$15 Cover @ the Door ($10 Students) / Start 8pm / Doors 7:30pm / Seated Show
Joe Morris
"One of the most profound improvisors at work in the U.S." - Will Montgomery, The Wire
"… the guitar revolutionary to pay attention to." - Norman Weinstein, The Boston Pheonix
"… a guitarist whose sound is completely his own, oscillating between deadpan sweetness and dangerous, shrapnel-like caprice." - K. Leander Williams, The Village Voice
Joe Morris is a composer/improviser multi-instrumentalist who plays guitar, double bass, mandolin, banjo, banjouke electric bass and EVEN NOW, drums.
Joe is an uncompromisingly original guitarist following in the tradition of other conceptual free jazz guitar innovators like Derek Bailey, Sonny Sharrock, Eugene Chadbourne, and James Ulmer. However, Morris has developed his own unique approach to guitar playing, composition, and improvisation that is unlike his peers. He usually incorporates a clean tone of the bebop lineage for his single-note-driven improvisations. His recordings are widely eclectic, ranging from solo performances, traditional acoustic settings, and fusion dates to various groups with interesting instrumentation.
Morris spent his formative years in New Haven, Connecticut. In 1975, he moved to Boston, where his unique approach was not initially accepted in the then-prevalent modal jazz scene. Yet, became an important part of the improv scene, including recording and producing concerts. Despite this temporary setback, and some time spent playing guitar in Europe, he developed a pivotal collaborative relationship with multi-instrumentalist Lowell Davidson.
Between 1986 and 1989 he lived in New York City. Upon moving to Connecticut in 2001 he created the Just Play series in New Haven (2003/2004), curated the premier season at Firehouse 12 (2005), was artistic director for Hartford Jazz Society Jazz in the Park series (2008), co-founded and curated the Improvisations series at Real Art Ways in Hartford (2011–2016), and founded and co-curated the Multiplex series at State House in New Haven (2019).
Joe picked up the upright bass in 2000 and is heard with it as frequently as his guitar!
In 1981, Morris began his own label, Riti Records (named after an African single-stringed folk instrument), to document his prolific musical output. During the '90s he arguably became the most widely heralded free jazz guitarist in jazz, while recording with many avant-garde luminaries. He is now on the faculty at New England Conservatory in the jazz and improvisation department.
Ken Vandermark
“The fire-breathing Ken Vandermark takes chances that others dare not pursue, risk ridicule in the hopes of finding a new path?” - Chicago Tribune
He first gained widespread attention while with the NRG Ensemble from 1992 to 1996. He was once a member of Witches and Devils and the Flying Luttenbachers and has led or co-led several groups, including DKV Trio, Free Fall, Territory Band, CINC, Sonore, the Vandermark 5, the Free Music Ensemble, School Days, the Sound in Action Trio, Steam and Powerhouse Sound.
He began during his college years in Montreal and then continued in Boston, where he led the trio Lombard Street
In 1996, he and writer John Corbett began organizing the Empty Bottle “Wednesday Night Jazz Series,” concerts that brought musicians from Chicago, North America, and Europe to audiences on a weekly basis for nearly a decade.
For the past 20 years, Ken Vandermark has been exploring and working to expand the possibilities of improvised and composed music in North America and Europe.
Since moving to Chicago from Boston in 1989, he's performed and recorded in a variety of contexts, and with many internationally renowned musicians.
Starting in April 2006, Ken has continued this work by co-directing the “Immediate Sound Series” with Mitch Cocanig at the Hideout. Since the fall of 2005 he has also been a member of Umbrella Music, a musician based group of organizers collaborating in Chicago.
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