Interlace Concerts

So much has happened since these concerts a few months ago, a friend has departed, memories have mingled with sorrow, windows have been stared out, and just about the time the leaves finish falling off the trees we'll be voting for a new President in America and hoping everything doesn't go haywire, or at least, less haywire, crossing our fingers just in case -- Photo by Jim Gale during the INTERLACE concerts at Outpost Performance Space, Albuquerque, produced by Tom Guralnick, Mark Weber, and Janet Simon -- This is Charley Krachy, tenor, and Don Messina, bass, with the Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet on the evening of May 5, 2o16

So much has happened since these concerts a few months ago, a friend has departed, memories have mingled with sorrow, windows have been stared out, and just about the time the leaves finish falling off the trees we’ll be voting for a new President in America and hoping everything doesn’t go haywire, or at least, less haywire, crossing our fingers just in case — Photo by Jim Gale during the INTERLACE concerts at Outpost Performance Space, Albuquerque, produced by Tom Guralnick, Mark Weber, and Janet Simon — This is Charley Krachy, tenor, and Don Messina, bass, with the Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet on the evening of May 5, 2o16

INTERLACE concerts — We flew these seven musicians in from New York City and upstate (NY) and Bill the clarinet player drove over from Vegas with his wife Danise — I wanted New Mexico to hear what I’ve been up to when I travel on my annual visits to NYC to work with these artists — These photos are by my friend Jim Gale, an Albuquerque scientist.

Bill Chattin -- photo by Jim Gale -- May 5, 2o16

Bill Chattin — photo by Jim Gale — May 5, 2o16

Kazzrie Jaxen with painting by JB Bryan "Tao Chien Gazes South" -- photo by Jim Gale -- May 5, 2o16

Kazzrie Jaxen with painting by JB Bryan “Tao Chien Gazes South” — photo by Jim Gale — May 5, 2o16

Kazzrie Jaxen & Charley Krachy scatting on "I Found a New Baby" -- photo by Jim Gale -- May 5, 2o16 -- Charley and Kazzrie made their first record together in 1989 -- These friends have all worked together for many years, all of them in some way radiating outwards from Lennie Tristano and his ideas of a pure improvisational art

Kazzrie Jaxen & Charley Krachy scatting on “I Found a New Baby” — photo by Jim Gale — May 5, 2o16 — Charley and Kazzrie made their first record together in 1989 — These friends have all worked together for many years, all of them in some way radiating outwards from Lennie Tristano and his ideas of a pure improvisational art.

The Seventies were a strange time in America -- I can't get over this notion of how discombobulated everything was, maybe the Sixties had knocked us for a loop? Those of us in the jazz world went about our business ever underground, some great records were made ---- Connie's friends banded together and started their record company New Artists in 1982 ----- What were they doing all through the Seventies? (This is the era of the salon sessions at Lennie's place in Queens) -- Photo of Virg Dzurinko & Kazzrie Jaxen -- May 6, 2o16 taken by Jim Gale

The Seventies were a strange time in America — I can’t get over this notion of how discombobulated everything was, maybe the Sixties had knocked us for a loop? Those of us in the jazz world went about our business ever underground, some great records were made —- Connie’s friends banded together and started their record company New Artists in 1982 —– What were they doing all through the Seventies? (This is the era of the salon sessions at Lennie’s place in Queens) — Photo of Virg Dzurinko & Kazzrie Jaxen — May 6, 2o16 taken by Jim Gale

Through it all, the Seventies, Eighties, Nineties, they remained friends and to this day their collective has remained a true community of artists working together, searching and dreaming, making sense of it all -- Carol Liebowitz during her solo set May 6 photo by Jim Gale

Through it all, the Seventies, Eighties, Nineties, they remained friends and to this day their collective has remained a true community of artists working together, searching and dreaming, making sense of it all — Carol Liebowitz during her solo set May 6 photo by Jim Gale

Kazzrie Jaxen -- May 5 on the Steinway B -- photo by Jim Gale ---- A person who truly inhabits magic and lives in the magical, would not know what you are talking about if you asked about this magic

Kazzrie Jaxen — May 5 on the Steinway B — photo by Jim Gale —- A person who truly inhabits magic and lives in the magical, would not know what you are talking about if you asked about this magic

Outpost Performance Space, 210 Yale SE, Albuquerque
INTERLACE 1
Thursday evening May 5, 2o16
Set 1
Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet + MW two poems
—- intermission —-
Set 2
Virg Dzurinko solo piano
then
Payne Liebowitz Duo + one poem MW

INTERLACE 2
Friday evening May 6, 2o16
Set 1
Payne Liebowitz Duo + MW one poem
then
Virg + MW
—- intermission —-
Set 2
Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet
then
Carol Liebowitz solo piano
then
Virg + Kazzrie: two pianos

Virg Dzurinko & Kazzrie Jaxen -- I first heard recordings of this duet at Virg's studio on Convent Avenue and it really knocked me out so I asked if they might consider doing some of this in Albuquerque? They used a rehearsal room that had two pianos at Greenwich House in the Village to acquaint themselves with what might happen at Interlace -- Photo by Jim Gale -- May 6, 2o16

Virg Dzurinko & Kazzrie Jaxen — I first heard recordings of this duet at Virg’s studio on Convent Avenue and it really knocked me out so I asked if they might consider doing some of this in Albuquerque? They used a rehearsal room that had two pianos at Greenwich House in the Village to acquaint themselves with what might happen at Interlace — Photo by Jim Gale — May 6, 2o16

Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet ---- We hung that painting by JB on the first night to accompany the poem "Spiderweb Mandala Flower Explosion Poem: Drishti" that I read with Carol & Bill -- the painting was the inspiration for the poem (that we had performed coincidently the previous May in Brooklyn with Eva Lindal and Ken Filiano in quintet) -- photo by Jim Gale -- May 5

Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet —- We hung that painting by JB on the first night to accompany the poem “Spiderweb Mandala Flower Explosion Poem: Drishti” that I read with Carol & Bill — the painting was the inspiration for the poem (that we had performed coincidently the previous May in Brooklyn with Eva Lindal and Ken Filiano in quintet) — photo by Jim Gale — May 5

Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet -- Charley Krachy, tenor saxophone; Don Messina, bass (having brought own his gut strings restrung on the Outpost house bass): Bill Chattin, drums (with Cal's cymbals and hihat) + myself on poem -- May 5, 2o16 photo by Jim Gale

Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet — Charley Krachy, tenor saxophone; Don Messina, bass (having brought own his gut strings restrung on the Outpost house bass): Bill Chattin, drums (with Cal’s cymbals and hihat) + myself on poem — May 5, 2o16 photo by Jim Gale

Kazzrie Jaxen -- May 5 -- photo by Jim Gale

Kazzrie Jaxen — May 5 — photo by Jim Gale

Charley Krachy and Don Messina -- May 5 -- When I think of the aggregate of musicians in the Tristano lineage I am reminded of the Dunbar Number, a theory in anthropology that understands social groups to function up to 150 individuals, the limit to which human tribes/clans can work as a group effectively ---- After that they split off -- For instance, with the Genome research now on the table has made it possible to mathematically figure out that the first homo sapiens who left Africa 50,000 years ago (to the minute) was a group of 150 (!) -- similarly, the collective that radiates closely out of Lennie, Connie, and Sal, stretch all over the world and someday I'm going to make a list, and I bet you it's close to 150 -- Photo by Jim Gale

Charley Krachy and Don Messina — May 5 — When I think of the aggregate of musicians in the Tristano lineage I am reminded of the Dunbar Number, a theory in anthropology that understands social groups to function up to 150 individuals, the limit to which human tribes/clans can work as a group effectively —- After that they split off — For instance, with the Genome research now on the table has made it possible to mathematically figure out that the first homo sapiens who left Africa 50,000 years ago (to the minute) was a group of 150 (!) — similarly, the collective that radiates closely out of Lennie, Connie, and Sal, stretch all over the world and someday I’m going to make a list, and I bet you it’s close to 150 — Photo by Jim Gale

Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet plus Mark Weber -- May 5, 2o16 -- photo by Jim Gale -- You never see sheet music on stage with any of the musicians associated with New Artists Records

Kazzrie Jaxen Quartet plus Mark Weber — May 5, 2o16 — photo by Jim Gale — You never see sheet music on stage with any of the musicians associated with New Artists Records

Carol Liebowitz on her solo set May 6 ---- I think Carol, for the most part, prefers to play free -- I totally love her treatment of tunes and had openly hoped she'd play a couple tunes (as producer, I don't interfere with what the artists are going to do) but she complied and played "Melancholy Baby" and "It's You or No One" and was fantastic abstractions cosmos interlace deep dive -- photo by Jim Gale

Carol Liebowitz on her solo set May 6 —- I think Carol, for the most part, prefers to play free — I totally love her treatment of tunes and had openly hoped she’d play a couple tunes (as producer, I don’t interfere with what the artists are going to do) but she complied and played “Melancholy Baby” and “It’s You or No One” and was fantastic abstractions cosmos interlace deep dive — photo by Jim Gale

Alas, the red tape to secure a work/performance visa from the US Embassy was too daunting and expensive and a drag so that Eva couldn't make it to be with the trio, so Bill Payne and Carol Liebowitz soldiered on in the duet format (Eva Lindal lives in Stockholm) -- photo by Jim Gale -- May 6, 2o16

Alas, the red tape to secure a work/performance visa from the US Embassy was too daunting and expensive and a drag so that Eva couldn’t make it to be with the trio, so Bill Payne and Carol Liebowitz soldiered on in the duet format (Eva Lindal lives in Stockholm) — photo by Jim Gale — May 6, 2o16

Normally this ensemble is the Payne Lindal Liebowitz Trio but during Interlace it was just the two -- photo by Jim Gale -- May 6, 2o16 ---- Everything they do is a free stretch

Normally this ensemble is the Payne Lindal Liebowitz Trio but during Interlace it was just the two — photo by Jim Gale — May 6, 2o16 —- Everything they do is a free stretch

I have sometimes tried to sort out what it is about this consortium of musicians that attracts me -- they are all different, but share a common sensibility, there's something in the notes, a bluesy-ness and solidity of intent -- and the Lester Young thing with the long lines of lyric improvisation -- They have remained patient, never rushing things, their attention to a truly authentic expression, purely honest desire to play and inhabit meaningful statements ----------- It seems like every thing I can say about these musicians you could say about every other jazz musician I've known, except there is still some mysterious quality that distinguishes them, maybe it has something to do with female energy, (the moon and its tides)? Kazzrie & Virg -- May 6, 2o16 -- photo by Jim Gale

I have sometimes tried to sort out what it is about this consortium of musicians that attracts me — they are all different, but share a common sensibility, there’s something in the notes, a bluesy-ness and solidity of intent — and the Lester Young thing with the long lines of lyric improvisation — They have remained patient, never rushing things, their attention to a truly authentic expression, purely honest desire to play and inhabit meaningful statements ———– It seems like every thing I can say about these musicians you could say about every other jazz musician I’ve known, except there is still some mysterious quality that distinguishes them, maybe it has something to do with female energy, (the moon and its tides)? Kazzrie & Virg — May 6, 2o16 — photo by Jim Gale

At the end Janet had bought flowers -- Carol, Virg, Kazzrie, and Bill C -- May 6, 2o16 -- I never told anyone but these two nights of concerts were my private memorial for my parents -- Don & Joy Weber -- who had passed away in the not so recent past ---- Photo by Jim Gale

At the end Janet had bought flowers — Carol, Virg, Kazzrie, and Bill C — May 6, 2o16 — I never told anyone but these two nights of concerts were my private memorial for my parents — Don & Joy Weber — who had passed away in the not so recent past —- Photo by Jim Gale

Photographer Jim Gale at his Inpost Artspace exhibit July 30, 2o11 photo by Mark Weber

Photographer Jim Gale at his Inpost Artspace exhibit July 30, 2o11 photo by Mark Weber

11 Comments

  1. Mark Sowlakis

    Always a pleasure to read your posts. Thanks for all you do for music and musicians. I am proud to be on the same page aesthetically and spiritually as you and your tribe…..Markos

  2. BillPayne

    One of the great weeks of my life!!! Thank you Mark! Danise had a great time too.

  3. Mark Weber

    The audiences these nights were the deepest listeners I have ever come across, it was scary. Nobody toying with smart phones or iDevices. Nobody catching a few winks. Nobody fidgeting. They were into the zone —— was one of those audience you pray for. Makes it all worth it.

  4. MG

    Great photos, and memories of a great event! – Mark

  5. Andrea Wolper

    I loved reading this, and wish I could’ve been there for these concerts. This network or tribe or community you describe has overlapping circles, circles within circles, layers inside of layers. It/they radiate/s in all directions. I think that in some ways our sadness has drawn us closer. At least, that’s what I’m feeling.

  6. Ramsey

    Thanks to you, Janet, and Outpost for presenting the INTERLACE concerts. I was there on the 6th and everyone and everything seemed to radiate something special. The spirits of shared improvisations were having a great time- clearly agile, certainly comfortable in Albuquerque’a higher elevation. There was an interlace of many layers….

  7. Bob Gusch

    Inspiring!

  8. charley

    Mark, Yes, you sure do have a way with words and expression….and being on the stage with you reading was a thrill for me. I really dug the whole Albuquerque experience and just want to say thanks again to you, Tom and Janet for your wonderful hospitality and friendship…!!

    charley

  9. Mark Weber

    NOTE: New Artists Records was started by Max Roach and Connie in 1982. It was a little later shortly thereafter that it became a cooperative. The first album was SWISH by Max & Connie in 1982. The second was Connie’s CONCERT AT COOPER UNION, 1984. The third was Richard Tabnik & Connie DUO DIMENSION, 1987. The fourth was Andy Fite & Liz Gorrill PHANTASMAGORIA, 1988. The fifth was LOVE ENERGY by Lenny Popkin-Connie Crothers Quartet, 1988. These first five were originally released as vinyl LPs. Everything after that was CDs.

  10. Charley Krachy

    Mark,
    Your timing is perfect….I especially needed this now. It was wonderful being there and performing….!!! Hoping we can hook up when you come east..!!

    • Mark Weber

      (Yes, Charley, time and the river.)

      As I said in an email yesterday to all participants in this 2-day event: Has it really been 2 years since these concerts? Where has the time gone?

      Unfolding time and the rotation of the Earth has its own exigencies, not too unsurprisingly. But still, I’m surprised at the flow. We have so much more to do, together. At the time of these concerts Connie was in the Yucatan at a cancer retreat, she was in our thoughts —- We will meet again, as the old song says —– In a lot of ways she opened up a whole new way to play jazz piano

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