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Air

 
Artist: Air
  • Formed: 1971
  • Disbanded: 1987
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Representative Albums: "Air Lore," "Live Air," "Air Show No. 1"

Biography

First among many ensembles in different genres that have chosen the name Air, this trio specializing in collective improvisation grew directly from the membership of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. Throughout 11 albums that appeared over a span of one dozen years this group operated in modes comparable to that of the Art Ensemble of Chicago and at times some of Albert Ayler's early trio realizations. Its inception occurred in 1971, when saxophonist Henry Threadgill agreed to fulfill a request from the theater department at Chicago's Columbia College to devise modern arrangements based upon ragtime compositions of Scott Joplin (a concept borne to fruition by Anthony Braxton and Muhal Richard Abrams in 1976). Threadgill joined forces with bassist Fred Hopkins and drummer Steve McCall, and named the trio Reflection.

Although they parted ways the following year, the cooperative unit reassembled in New York in 1975 and chose the elemental name Air. This and their collective penchant for spontaneous creativity resulted in a string of exciting albums with titles like Air Song, Air Raid, Live Air (combining material recorded at Studio Rivbea in New York City's Soho and at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor), Air Time, and Open Air Suite, which has the distinction of being one of the few record albums ever decorated with a painting of a baboon's big blue ass on the cover. Released in 1979, Air Lore returned to the unit's initial itinerary of Scott Joplin, now interspersed with melodies by Jelly Roll Morton.

Following Air Mail (which includes the sound of Threadgill's own invention, the hubkaphone, an instrument made out of hubcaps) and 80 Degrees Below '82, McCall left the group in 1982 to work with Cecil Taylor and Roscoe Mitchell. His replacement was Pheeroan akLaff, a dynamic individual from Detroit who would ultimately be replaced by Andrew Cyrille within months of the group's dissolution. Rechristened New Air, the trio was recorded live at the 1983 Montreal Jazz Festival but made only one other album, Air Show No. 1, in collaboration with vocalist Cassandra Wilson. By the time this recording was made available in 1987, Air had ceased to exist as Threadgill emerged as a leader of his own larger ensembles, issuing records like X-75, Vol. 1, When Was That?, and Just the Facts and Pass the Bucket. Steve McCall was felled by a stroke in May of 1989 and Fred Hopkins passed away ten years later. ~ arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Air (jazz group)
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Air was a free jazz trio founded in 1971 by saxophone player Henry Threadgill, double bassist Fred Hopkins and drummer Steve McCall. They combined radical free improvisation with a strong sense of tune and equal emphasis on each instrument in the group.[1]

They began when Threadgill was asked by Columbia College in Chicago, Illinois to arrange a number of Scott Joplin songs. Joplin was so strongly associated with piano that the musicians enjoyed the challenge of performing his trademark songs without piano. They opted to play them as rags and as a basis for jazz improvisation.

The group recorded some twelve albums, among them Air Lore from 1979 on the Arista/Novus label of Arista Records, which is a recording of improvisations over more Scott Joplin songs as well as selections by Jelly Roll Morton and a Henry Threadgill original. It remains a classic.[2] Other albums of note are Air Time from 1977, and 80 Degrees Below 82 from 1982. The Penguin Guide to Jazz included Air Song and Air Time in its suggested "Core Collection."[3]

Air broke up and reformed several times, and after McCall's death, Andrew Cyrille performed as part of the trio. They released two CD's with drummer Pheeroan Aklaff as "New Air" (on Black Saint).

Discography

Title Year Label
Air Song 1975 India Navigation
Live Air 1976 Black Saint
Air Raid 1976 Whynot
Air Time 1977 Nessa
Open Air Suite 1978 Novus
Suisse Air 1978 Novus
Air Lore 1979 Novus
Air Mail 1980 Black Saint
80 ° Below '82 1982 Antilles
Live At Montreal 1983 Black Saint
Air Show No. 1 1986 Black Saint

References

  1. ^ Allmusic
  2. ^ RECORD NOTES; A Recording Studio As Artists See It - New York Times
  3. ^ Cook, Richard; Brian Morton (2006) [1992]. "Air". The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings. The Penguin Guide to Jazz (8th ed. ed.). New York: Penguin. pp. 13. ISBN 0-141-02327-9. 

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