American Rhapsody
Burnett Thompson, Piano
The program is populated by 16th and 17th century Native American, African and European music, providing a side-by-side experience that becomes a revelation for the listener.
Following the regime upheaval, political and religious mayhem, witch burnings, wars, and assassinations of the Reformation, a new breed of European explorer emerged. Survivors of political and religious persecution headed to North America to find relief, pursued by disease and death both mid- journey and upon arrival in the New World. These were often profoundly pious, humble folk who confronted their own mortality, as well as that of their families on a daily basis. How these godly, devout pilgrims wound up destroying or marginalizing hundreds of indigenous nations and importing 12 million Africans into slavery has yet to be satisfactorily explained. We cannot solve that question, but we will simply address the parallel cultural phenomena represented by the music of three divergent cultures that could not have been more dissimilar. Locating records of native American music at the time of the European arrival is not an easy task. We were pleased to find transcriptions of music of that period from Nova Scotia to Brazil through the research of historian Victoria Lindsay Levine. Transcriptions by Portuguese, British and French explorers, including lyrics and European-style settings of the melodies for vocal ensembles are found in Writing Native American Music, 2002 Actual transcriptions of African music of the same time period were even more difficult to find but include at least two important sources by contemporary explorers. The first was the Irish explorer and naturalist Sir Hans Sloane, (1660-1753) who ordered transcriptions of African melodies during his travels to Haiti in the mid-17th century. These transcriptions have been further collected and amplified by the Musical Passage project and enhanced by publication by Mary Caton Lingold and others in her 2023 publication African Musicians in the Atlantic World: Legacies of Sound and Slavery. The second African source is the work of the English writer Thomas Edward Bowdich (1791-1824), author of Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee, 1819. Bowdich includes transcriptions, some with texts, of two dozen African melodies of Ashanti, Kerrapi, Fantee, Mallowa, Empoöngwa, Imbekee and Mosee populations. Bowdich's writings are thoroughly examined in the indispensable The Music of Black Americans by Howard University Professor Eileen Southern. The European musical component was already a work in progress, a result in part of the Reformation: Age of Mayhem recordings, and concerts in London, Berlin and Prague. King Henry VIII himself contributes a melody. There is also a German hymn and a 16th century French song, "A Moment Lost", (L'Occasion Manquée) that made its way to Quebec. The French song was revived by Julien Tiersot in his Forty-Four French Folk Songs and Variants--from Canada, Normandy, and Brittany, published in 1910.
Tabla virtuoso Hamid Habib Zadah hails from Herat, in western Afghanistan. While performing regularly in high profile events in Herat and Turkmenistan, Hamid attended music conservatories in Herat and Kabul, elevating him into upper tier of traditional Afghan performers. A recent émigré to the U.S., Hamid has already performed in concerts in New York City, California, Washington, DC and with the Alexandria Symphony Orchestra. Pianist/Composer Burnett Thompson has allowed music to draw him into countless corners of the planet, from the mountains of Yunnan, China, the mews of London, cellars of Vienna, medinas of north Africa, and back to the alleys of Beijing. He has collaborated with Lorin Maazel, Arturo Sandoval, Alex Blake, the Manchester String Quartet, cellist Han-Na Chang, and directed a host of remarkable concert series, including Castleton in Performance, Hill Center Concert Series, Jazz on Jackson Place, the Foggy Bottom Chamber Ensemble, and Piano Jazz at the Arts Club. Recent projects have included Autumn in Yunnan, ethnic music of southwest China, and Reformation, a fresh take on 15th century secular and sacred music of middle Europe. Burnett played a large role in exposiing Chinese jazz and traditional performers to the American audience. . More about Burnett at HERE
Burnett and Alex perform regularly at Mezzrow Jazz Club in New York where they performed the Chinese traditional music of Autumn in Yunnan, and music of 15th and 16th century Europe with the Reformation: Age of Mayhem recording and tour. They previewed the current album at Mezzrow in December, 2023. Hamid joined them on the PianoJazz DC series in 2022, and the trio will perform American Rhapsody on the PianoJazz DC series, followed by Mezzrow Jazz Club Dec. 9 in NYC.
Mezzrow Jazz Club
Membertou Transcribed 16th Century, Mi'kmaq Tribe, Nova Scotia
Ashanti Melody Transcribed 18th century, Ghana
Die Katzenpfote 1480, German Folk Song
Lullaby for a Sleeping Baby Cheyenne, Oklahoma
Papa/Angola
Haiti, Transcribed mid-17th Century
Der Mayen
The Month of May: 1562 German Folk Song
Koromanti Part 1 Haiti, Transcribed mid-17th Century
Illinois Dance Song Transcribed 1670, Native American
Pastime with Good Company 1513, Composed by Henry VIII
Peyote Drinking Song Recorded 1927, Santa Fe
Dagna Mamadou Diabate, composer, Burkina Faso
A Moment Lost 16th Century French and Canadian Koromanti Part 2 Haiti, Transcribed mid-17th Century Herzlich tut mich Verlangen 1600 German Folk Song, Hymn arrangement by J.S. Bach 1710 Mamadou Gambia Traditional Trois Chansons des Americains Transcribed 1557, Brazilian Native Tribe
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