Joseph Jarman (September 14, 1937 – January 9, 2019) was an American jazz musician, composer, poet, and Jodo Shinshu priest. He was one of the first members of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians and a member of the Art Ensemble of Chicago.
Jarman's solo recording career began at this time, with two releases on the Delmark label which included material, such as spoken word and "little instruments", that would later characterize the sound of the Art Ensemble. The band he fronted and used during these recordings between 1966 and 1968, included Fred Anderson (tenor sax), Billy Brimfield (trumpet), Charles Clark (bass), Christopher Gaddy (piano) and Thurman Barker (drums). However, in 1969, Clark and Gaddy both died and Jarman disbanded his group.
Jarman stayed with the Ensemble until 1993, when he left the group to focus on his spiritual practice, "a cleansing process" as he stated. The move was not announced at first, leading fans to speculate about Jarman's health when he did not appear on stage for an AECO Thanksgiving weekend show at the Knitting Factory in 1994. He did not have much to do with music until 1996 when, in January, he recorded two CDs, The Scott Fields Ensembles' 48 Motives and the concert, duo CD Connecting Spirits with Marilyn Crispell, which Fields produced. Later in the year, his friend and fellow AACM peer Leroy Jenkins asked him to join a trio with him and Myra Melford in Chicago, which would eventually be called Equal Interest. Looking back on those three years without music, Jarman commented that "I didn't realize it, but it actually depressed me in many ways." He was then commissioned to write a chamber orchestra piece, which led him to the realization of how to incorporate his Buddhist teachings into his music. Jarman returned to the AECO in January 2003.
Along with the saxophone and clarinet, Jarman also played (and recorded on) nearly every member of the woodwind family, as well as a wide variety of percussion instruments. Aside from his work with relatively traditional jazz line-ups, he also composed for larger orchestras and created multimedia pieces for musicians and dancers.
Joseph Jarman died of respiratory failure at the Lillian Booth Actors Home in Englewood, New Jersey on January 9, 2019, as announced by the New York chapter of the AACM on their website. He was 81. Jazz Musician and Buddhist Priest Joseph Jarman Dead at 81: Pitchfork. Retrieved 2019-01-11.
With the Art Ensemble of Chicago
Numbers 1 & 2 – Lester Bowie | 1967 | Nessa Records |
Early Combinations - Art Ensemble | 1967 | Nessa |
A Jackson in Your House | 1969 | BYG Actuel |
Tutankhamun | 1969 | Freedom Records |
The Spiritual | 1969 | Freedom |
People in Sorrow | 1969 | Nessa |
Message to Our Folks | 1969 | BYG-Actuel |
Reese and the Smooth Ones | 1969 | BYG-Actuel |
Eda Wobu | 1969 | JMY Records |
Certain Blacks | 1970 | America Records |
Go Home | 1970 | Galloway |
Chi-Congo | 1970 | Paula |
Les Stances a Sophie | 1970 | Nessa |
Live in Paris | 1970 | Freedom |
Art Ensemble of Chicago with Fontella Bass | 1970 | America |
Phase One | 1971 | America |
Live at Mandell Hall | 1972 | Delmark |
Bap-Tizum | 1972 | Atlantic Records |
Fanfare for the Warriors | 1973 | Atlantic |
Kabalaba | 1974 | AECO Records |
Nice Guys | 1978 | ECM Records |
Live in Berlin | 1979 | West Wind |
Full Force | 1980 | ECM |
Urban Bushmen | 1980 | ECM |
Among the People | 1980 | Praxis |
The Complete Live in Japan | 1984 | DIW Records |
The Third Decade | 1984 | ECM |
Naked | 1986 | DIW |
Ancient to the Future | 1987 | DIW |
The Alternate Express | 1989 | DIW |
Art Ensemble of Soweto | 1990 | DIW |
America - South Africa | 1990 | DIW |
Thelonious Sphere Monk with Cecil Taylor | 1990 | DIW |
Dreaming of the Masters Suite | 1990 | DIW |
Live at the 6th Tokyo Music Joy | 1991 | DIW |
Fundamental Destiny with Don Pullen | 1991 | AECO |
Salutes the Chicago Blues Tradition | 1993 | AECO |
Reunion | 2003 | Around Jazz/Il Manifesto |
The Meeting | 2003 | Pi Recordings |
Sirius Calling | 2004 | Pi |
Non-Cognitive Aspects of the City | 2006 | Pi |
With Jerome Cooper
With Alan Silva
|
|