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How Jeff Parker Changed the Sound of Jazz

Pitchfork·Grayson Haver Currin·about 1 month ago
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When the Tortoise guitarist left the Chicago music scene for Los Angeles, he thought he might be leaving his career behind, too. Instead, he cultivated a community of musicians who have become a cosmic force in improvised music. We talk to Parker about his journey to the center of this new universe. David Haskell Jeff Parker once turned down a job from Joni Mitchell . It was early 1998, and the luck of the guitarist, newly 30, suddenly seemed to be shifting. He had been in Chicago for just less than a decade, cobbling together every gig he could find—weddings, funk bands and Motown acts, free improvisation with men hunched behind computers—to pay rent. But he had just joined the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, a clearinghouse of adventurous jazz players and advocates for radical Black expression. He was now in two exciting Chicago bands, Tortoise and Isotope 217 , interwoven outfits that wordlessly insisted there should be no walls between dub and jazz, rock and electronica.…

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