Rob Mazurek

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  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

Originally rooted in the tradition of hard bop jazz, cornetist Rob Mazurek developed into one of the most consistently exciting pure improvisers of his time. As a founding member of the multifaceted Chicago Underground collective and the 21st century fusion outfit Isotope 217, his playing has redefined musical boundaries through vibrant sonic palettes that defy categorization.

Born in 1965 in Jersey City, New Jersey, Mazurek moved with his family to the Chicago area as a preteen, and began playing cornet in his school band at the age of ten. After switching briefly to trumpet, he eventually settled on the smaller horn. Upon graduating from high school, the young musician attended the Bloom School of Jazz in Chicago. He got his start as a performer in the city, playing with pianist Kenny Prince and drummer Yoron Israel. Early influences came from the hard bop nucleus of Blue Note Records (particularly the trumpet playing of Lee Morgan, Kenny Dorham, and Freddie Hubbard). It was in this mold that Mazurek shaped his first group, a quartet with drummer George Fludas, bassist John Webber, and pianist Randolph Tressler. In 1993, Mazurek booked an engagement at Edinburgh's Tron Tavern & Ceilidh House for the entire length of the country's Fringe Festival. Though the music was fairly traditional, the performances were a success, and the following year the group was offered a deal with Scotland's Hep label. The quartet's promise was certified with Man Facing East in 1994 and Badlands in 1995.

Mazurek was hearing a new sound, however. His creative impulses were being sparked by the music of Ornette Coleman and his cornet-wielding sparring partner from the late '50s, Don Cherry, as well as the Art Ensemble of Chicago. The list would quickly grow to include the free playing of Henry Threadgill, Bill Dixon, and Leo Smith, and by the time of 1996's Green & Blue, Mazurek was beginning to see the limitations of his quartet. That year he established the Chicago Underground, a Sunday afternoon workshop at a local bar, the Green Mill. The first person he invited to his new musical high-wire act was guitarist Jeff Parker. The jam sessions quickly attracted a group of regulars including bassist Noel Kupersmith and drummer Chad Taylor, and Mazurek found that he had the core for an ensemble. It was this new crew (completed by trombonist Sara Smith), billed as the Chicago Underground Orchestra, that recorded Playground for Bob Koester's Delmark in 1998. The partnership automatically linked Mazurek's group with a rich tradition of Chicago jazz, as Delmark had championed a number of artists from the city's Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians.

Mazurek's Orchestra would spawn a number of spinoffs including a Duo (with Taylor), Trio (with Kupersmith), and a Quartet (with Parker), all of which wore the Chicago Underground banner. Parker had moved into the loft of Chicago out-rockers Tortoise a few years earlier and quickly became a full-time member. Two musical worlds -- fringe jazz and fringe rock -- met and Mazurek found himself exposed to an entirely new realm of sonic possibilities. In the years that followed, he made numerous extracurricular appearances, lending his cornet to Tortoise's TNT, Gastr del Sol's Camoufleur, Stereolab's Cobra and Phases Group, and Sam Prekop's solo debut, among others. It was out of this musical cross-fertilization that, in 1997, Isotope 217 was born. A disorienting mix of jazz flourishes, muscular funk, hip-hop reductions, and minimalist electronica, the group was a collaboration between Orchestra members (Mazurek, Parker, and Smith), veteran Chicago bassist Matt Lux, and Tortoise's Dan Bitney and John Herndon. The sextet released its debut, The Unstable Molecule, in 1998, followed by Utonian Automatic (1999) and Who Stole the I Walkman? (2000).

Meanwhile, the music emanating from the Chicago Underground was approaching the realm of pure sound on albums like Synesthesia and Possible Cube. Mazurek had discovered the music of Morton Feldman and Vladimir Ussachevsky as well as visual artists like Mark Rothko, all of which seemed to find a way into the music. As the century drew to a close, he was hard at work developing laptop-constructed musique concrète for his Orton Socket project. Mazurek subsequently moved from the United States to São Paulo, Brazil, and has continued to maintain an internationalist perspective, touring and recording with such ensembles as the São Paulo Underground, the Exploding Star Orchestra, and the improvisational trio Tigersmilk, and presenting new works at the Dieppe Biennale in Normandy, France, in 2007. In addition, the Exploding Star Orchestra appeared at the Chicago Jazz Festival with vanguard jazz legend Bill Dixon. Together they premiered one new extended composition by each man. It was the latter's first large scale experiment with a video score. In 2008, the collaboration continued in the recording studio, resulting in Bill Dixon with Exploding Star Orchestra on Thrill Jockey. It was Dixon's final recording.

Mazurek was extremely active in 2010. He recorded Boca Negra with the Chicago Underground Duo, Stars Have Eyes with the Exploding Star Orchestra (both on Thrill Jockey), and a solo effort entitled Calma Genta, on Submarine Records' Catune imprint. In 2011, he issued Star Licker, the initial offering by his new Double Demon group on Delmark, with vibraphonist Jason Adasiewicz and drummer John Herndon. In addition, his stellar Sao Paulo Underground group released its third offering, Tres Cabeças Loucuras on Cuneiform. He toured behind both. Given his other projects, the Chicago Underground Duo remained near the top of Mazurek's priority list. The pair released Age of Energy in the early spring of 2012. ~ Nathan Bush, Rovi
Top
Rob Mazurek
Born 1965 (age 45–46)
Origin Chicago, Illinois, United States
Genres Jazz, experimental
Instruments Cornet
Years active 1990?-present
Associated acts Isotope 217
Chicago Underground
Tigersmilk
Mandarin Movie
Website www.robmazurek.com

Rob Mazurek (born 1965) is an American composer, jazz musician, and visual artist originally from Chicago, Illinois. Mazurek now resides in São Paulo Brazil.

Contents

Biography

Mazurek was born in Jersey City, New Jersey in 1965, and played trumpet and cornet in high school in Naperville, Illinois. After high school he attended the Bloom School of Jazz in Chicago, and began playing gigs with local jazz musicians. In the early 1990s, he played hard bop with his first quartet, featuring drummer George Fludas, bassist John Webber, and pianist Randolph Tressler. This troupe booked an extended set of gigs in Edinburgh, Scotland, and Scottish label Hep Records released three albums of theirs, in 1994, 1995, and 1997.[1]

In 1996, Mazurek founded a workshop at Chicago jazz club The Green Mill called Chicago Underground for the performance of avant-garde, improvisatory jazz. By 1998, a new ensemble had formed around this idea, featuring guitarist Jeff Parker, drummer Chad Taylor, bassist Noel Kupersmith, and trombonist Sara Smith. As the Chicago Underground Orchestra, this ensemble released several albums on Chicago's Delmark Records. Mazurek continued to form groups under the Chicago Underground umbrella, performing as the Chicago Underground Duo and Chicago Underground Quartet.[1]

By then a well-known figure on the Chicago jazz scene, Mazurek collaborated with a number of jazz and experimental rock artists, performing on albums by Tortoise, Sam Prekop, Gastr del Sol, Stereolab, and Brokeback. Out of these experiments was born the experimental collaboration Isotope 217. Mazurek would continue experimenting with his laptop-based project Orton Socket.[1] Mazurek has released several albums on Chicago's Thrill Jockey records in the 2000s, including some under the Chicago Underground designation.

Mazurek also paints and experiments with multimedia art.[2] In addition to touring extensively worldwide as a musician, he has had works exhibited at art galleries such as Heaven Gallery in Chicago, Naked Duck Gallery in New York, and Gantner Multi-Media Center in France.[3]

In March 2003 Mazurek participated in the SUB/SAS workshop in Palermo, Italy. A workshop exploring the means of a contemporary trend of interdisciplinary relationships between artists, sound artists, landscape designers and architects. Through this group he has exhibited paintings-videos-sound works in Rome, Copenhagen, Brussels, Paris and Palermo and continues his collaboration with the group with exhibitions/workshops planned in 2005 for Helsinki, Barcelona and Toronto.

In 2005 Mazurek was awarded the prestigious grant/residency at the Abbaye Royale de Fontevraud in France where he developed a multi-media piece based on the environment of the Abbaye. The piece (which includes digital manipulation of piano compositions, paintings, digital manipulation of paintings, video and text) was presented in May 2005 as part of the Abbaye's "Creation Week".

On August 11, 2005 Mazurek debuted his new large ensemble "Exploding Star Orchestra", at Millennium Park in Chicago. The group includes some of the most powerful and interesting players in Chicago today.

In 2006 he introduced the São Paulo Underground (Aesthetics Records/Submarine Records/Headz Japan), touring worldwide and became a member of Jason Ajemian's new ensemble "Day Dream New Life Styles" featuring Tony Mallaby, Jeff Parker, and Chad Taylor.

January 2007 saw the debut release of his EXPLODING STAR ORCHESTRA "We Are All From Somewhere Else".

In April 2007 he celebrated the release of a DVD/CD release of the Chicago Underground Trio entitled "Chronicle", which features the film work of Raymond Salvatore Harmon.

In June 2007, Tigersmilk will release its third cd "Android Love Cry" with new digital prints by Mazurek.

Currently he is working on new solo cornet/music concrete works based on material from the Abbaye Royale de Fontevraud residency, that will be released on Adluna Records fall of 2007 and new sound/visual works that will be featured on the Bottrop-Boy label in winter 2008.

In June 2007 he was invited to the Dieppe Bienale in Normandy France to present new sound and visual works.

On September 2, 2007 his group Exploding Star Orchestra performed at the Chicago Jazz Festival with the great Bill Dixon, performing a new composition by Bill Dixon and a new composition by Mazurek utilizing his first experiments in the world of video score.[3]

Discography

  • 1994 Man Facing East (Hep Records)
  • 1995 Badlands (Hep)
  • 1997 Green & Blue (Hep)
  • 1998 Playground (Delmark Records)
  • 1998 12 Degrees of Freedom (Thrill Jockey)
  • 1999 Possible Cube (Delmark)
  • 2000 Synesthesia (Thrill Jockey)
  • 2000 Flamethrower (Delmark)
  • 2001 Chicago Underground Quartet (Thrill Jockey)
  • 2001 Amorphic Winged (Walking Road)
  • 2002 Axis and Alignment (Thrill Jockey)
  • 2002 Silver Spines (Delmark)
  • 2004 Slon (Thrill Jockey)
  • 2004 Sweet and Vicious Like Frankenstein (Mego Records)
  • 2005 Mandarin Movie (Aesthetics Records)
  • 2006 In Praise of Shadows (Thrill Jockey)
  • 2006 Sauna: Um, Dois, Tres (Aesthetics)
  • 2007 Chronicle (Delmark)
  • 2007 Exploding Star Orchestra: We are all from somewhere else (Thrill Jockey)
  • 2008 Bill Dixon with Exploding Star Orchestra (Thrill Jockey)
  • 2009 Rob Mazurek Quintet: Sound Is (Delmark)
  • 2010 Boca Negra (Thrill Jockey)
  • 2010 Calma Gente (Submarine Records)
  • 2010 Exploding Star Orchestra: Stars Have Shapes (Delmark)
  • 2011 Starlicker: Double Demon (Delmark)

References

  1. ^ a b c Rob Mazurek at Allmusic
  2. ^ Mark Corroto, Rob Mazurek/Mandarin Movie. All About Jazz, April 15, 2005. Accessed July 4, 2007.
  3. ^ a b Rob Mazurek at All About Jazz. Accessed July 4, 2007.

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Mentioned in

Isotope 217 (Rock Band, '90s, 2000s)
Chicago Underground Trio (Jazz Band, '90s, 2000s)
Pan American (Electronica Artist, '90s, 2000s)
Chicago Underground Duo (Jazz Band, '90s, 2000s)
Jason Ajemian (Jazz Artist, 2000s)