) together
with two percussionists. Each master sang
his own song; after each one finished another
continued. It was a historic moment.
Randy Weston's musical odyssey
is another
installment in an already amazing body of
work. In 1991, he told the story of the roots
of the blues on SPIRITS OF OUR ANCESTORS
(Antilles). The two-CD set was hailed for
its concept as well as its musicianship. Robert
Palmer wrote in Rolling Stone, "SPIRITS
is the kind of 'jazz' record that, like Miles'
KIND OF BLUE, connects with anyone who hears
it. Listen up."
The culmination of Randy Weston’s rich
musical offerings has resulted in the following
awards: In 2001 he received the America
Jazz Masters Fellowship from the National
Endowment for the Arts. In 2000 he received
the Arts Critics and Reviewers Association
of Ghana (ACRAG) Black Music Star Award. In 1999
Harvard University honored him with a 1 week
residency and tribute concert. In 1997
he received The French Order of Arts and Letters,
and in 1995 The Montreal Jazz Festival gave
him a 5 night tribute. He also won Composer
of the Year from Downbeat Magazine in 1999
and 1996.
Randy Weston, born in Brooklyn,
New York in 1926, didn't have to travel far
to hear the early jazz giants that were to influence him.
Though Weston cites Count Basie, Nat King
Cole, Art Tatum, and of course, Duke Ellington
as his other piano heroes, it was Monk who
had the greatest impact. "He
was the most original I ever heard," Weston remembers. "He
played like they must have played in Egypt
5000 years ago."
Randy
Weston’s first recording as a leader came in 1954 on
Riverside Records RANDY WESTON PLAYS COLE
PORTER COLE PORTER IN A MODER MOOD. It was
in the 50's when Randy Weston played around
New York with Cecil Payne and Kenny Dorham
that he wrote many of his best loved tunes, "Saucer Eyes," "Pam's
Waltz," "Little
Niles," and, "Hi-Fly." His greatest hit, "Hi-Fly," Weston
(who is 6' 8") says, is a "tale of being my height and
looking down at the ground."
Randy Weston has never failed to
make the connections between African and American
music. His dedication is
due in large part to his father, Frank Edward
Weston, who told his son that he was, "an African born in America." "He
told me I had to learn about myself and about
him and about my grandparents," Weston
said in an interview, "and the only way to do it was I'd have
to go back to the motherland one day."
In the late 60's, Weston
left the country. But instead of moving to
Europe like so many of his contemporaries,
Weston went to Africa. Though he settled in
Morocco, he traveled throughout the continent
tasting the musical fruits of other nations.
One of his most memorable experiences was
the 1977 Nigerian festival, which drew artists
from 60 cultures. "At
the end," Weston
says, "we all realized that our music was different but the
same, because if you take out the African
elements of bossa nova, samba, jazz, blues,
you have nothing. To me, it's Mother Africa's
way of surviving in the new world."
For additional information
contact: Maurice Montoya/Maurice Montoya Music
Agency Phone: 212/209-3330, Fax: 212/889-8595,
email: mm@mmmusicagency.com or visit www.mmmusicagency.com
www.randyweston.info
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