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Free improvisation or
free music is musical improvisation without any rules beyond the taste or inclination of the musician(s) involved; in many cases the musicians make an active effort to avoiding overt references to recognizable musical genres. The term is somewhat paradoxical, since it can be considered both as a technique (employed by any musician who wishes to disregard rigid genres and forms) and as a recognizable genre in its own right.
"Free improvisation", as a style of music, developed in the U.S. and Europe in the mid and late 1960s, largely as an outgrowth of free jazz and contemporary music musics. Relatively little known and somewhat loosely-defined, none of its exponents can be said to be "famous" amongst the general public. However, in experimental circles, a number of free musicians are well known, including
saxophones
Evan Parker and Peter Brötzmann, guitarist
Derek Bailey, and the improvising group
AMM (group).
Characteristics
Although performers may choose to play in a certain style or key signature, or at a certain
tempo, conventional songs are highly uncommon in free improvisation; more emphasis is generally placed on
mood, texture (music) or, more simply, on "performative gesture" than on preset forms of melody,
harmony or rhythm. These elements are improvised at will, as the music progresses.
Guitarist Derek Bailey proposed
non-idiomatic improvisation as a more accurately descriptive term, claiming the form offers musicians more possibilities "per cubic second" than any genre (
Guitar Player, January 1997); while
guitarist Elliott Sharp (himself occasionally active in free improvisation) has argued—partly tongue in cheek—that no improvisation is ever truly free, excepting the unlikelihood of amnesiac improvising musicians. (ibid) Interestingly, John Eyles notes that Bailey has been quoted as saying that free improvisation is “playing without memory”
In his landmark book
Improvisation, Bailey has written "The lack of precision over its improv's naming is, if anything, increased when we come to the thing itself. Diversity is its most consistent characteristic. It has no stylistic or idiomatic commitment. It has no prescribed idiomatic sound. The characteristics of freely improvised music are established only by the sonic-musical identity of the person or persons playing it."
Free music performers, coming from a disparate variety of backgrounds, often engage musically with other List of genres of musics. For example, acclaimed soundtrack composer Ennio Morricone was a member of the free improvisation group Nuova Consonanza. Rock musician Thurston Moore has released a number of free improvisation collaborations. Anthony Braxton has written
opera, and John Zorn has written acclaimed orchestral pieces.
As it has influenced and been influenced by other areas of exploration, aspects of modern classical music (extended techniques),
noise rock (aggressive confrontation),
Intelligent dance music (computer manipulation and digital synthesis),
minimalism and
electroacoustic music can now be heard in free improvisation.
History
Though there are many important precedents and developments, free improvisation developed gradually, making it difficult to pinpoint a single moment when the style was "born". As an uncredited critic has written for
Allmusic, "being freed of all rules, free improvisation cannot be traced back to a genre other than the very generic term 'avant-garde.'"
However, in the same article cited above, Bailey contends that free improvisation must have been the earliest musical style, because "mankind's first musical performance couldn't have been anything other than a free improvisation." Similarly, Keith Rowe stated, "Other players got into playing freely, way before AMM, way before Derek ! Who knows when free playing started? You can imagine
lute players in the 1500s getting drunk and doing improvisations for people in front of a log fire.. the noise, the clatter must have been enormous. You read absolutely incredible descriptions of that. I cannot believe that musicians back then didn't float off into free playing. The
melisma in Claudio Monteverdi must derive from that. But it was all in the context of a
repertoire."
Classical Precedents
Skilled musicians were expected to improvise in the
common practice period (about 1600 to 1900), and many well-known composers and performers (such as violinist Paganini, and keyboardist and composer
Beethoven) were acclaimed for their skills at improvisation. The
cadenza portion of a
concerto was an opportunity for the instrumental soloist to demonstrate their improvisatory skills. Different composers allowed for varrying degrees of improvisation in a cadenza: sometimes a soloist would simply embelish a pre-composed cadenza with a few minor changes; other times, however, the soloist had much more latitude as to how they improvised during the cradenza, with a blank spot being left on the score (with or without an indication of how long the musician was expected to improvise), and pitches, notes, melodies, harmony and tempo left to the soloist's discretion.
But by about 1900, such improvisation fell out of style, and even slight deviations from a printed score could be regarded as improper.
By the middle decades of the 20th century, however, composers like
Henry Cowell,
Morton Feldman,
Karlheinz Stockhausen and George Crumb, re-introduced improvisation to classical music, with compositions that allowed or even required musicians to improvise. Perhaps the most notable example of this is
Cornelius Cardew's
Treatise (music): a
Graphic notation (music) with no conventional notation whatsoever, which musicians were invited to interpret. (It's no coincidence that Cardew was a member of AMM.)
Another notable group,
Musica Elettronica Viva, were formed in Rome in 1966 by
Alvin Curran,
Richard Teitelbaum, Frederic Rzewski, Allan Bryant,
Carol Plantamura,
Ivan Vandor, and Jon Phetteplace -- most of whom had at least some crossover with the "experimental classical" world.
Jazz Precedents
Perhaps the earliest free recordings are two pieces recorded under the leadership of
jazz pianist Lennie Tristano: "Intuition" and "Digression", both recorded in 1949 with a
sextet including saxophone players
Lee Konitz and
Warne Marsh. In 1954 Shelly Manne recorded a piece called "Abstract No. 1" with trumpeter Shorty Rogers and reedsmith Jimmy Giuffre which was freely improvised. Jazz critic
Harvey Pekar has also pointed out that one of
Django Reinhardt's recorded improvisations strays drastically from the chord changes of the established piece. While noteworthy, these examples were clearly in the jazz idiom.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the free jazz movement coalesced around such important (and disparate) figures as
Cecil Taylor, Sun Ra,
Ornette Coleman,
John Coltrane, as well as many lesser-known figures such as
Joe Maneri. Free jazz allowed for radical improvised departures from the harmonic and rhythmic material of the composition – for instance, by permitting performers to ignore conventional repeating song-structures. Such music often seemed far removed from the preceding jazz tradition.
These ideas were extended in 1962's
Free Fall recording by jazz clarinetist Jimmy Giuffre's trio, featuring music that was often freely and spontaneously improvised, and which had only tenous similarity to established jazz styles. Another important recording was
New York Eye and Ear Control (1964), a soundtrack for a film by Michael Snow, recorded for the
ESP-Disk label under the leadership of saxophonist
Albert Ayler. Snow suggested to Ayler that the band simply play without a composition or themes.
The Spontaneous Music Ensemble was formed by John Stevens (drummer) and
Trevor Watts in the mid-1960s and included, at various times, influential players such as
Derek Bailey,
Evan Parker, Kenny Wheeler, Roger Smith, and John Butcher. As with the AACM, many of these players began in jazz, but gradually pushed the music into a zone of abstraction and relative quietude. The British record label
Emanem has documented much music in this vein.
There was (and continues to be) often considerable blurring of the line between
free jazz and free improvisation. The Chicago-based Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), a loose collective of improvising musicians including Muhal Richard Abrams,
Henry Threadgill, Anthony Braxton, Jack DeJohnette,
Lester Bowie, Roscoe Mitchell, Joseph Jarman,
Famadou Don Moye, and
Malachi Favors was formed in 1965 and included many of the key players in the nascent international free improv scene. (Braxton recorded many times with Bailey and Teitelbaum; Mitchell recorded with
Thomas Buckner and Pauline Oliveros.)
In 1966
Elektra Records issued the first recording of European free improvisation by the UK group
AMM (group), which included at the time Cornelius Cardew,
Eddie Prévost,
Lou Gare, Keith Rowe and
Lawrence Sheaff.
International Free Improvisation
Through the remainder of the 1960s and through the 1970s, free improvisation spread across the U.S., Europe and East Asia, entering quickly into a dialogue with
Fluxus, happenings and performance art (Cardew, for example, being associated with La Monte Young and other New York happenings artists) initially and making its influence immeadiately felt on rock and roll. (Syd Barrett of Pink Floyd was famously an AMM devotee; the
Grateful Dead were noteworthy extensions of the influence.)
By the mid-1970s, free improvisation was truly a worldwide phenomenon. Japanese players like saxophonist
Kaoru Abe and guitarist
Masayuki Takayanagi took the music to dazzling heights. The Los Angeles Free Music Society ran ahead with rambunctious glee through the ideals of free music. And in 1976 Derek Bailey founded Company (group) a festival which lasted until 1994 and combined an ever-changing roster of improvisers who collaborated, sometimes for the first time, live. This "musical chairs" approach to collaboration was partly Bailey's response to Stevens's insistence that musicians needed to collaborate for months or years to improvise well together. The spirit of Company survives in many similar ongoing festival and events worldwide.
Electroacoustic Improvisation
A recent branch of improvised music is characterized by quiet, slow moving, minimalistic textures and often utilizing laptop computers or unorthodox forms of electronics.
Developing worldwide, with centers in New York, Tokyo and Austria, this style has been called "
lowercase music" (a term coined by gallery artist and musician Steve Roden for his own work) or "EAI" (
electroacoustic improvisation), and is represented, for instance, by the American record label Erstwhile Records, and by the Austrian label
Mego.
EAI is often radically different even from established free improv. Eyles writes, "One of the problems of describing this music is that it requires a new vocabulary and ways of conveying its sound and impact; such vocabulary does not yet exist - how do you describe the subtle differences between different types of
audio feedback? I’ve yet to see anyone do it convincingly - hence the use of words like 'shape' and 'texture'!"
Free improvisation on the radio
The London based independent radio station
Resonance fm, founded by the London Musicians Collective, frequently broadcasts experimental and free improvised performance works. WNUR 89.3 FM ("Chicago's Sound Experiment") is another source for free improvised music on the radio.
Taran's Free Jazz Hour broadcasted on Radio-G 101.5 FM, Angers and Euradio 101.3 FM, Nantes is entirely dedicated to free jazz and other freely improvised music.
See also
- List of free improvising musicians and groups
- Musical collectives
- Musics (magazine)
External links
- European Free Improvisation Pages
- Resonance 104.4 FM
- WNUR 89.3FM
- Signal to Noise magazine
Free improvisation or
free music is musical improvisation without any rules beyond the taste or inclination of the musician(s) involved; in many cases the musicians make an active effort to avoiding overt references to recognizable musical genres. The term is somewhat
paradoxical, since it can be considered both as a technique (employed by any musician who wishes to disregard rigid genres and forms) and as a recognizable genre in its own right.
"Free improvisation", as a style of music, developed in the
U.S. and Europe in the mid and late 1960s, largely as an outgrowth of
free jazz and contemporary music musics. Relatively little known and somewhat loosely-defined, none of its exponents can be said to be "famous" amongst the general public. However, in experimental circles, a number of free musicians are well known, including saxophones
Evan Parker and Peter Brötzmann, guitarist
Derek Bailey, and the improvising group
AMM (group).
Characteristics
Although performers may choose to play in a certain style or
key signature, or at a certain tempo, conventional songs are highly uncommon in free improvisation; more emphasis is generally placed on mood,
texture (music) or, more simply, on "performative gesture" than on preset forms of melody, harmony or
rhythm. These elements are improvised at will, as the music progresses.
Guitarist
Derek Bailey proposed
non-idiomatic improvisation as a more accurately descriptive term, claiming the form offers musicians more possibilities "per cubic second" than any genre (
Guitar Player, January 1997); while guitarist Elliott Sharp (himself occasionally active in free improvisation) has argued—partly tongue in cheek—that no improvisation is ever truly free, excepting the unlikelihood of
amnesiac improvising musicians. (ibid) Interestingly, John Eyles notes that Bailey has been quoted as saying that free improvisation is “playing without memory”
In his landmark book
Improvisation, Bailey has written "The lack of precision over its improv's naming is, if anything, increased when we come to the thing itself. Diversity is its most consistent characteristic. It has no stylistic or idiomatic commitment. It has no prescribed idiomatic sound. The characteristics of freely improvised music are established only by the sonic-musical identity of the person or persons playing it."
Free music performers, coming from a disparate variety of backgrounds, often engage musically with other
List of genres of musics. For example, acclaimed soundtrack composer
Ennio Morricone was a member of the free improvisation group Nuova Consonanza. Rock musician Thurston Moore has released a number of free improvisation collaborations. Anthony Braxton has written opera, and John Zorn has written acclaimed orchestral pieces.
As it has influenced and been influenced by other areas of exploration, aspects of modern classical music (extended techniques),
noise rock (aggressive confrontation), Intelligent dance music (computer manipulation and digital synthesis),
minimalism and electroacoustic music can now be heard in free improvisation.
History
Though there are many important precedents and developments, free improvisation developed gradually, making it difficult to pinpoint a single moment when the style was "born". As an uncredited critic has written for
Allmusic, "being freed of all rules, free improvisation cannot be traced back to a genre other than the very generic term 'avant-garde.'"
However, in the same article cited above, Bailey contends that free improvisation must have been the earliest musical style, because "mankind's first musical performance couldn't have been anything other than a free improvisation." Similarly,
Keith Rowe stated, "Other players got into playing freely, way before AMM, way before Derek ! Who knows when free playing started? You can imagine lute players in the 1500s getting drunk and doing improvisations for people in front of a log fire.. the noise, the clatter must have been enormous. You read absolutely incredible descriptions of that. I cannot believe that musicians back then didn't float off into free playing. The melisma in Claudio Monteverdi must derive from that. But it was all in the context of a
repertoire."
Classical Precedents
Skilled musicians were expected to improvise in the
common practice period (about 1600 to 1900), and many well-known composers and performers (such as violinist
Paganini, and keyboardist and composer
Beethoven) were acclaimed for their skills at improvisation. The
cadenza portion of a
concerto was an opportunity for the instrumental soloist to demonstrate their improvisatory skills. Different composers allowed for varrying degrees of improvisation in a cadenza: sometimes a soloist would simply embelish a pre-composed cadenza with a few minor changes; other times, however, the soloist had much more latitude as to how they improvised during the cradenza, with a blank spot being left on the score (with or without an indication of how long the musician was expected to improvise), and pitches, notes, melodies, harmony and tempo left to the soloist's discretion.
But by about 1900, such improvisation fell out of style, and even slight deviations from a printed score could be regarded as improper.
By the middle decades of the 20th century, however, composers like
Henry Cowell, Morton Feldman,
Karlheinz Stockhausen and
George Crumb, re-introduced improvisation to classical music, with compositions that allowed or even required musicians to improvise. Perhaps the most notable example of this is Cornelius Cardew's
Treatise (music): a
Graphic notation (music) with no conventional notation whatsoever, which musicians were invited to interpret. (It's no coincidence that Cardew was a member of AMM.)
Another notable group,
Musica Elettronica Viva, were formed in Rome in 1966 by
Alvin Curran, Richard Teitelbaum,
Frederic Rzewski,
Allan Bryant,
Carol Plantamura, Ivan Vandor, and Jon Phetteplace -- most of whom had at least some crossover with the "experimental classical" world.
Jazz Precedents
Perhaps the earliest free recordings are two pieces recorded under the leadership of
jazz pianist Lennie Tristano: "Intuition" and "Digression", both recorded in 1949 with a
sextet including saxophone players Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh. In 1954 Shelly Manne recorded a piece called "Abstract No. 1" with trumpeter Shorty Rogers and reedsmith Jimmy Giuffre which was freely improvised. Jazz critic Harvey Pekar has also pointed out that one of
Django Reinhardt's recorded improvisations strays drastically from the chord changes of the established piece. While noteworthy, these examples were clearly in the jazz idiom.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the free jazz movement coalesced around such important (and disparate) figures as Cecil Taylor, Sun Ra,
Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, as well as many lesser-known figures such as
Joe Maneri. Free jazz allowed for radical improvised departures from the harmonic and rhythmic material of the composition – for instance, by permitting performers to ignore conventional repeating song-structures. Such music often seemed far removed from the preceding jazz tradition.
These ideas were extended in 1962's
Free Fall recording by jazz clarinetist Jimmy Giuffre's trio, featuring music that was often freely and spontaneously improvised, and which had only tenous similarity to established jazz styles. Another important recording was
New York Eye and Ear Control (1964), a soundtrack for a film by
Michael Snow, recorded for the
ESP-Disk label under the leadership of saxophonist
Albert Ayler. Snow suggested to Ayler that the band simply play without a composition or themes.
The Spontaneous Music Ensemble was formed by John Stevens (drummer) and Trevor Watts in the mid-1960s and included, at various times, influential players such as Derek Bailey,
Evan Parker,
Kenny Wheeler,
Roger Smith, and John Butcher. As with the AACM, many of these players began in jazz, but gradually pushed the music into a zone of abstraction and relative quietude. The British record label Emanem has documented much music in this vein.
There was (and continues to be) often considerable blurring of the line between
free jazz and free improvisation. The Chicago-based Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), a loose collective of improvising musicians including Muhal Richard Abrams,
Henry Threadgill,
Anthony Braxton,
Jack DeJohnette,
Lester Bowie,
Roscoe Mitchell,
Joseph Jarman,
Famadou Don Moye, and
Malachi Favors was formed in 1965 and included many of the key players in the nascent international free improv scene. (Braxton recorded many times with Bailey and Teitelbaum; Mitchell recorded with Thomas Buckner and Pauline Oliveros.)
In 1966
Elektra Records issued the first recording of European free improvisation by the UK group
AMM (group), which included at the time
Cornelius Cardew,
Eddie Prévost,
Lou Gare, Keith Rowe and Lawrence Sheaff.
International Free Improvisation
Through the remainder of the 1960s and through the 1970s, free improvisation spread across the U.S., Europe and East Asia, entering quickly into a dialogue with Fluxus, happenings and performance art (Cardew, for example, being associated with
La Monte Young and other New York happenings artists) initially and making its influence immeadiately felt on rock and roll. (Syd Barrett of
Pink Floyd was famously an AMM devotee; the
Grateful Dead were noteworthy extensions of the influence.)
By the mid-1970s, free improvisation was truly a worldwide phenomenon. Japanese players like saxophonist Kaoru Abe and guitarist
Masayuki Takayanagi took the music to dazzling heights. The Los Angeles Free Music Society ran ahead with rambunctious glee through the ideals of free music. And in 1976 Derek Bailey founded
Company (group) a festival which lasted until 1994 and combined an ever-changing roster of improvisers who collaborated, sometimes for the first time, live. This "musical chairs" approach to collaboration was partly Bailey's response to Stevens's insistence that musicians needed to collaborate for months or years to improvise well together. The spirit of Company survives in many similar ongoing festival and events worldwide.
Electroacoustic Improvisation
A recent branch of improvised music is characterized by quiet, slow moving, minimalistic textures and often utilizing laptop computers or unorthodox forms of electronics.
Developing worldwide, with centers in New York, Tokyo and Austria, this style has been called "
lowercase music" (a term coined by gallery artist and musician Steve Roden for his own work) or "EAI" (electroacoustic improvisation), and is represented, for instance, by the American record label
Erstwhile Records, and by the Austrian label Mego.
EAI is often radically different even from established free improv. Eyles writes, "One of the problems of describing this music is that it requires a new vocabulary and ways of conveying its sound and impact; such vocabulary does not yet exist - how do you describe the subtle differences between different types of
audio feedback? I’ve yet to see anyone do it convincingly - hence the use of words like 'shape' and 'texture'!"
Free improvisation on the radio
The
London based independent radio station
Resonance fm, founded by the
London Musicians Collective, frequently broadcasts experimental and free improvised performance works.
WNUR 89.3 FM ("Chicago's Sound Experiment") is another source for free improvised music on the radio.
Taran's Free Jazz Hour broadcasted on Radio-G 101.5 FM, Angers and Euradio 101.3 FM, Nantes is entirely dedicated to free jazz and other freely improvised music.
See also
External links
- European Free Improvisation Pages
- Resonance 104.4 FM
- WNUR 89.3FM
- Signal to Noise magazine