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Steve Coleman
The order of things
July, 11, 1998/Washington, D.C.
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photos © Michael
Wilderman
Thomas Stanley: Steve, do you have recollections
of when you first heard jazz music coming up as a youngster?
Steve Coleman: No, because it was around
the house all the time. So it must have been from gitgo.It was around the
house. My father, mother listened to music all the time so I mean, you
know, as I was growing up I heard all kinds of music. All kinds of black
music anyway. My sisters listened a little bit to some rock, but mainly
like Hendrix and Funkadelic.
Q: Older sisters?
A: Yeah older sisters. You see I have
two older sisters and an older brother. So between them - I have a younger
brother too - but between them and my mother nad father and my uncles and
everybody, I heard everything that everybody was into, you know whatever
age group. So I didn't, the only way that I distinguished it was that one
music was what older people tended to listen to and one was what younger
people listened to. So I didn't call it jazz or anything, I just called
it the music that older people listened to. [laughs] I mean and that was
it. Other than that, I knew it was all Black music. I saw the album covers.
I saw all the faces on the albums and everything. So I kind of distinguished
it. And I knew that there was music predominantly made by white people
that didn't sound the same. So I associated blues, and what people call
today blues, jazz, funk, r&b, whatever, that whole thing is just black
music.
Q: What did music make you feel that attracted
you to it as a player, you know, as you first got into your instrument.
A: That's difficult to say. Like most
black people, on the South Side of Chicago music was just part of the community.
So we didn't really view it as a separate thing. It was just something
that was just there; it was the sound of everything else. Put it that way.
So I didn't really think of music as being separate although I was aware
that there were people who made music and people who didn't make music.
As I started playing music, it just felt good. Initially. It wasn't anything,
I didn't know I was going to be into it for the rest of my life. It just
felt good to play. It felt natural. That's the best way I can phrase it.
It wasn't until I was about 17 or 18 that I really, really got really serious.
I started playing around 14. But even before that I was in these little
singing groups, imitating the Jackson 5, or you know, singing in church
or something like that. So it was always there. But I don't think I got
serious until, first of all, when I was 14, I started learning music. Learning
what the notes on the page were. Learning, you know, technically about
music. And then when I was about 17 or 18 I got really serious, and really
got deeper into the structure. And that's when I started to check out the
music of people like Charlie Parker, Sonny Rollins, and Coltrane and all
these people, because I realized that what they were doing was on another
level than what most people were doing. I mean just in terms of what you
had to know to be able to do that. And also what they were trying to say
through their music. Most popular music, of course, is either sex or dance
or a lot of rappers are doing things like I'm the greatest, you ain't shit.
Q: The sordid complexities of romantic
love.
A: You know. [laughs] Most of it's love
music, but if it's not love music, it's dance til you drop or something
like that, but there's not a whole lot of complexity of subject matter.
Put it that way. But there were some artists, like Stevie Wonder, Marvin
Gaye, and different people back in the day, who were writing about
a variety of subjects. About life. I mean things that would happen, political
things, war, certain situations that you might run into or whatever. I
noticed earlier on that there were some artists that were doing a whole
range of things and there were other artists that put out love song after
love song. I mean that were more limited, you know. At first I was into
the music that was being played on the radio, I guess you would call it
r&b or whatever. But when that kind of music kind of got taken over
during the disco era when disco came out and everything turned into this
kind of Donna Summers thing. That kind of dro ve me away to look for something
else. And that's when I got int o th e improvisational forms. Because I
was looking for something more interesting and to me shit was getting less
interesting. I remember all the artists who I liked, like James and George
Clinton and all those people, their stuff sounded more and more disco-ey
with each passing record like the late seventies early eighties. So that's
when I started looking for something else. Because I didn't like the way
things were going. Specifically, at that time I remember I didn't like
the rhythms. I didn't like that boom-boom-boom thing. And so to this day
I don't like it. That made me search for something else. And at that time
I was already playing. So I understood what it was musically that was happening
as opposed to just feeling it.
Q: Rhythm's about time, structured time,
whether that structure is intentionally put into a formula or whether we
just perceive it. Rhythm is in a lot of things other than music, and I
was wondering if you could talk about some of the places where you hear
rhythm outside of music.
A: Everywhere. In the range that people
speak. The cadence of the language. Of course in poetry and all that. In
basketball and the way people walk. It's everywhere. I don't really relate
rhythm just to music. First of all this universe has a rhythm. Now, I say
a rhythm, when I say a rhythm, it's really a complex pattern of rhythms.
If you just look at the complex orbits of let's say Mars or Jupiter or
whatever, that's a rhythm. I mean, I don't know what your belief is. Whatever
your belief is, it's clear that we didn't make the universe. Whatever's
happening whether you just think it's purely chance or whether there's
a god out there or whatever your people's beliefs are. Personally I believe
that the universe has a kind of intelligence. It's like this living entity
almost. There's an order in it. Now, maybe we can't always understand that
order, but it's clear that there's an order otherwise shit would just be,
you knowÖ
Q: Chaos.
A: Yeah, complete chaos. I mean even this
solar system; these planets have been circling this sun for aeons. And
there's a whole order to that. They keep doing it, they're not running
by batteries. There's a whole order to the way things work, an ordered
system and all that. I believe that basically that's happening on every
level even if we can't discern it. So I mean, most of what we do, especially
in the past in ancient times, is we try to discover what that order is
and end up emulating parts of it. I think of my music as that. It's just
what I can understand of the universe and all this I try to put in my music.
That's where the music is coming from. The things that I've kind of rejected
are things that to me don't fit with, just from my opinion.
Q: A couple of albums back you had
an opportunity to do some work with a group of Cuban musicians. I think
that the rhythms they work with are some of the most sophisticated and
compelling on the planet. How has that experience changed your relationship
with this order.
A: There's two places, well three places
actually, well four, (laughs) actually there's a lot now that I think about
it. There's a couple of places that I've been to that have made big differences
for me, not necessarily in an obvious way. Ghana, which is a place I went
to before I went to Cuba. I spent five weeks in Ghana just traveling and
studying and checking out stuff. Basically, when I go to these places,
I check out the belief systems of the people, the lifestyles, how they
translate that into being, and, of course, how they translate it into music.
Naturally, I'm interested in music. My going to Cuba was really just an
extension of what I did in Ghana. And then I went to Egypt after that,
and then I went to the south of India. Now all those places with the exception
of Egypt. What I was studying in Egypt specifically was ancient Egypt,
not really modern Egypt. Modern Egypt was like this Arabic Islamic thing
that's happening now, but culturally, although some of that was interesting,
what I was really studying was what was there a long, long time ago. And
I see the whole West African thing, like Nigeria, Ghana, the Yoruba, the
Akan, and the different tribes, even going down into the Congo, and Cameroon
and places like that, and also in Mali, where like the Dogon are and those
places -- I see those cultures as in some ways being an extension of what
happened in ancient Egypt. In certain aspects. When ancient Egypt was destroyed,
it wasn't destroyed all at once, it just sort of dissipated over a period
of time. That knowledge went to different places. That culture formed a
kinfd of foundation or basis for a lot of different cultures in different
ways. I think it went south, I think it went southwest, I think it went
west. I mentioned Nigeria, Ghana, and Mali. I think it went north. I think
that European culture took another turn, but predominantly it's based on
what happened in ancient Egypt. I mean you can see our calendar system
and a whole bunch of other things are things that came from Egypt. Ther
e was a lot of going back and forth between the ancient Egyptian civilization
and Mesopotamia. At first with the Sumerians and then later on with the
Assyrians and Babylonians and all those people. So there's a lot there
that has alkso been influenced by Egypt and probably vice a versa because
those are veruy old cultures too. And then India, starting with the Indus
Valley civilizations I think they call them Harapan. And going on into
the Vedic stuff. I saw a lot of stuff in southern India that was very,
very Egyptian. That's the best way to put it.
I was going to these places to make these connections.
Now where Cuba and Haiti and Bahia and those places fit in is that, of
course, the Yoruba thing was brought over to this world. Mainly those three
places is where it's real strong, although I hear that Belize has some
stuff happening.
Q: I've been to Belize. I've been there
three times now. Steve, you need to check it out.
A: Well, everybody's says there's some
stuff happening there. But there have been certain places, and even some
places in the States previously, maybe not so much today, but there have
been certain places where this knowledge was preserved in soime form or
another. Obviously it's been changed, but in some form or another it's
been preservedwhether you're talking about Santeria, or Condomble, or Voodoon
or whatever. So those were the things I was interested in. I was really
interested in the knowledge itself and checking out various living traditions
that still sort of carry on to see examples of this thing as close as I
can. Obviously it's only going to be so close, we're talking about thousands
and thousands of years. I do a lot of studying of ancient texts and things
of that order. Also, I try to study what I think they studied which, is
mainly, to put it simply the nature of things. I'm probably far off your
question at this point, but that's basically where I'm trying to come from
and my music is r eally just an expression of all of that. Now, it's not
in an obvious way. It's not direct it's more symbolic.
I'm certainly not the first person to do any
of this. In Chicago there was a group called the Pharoahs, which later
became Earth, Wind, and Fire, and of course, there's AACM, Sun Ra. There
was a lot of groups and people who have delved into all these areas.
Q: While we're talking about musicians
from Chicago and ancient Egypt, and you just mentioned Sun Ra. Could you
comment on his impact on you as a musical artist and just as a human being.
What does Sun Ra's legacy mean to Steve Coleman.
A: Well, that's hard to put in words.
First of all it's just inspiring. Like a lot of people, originally I thought
Sun Ra was crazy. As I got more serious and I realized that everywhere
I was looking people like Sun Ra had already covered. I started to realize
that others have been down this road before in their own way. Musically,
there's not a direct influence. I'm more influenced by what I see and what
I experience. By the time I got really hip to Sun Ra I was already past
the stage where I was emulatating other musicians. I didn't get direct
musical things from him. The person I probably got the most direct musical
things from is probably John Gilmore who played with Sun Ra. Even that
is not the same as when I was in my emulation stage. It was more inspiration
and just being inspired by their story and what I knew about them and what
I could read about them. You know, I checked out that book Space is the
Place and different things. Whatever I could check out, and whenever I
could talk to one of the m. I've only talked to Gilmore once unfortunately.
So I'm always interested in what was happening. I've talked to people who
worked with Sun Ra and they've told me what rehearsals were like and what
kinds of things Ra would do. I'm just inspired by the whole story of it.
But I'm definitely stumbling to find my own path, to try and figuire things
out, because Sun Ra as you know was very cryptic. It wasn't like there
waws a lot that you could grab directly, I mean, you would have to be around
him a long time I would think.