There are records that feel like documents and there are records that feel like contraband. Live in Detroit 1986 sits firmly in the latter… a tape smuggled out of the room, dubbed and redubbed into soft focus until the hiss becomes a third rhythm section. Captured less than a year after Fela Kuti’s release from prison, at Detroit’s Fox Theatre during his first U.S. tour, the set lands with a charged, itinerant electricity: part exorcism, part declaration.
Charles Mingus :: A Modern Jazz Symposium of Music and Poetry
An overlooked experiment from a remarkably ambitious late fifties period of bassist Charles Mingus, 1958’s A Modern Jazz Symposium of Music and Poetry doesn’t actually include poetry in the traditional sense. Episodically exploring the Harlem-based narrator’s relationship with jazz, the elongated “Scenes in the City” features spoken word vignettes by actor Melvin Stewart and was partially penned by Langston Hughes. In addition to the piece’s music cues of Mingus and his band, the rest of the material drops the verbal experiments in favor of equality enticing tracks that went on to inform the seminal Mingus Ah Um.













