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Re: any written material on Hassell`s harmonic structures/improvisation-approach
His bio is on his website. (very impressive, Per!)
Tom
http://www.jonhassell.com/bio.html
----- Original Message -----
From: "Per Boysen" <perboysen@gmail.com>
To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
Sent: Sunday, August 19, 2007 10:23 AM
Subject: Re: any written material on Hassell`s harmonic
structures/improvisation-approach
> On 19 aug 2007, at 18.51, rune fagereng wrote:
>
>>> I would like to know and understand more about
>>> Hassells music. Are there something written on this
>>> subject? Like what are this harmoni-structure on -
>>> lets say, "open secrets" ? How does he think and
>>> approach when improvising?
>
>
> There's some texts at his web site and some articles on the internet,
> that you should find by Google. As far as I remember no one have asked
> him those questions though... or maybe he refuses to answer. At least I
> know he started out studying singing with this Indian male singer I
>can't
> remember the name of right now. After a wile Jon started bringing his
> trumpet, instead of singing, to the lectures. In India you learn by
> playing/singing together with the master by trying to copy the
>phrasing.
> So what he has always been doing is actually to play trumpet as close
>as
> possible to the particular Indian vocal singing tradition (sorry, don't
> know much about Indian vocal tradition either). When coming back (to
>New
> York, I think it was) he wanted to expand his playing into a "music
> style" by adding drums. He took the decision to not fall back on the
> Indian tabla tradition because he felt it would be too much of the same
> spice crammed into the same sandwich (oops, my expression ;-) and
>that's
> why he looked to African rhythms. He recorded the Burundi Drummers
>(West
> African..?) and simply flew them into some tracks on the multi track
>tape
> recorder to go along with his "indian singing" trumpet lines (sometimes
> adding a fifth by harmonizer). Myself I have always loved the way
>these
> hand drumming does not play a certain beat pattern (rather sounding
>like
> thunder or zebras running by etc) and maybe the explanation to this is
> that his early recordings were created with this collage technique? I
> don't know if he played the trumpet lines listening to those
> zebra-thunder-no-beat-drumming-clatter-cluster or if he recorded the
> trumpet first and then spliced in the drumming tape later? Would be
>nice
> to find out the truth about that.
>
> I'm not sure there is much "harmony structure" at all in his music? I
> don't know about his inner ways of approaching improvisation but to my
> ears it sounds very Indian, like the Raga tradition; using a theme an
> stretching it into different directions during different parts of the
> evolving piece. That music is more about Time than Harmony.
>
> On last thing; very early he mounted the term "Coffee Colored Music" as
>a
> way to describe the music he wanted to do. He meant that he takes
> influences from all cultures and colors and if you mix all colors of
>the
> entire world it would end up as - coffee colored. This was "world music
> for the future" before that term "world music" was even invented by
> media.
>
> Think I reached the bottom of my all too thin Hassel knowledge by that
>-
> over and out.
>
> Greetings from Sweden
>
> Per Boysen
> www.boysen.se (Swedish)
> www.looproom.com (international)
>
>
>
>
>