"Oh, how we've missed the Microscopic Septet! Back in the
early 1980s, when jazz, on all aesthetic levels, seemed to be
resolidifying its connection with its heritage, these wild and wooly
virtuosos leapt into the breach between "outside" and "inside" jazz and
made a cheerful shambles. They were as clever as the Beatles, as
subversive as Captain Beefheart, as antic as Spike Jones.
Did I mention that they were - and are - more fun than any other
well-dressed jazz ensemble in the western world? ...
fans still light candles for their return. ...Hurry back, fellows,
won't you? The uptown neoclassicists still have a lot to learn from you
downtown pranksters."
- Gene Seymour, Newsday:
The Long Island Newspaper, June 13, 2000
"Posterity is going to remember the Microscopic Septet as one
of the best bands of the 1980s."
- Francis Davis, The
Philadelphia Inquirer, Aug. 25, 1988
The music of The Microscopic Septet was the sound
of jazz in 20th C. America: all of it, from Ellington to Ayler, bebop
to Zorn, Dixieland to experimental, captured in a microcosm. It
distilled the essence of jazz as a popular music into a sound that
swung, a music that was intelligent, sometimes smart-aleck, and always
good clean fun. Optimistic and upbeat, full of innocent confidence, the
Microscopic Septet captured not only the sound of jazz, but also the
sound - or soundtrack - of 20th Century America. No
wonder, then, that when National Public Radio (NPR)
needed a new theme song for one of its most popular shows, "Fresh
Air, with Terry Gross", broadcast to every home in America,
it asked this band to compose the tune and has used it ever since.
Active from 1980-1992, The Microscopic Septet was part of New York's
emerging Downtown Music Scene, a diverse group of artists on the
fringes of jazz, rock, and improv that would converge in the Knitting
Factory when the club opened in 1987. But while the band shared an
aesthetic for breaking down genres boundaries with such other Downtown
bands as Curlew, Massacre, and Material; shared the goal of creating
intelligent music that could be danced to with Curlew, and shared
stylistic surface elements (retro sound, stage costumes and attitude)
with the Jazz Passengers and Lounge Lizards, the Micros, as the band
was familiarly called, neither sounded like nor was directly comparable
to any one of the Downtown bands. More inclusive than even the
barrier-breaking downtown crowd, the Micros shared elements with all
these bands - and more.
During the 1980s, jazz in New York City was split into two distinct
scenes. Downtown's jazz scene was unregimented, avant in outlook, and
inclusive in scope, often merging with the rock scene and including
improvisers, the free-jazz players, and the new
jazz-funk/groove-influenced players. Mainstream jazz was headquartered
Uptown, where Grammy Award-winning trumpeter Wynton Marsalis was
reviving early forms like swing and bebop, enforcing a return to
stylistic tradition, and championing jazz as America's new classical
music. As Will Friedwald noted "While the two major strains of '80s
jazz were "neo-classical" (ala Wynton Marsalis) and
the avant garde, the Micros seemed to be doing both at the same time."
As NYU dropout and Micros' founder Johnston said: "Break all the rules
and respect all the saints." Like Uptown, the Micros played swing music
and quoted from the Masters. But they extended swing into the present,
bringing free blowing from the lofts and Knitting Factory noise into
the dance hall, and introducing the radio age to TV theme songs. As
Johnston relayed in an interview with Howard Mandel: "...our music, if
nothing else, is definitely jazz...Jazz is something that's always
changing, so of course our music is different than the way it was in
the Fifties. It incorporates all the things we've experienced."
As the Micros asserted in interviews, jazz began in the 1920s as a
popular music, inclusive in its form. Danceable and approachable, it
embraced the life around it, incorporating Latin rhythm, tango, polka
and more. Later jazz , whether avant or traditional, became a 'serious'
art form, aloof and apart. Johnston said in interviews:
"What the
Micros are about...is that jazz went through a period of being an
entertaining, popular music as it was in the twenties, thirties, and
forties, to bop to eventually being this serious cult art music. Jazz
for us is more than that, it is music we love and want to have fun
with, which should not take away from our real reverence for the music.
"
In the '80s, jazz purists had frozen traditional jazz
forms in time, cast them in bronze, and confined them to Uptown
museums. The Micros brought Uptown jazz back Downtown, where together
they had a good time, broke all the rules, and spawned the smiling
future of the genre. Sounding like no one else, the Microscopic Septet
was the only living jazz band in 1980s/90s NYC that was playing
traditional jazz - swing music - and keeping it 'real', extending it
into the future. Ironically, while purists feared that the Micros were
undermining traditional jazz, the band had done the opposite.
"Surrealistic Swing" - the music of the Microscopic Septet - was the
jazz swing music of the late 20th Century.
The Microscopic Septet was founded in 1980 by Phillip
Johnston, a composer, soprano saxophonist, and improvisor on
NYC's Lower East Side. Largely self-trained as a musician, Johnston was
influenced by a pantheon of jazz and avant-rock greats that included Steve
Lacy, Thelonius Monk, Duke
Ellington, Captain Beefheart, and more,
as well as by popular music in myriad forms. At the time he founded the
Micros, he was co-leading the Public Servants (with
vocalist Shelley Hirsch), a rock band that combined
pop, funk, swing, Beefheart, and avant-garde performance art, and
playing in Noise R Us, a large punk/funk band with
a four-sax front line. Johnston was also playing in a quartet and
septet led by composer and pianist Joel Forrester.
Johnston recruited musicians from these and other bands to assemble a
saxophone-quartet-plus-rhythm-section jazz band. He brought Forrester
on as co-leader, sharing half of the composing responsibilities. The
Microscopic Septet's first line-up also included Dave Sewelson
(baritone sax; Noise R Us & Public Servants), George
Bishop (tenor sax; Noise-R-Us), John Zorn
(alto sax; Public Servants), Dave Hofstra (bass;
Public Servants) and Bobby DeMeo (drums). By the
time the band played its first show at the Lower East Side's Ear Inn,
on Feb. 22, 1981, Richard Dworkin was in the drummer's seat, having
replaced DeMeo, and John Hagen had replaced Bishop on sax. When Zorn
left to pursue an independent career, Don Davis
joined the Micros on alto sax. Paul Shapiro
replaced Hagen after the Micros first lp, Take the Z Train,
was released. The band's lineup remained remarkably stable afterwards.
The new band's name - Microscopic Septet - alluded
partially to the composers' desire to create big band arrangements and
orchestrations for a smaller group. Said Johnston: "The instrumentation
is enough to give us a big range of colors and work compositionally in
a more expansive way." It worked, Downbeat noted,
as "the septet often fools you into thinking that there are four or
five more horn players hiding under the chairs." But the name also
described their compositions, which evoked entire eras of music through
snips of tango or other tell-tale refrain. As the New York
Times stated: "The Microscopic Septet stands out...primarily
through its command of idiomatic detail - the group summons the sound
of an Ellington orchestra, or the feel of a 50's rhythm-and-blues band,
with a few well-chosen phrases and sonorities."
The team-up of Johnston and Forrester as the Micros' composers proved
to be magic; their compositions became the band's stars. Called "the
boldest and most gifted pair of composers to have joined forces in one
group since Roscoe Mitchell and Joseph Jarman of the Art Ensemble of
Chicago" [Philadelphia Inquirer], the two had known
each other since the early 70s, and shared the same musical aesthetics,
humor, and similarly skewed world views. They had met, says Johnston,
when he was living in the Bowery, and Forrester, hearing music, barged
into his apartment, unannounced: "I was playing a Thelonius
Monk tune, and a guy I had never seen before came walking
through my door, which wasn't locked- those were the hippie days..."
Not surprisingly, humor would play a role in the Septet, emerging in
Johnston's and Forrester's compositions and in their onstage banter.
The Micros would prove that technically sophisticated music could also
be funny, and fun.
For the Microscopic Septet, Johnston and Forrester envisioned writing
music that would capture jazz's essence: fluid and inclusive, a popular
music that was joyful and danceable (ie. a music that swung). They
wanted to break away from then-standard head-solo-head song formats and
instead write extended, layered jazz compositions that segued different
themes in a single piece, as Duke Ellington and Jelly
Roll Morton had done. Their extended compositions would
assimilate the entire history of jazz, as well as other popular music
from the soundtrack of their lives, from polkas to Latin tangos to
cartoon ditties to klezmer to TV theme songs to New Wave. "We all came
out of the type of music played by the Art Ensemble of Chicago
and Anthony Braxton, as well as bebop. But we were
playing standards, Dixieland and rock to make a living", said Johnson
in various interviews. "We ...grew up listening to pop. What we try to
do is get to the heart of all these different musics." Johnston and
Forrester adhered to one stylistic rule: "It's gotta swing, whether its
Latin or R&B or straight-ahead blowing. ...But swing - that's
the foundation of what we do." The Micros, asserted Johnston, "...play
music that swings, that has beautiful harmonies and melodies, and
everything else is really second to that. The ideas that have always
run through jazz - of swinging, of telling a story, of being real - to
me that's at the essence of everything we try to do."
A late-20th C. swing band steeped in dancehall tradition, The
Microscopic Septet thrived on live performance. "We were all about
playing," says Johnston; "all we really wanted to do was have a good
time and play the best music we could imagine, the best we knew how."
It played the Downtown music scene circuit - rock clubs like CBGB, Mudd
Club, Danceteria, Peppermint Lounge, Studio Henry, Acme Bar and Grill
and more. Later, it played the Knitting Factory and such mainstream
jazz clubs as The Blue Note, as well as jazz festivals worldwide (JVC
Jazz Fest). These performances attracted a devoted cult following as
much for the music - technically sophisticated and played by top-notch
musicians - as for the on-stage antics. The band wore suits and ties
onstage, as a respectful tip 'o the fedora to Uptown's jazz
traditionalists as well as a wink to stylish New Wave rockers with
skinny ties. (A poster announcing the band's first show depicted its
lineup as the seven steps to tie a necktie, and New York
Rocker would later refer to them as "Seven Men in Neckties"
in a review.) Like the Sun Ra Arkestra, its
performances were legendary not only for musical substance, but also
for entertainment value. Live renditions of one favorite tune,
"Lobsters on Parade," featured besuited Micros donning tassled fezs and
parading through the audience.
Johnson and Forrester were prolific composers; by the time the Micros
disbanded, in 1992, it had a songbook of over 180 tunes. Only 34 of
those were recorded and released in the band's lifetime, in a total of
4 albums, all released on small labels to an impressive amount of
high-profile critical acclaim. The Micros' recordings received glowing
reviews in big-city newspapers (New York Times,
Chicago Tribune) and alternative papers (L.A. Reader,
The Village Voice) on both coasts, as well as in
major jazz publications (Downbeat, Cadence).
Op and the subsequent Option, the bastions of hip
alternative music in the '80s and '90s - equivalent to today's The Wire
- also favorably reviewed the Micros, as did such mainstream music
publications as Musician and Billboard.
Towards the band's latter years, it was being praised enthusiastically
in such widely-distributed general magazines as Interview,
The New Yorker, Elle, GQ:
Gentlemen' Quarterly, and even Vanity Fair.
The Jan/Feb 1990 issue of Option, featuring Laurie
Anderson on its cover, devoted a full article to the Microscopic
Septet.
The band's debut LP, Take the Z Train, came out on Press
Records in 1983. Recorded "direct to two-track - basically
the way they did it in the '50s...[at] Seltzer Sound, where Eubie Blake
recorded," it featured cover art by San Francisco artist Bill Paradise
and received an auspicious amount of press, including 4-star reviews in
both Downbeat and the Rolling Stone
Jazz Record Guide. Cadence
exclaimed: "It is as if the entire history of improvisatory music is on
parade.... recommended!" while New York Beat called it "the headiest
collection of new swing music to come along in some time. "
The following year, the Micros did its first 6-week tour of the
Netherlands, home to Willem Breuker and the ICP
Orchestra, artists to whom some compared it. It recorded its
only live album, Let's Flip!, which was released in
1985 by Dutch label Osmosis Records with liner
notes by Richard Foreman, a key figure New York's
avant-garde theatre scene . Let's Flip! captured the excitement of the
band live in concert in Rotterdam, and received glowing reviews from
Downbeat, Musician, and Billboard. Option called it "Good clean fun,
recorded live." A 2nd tour of The Netherlands generated a studio
recording, Off Beat Glory. Released by Osmosis in
1986, Off Beat Glory contained liner notes by American novelist William
Kotzwinkle, author of The Fan Man, starred Micros member
Swelson. Downbeat remarked that "...these guys
should be more famous than they are. Their music is well-written, their
playing cooks, and everything they do is accessible...".
Beauty Based on Science was the band's 1st CD, and
last recording released during their lifetime. Recorded in NYC, it was
released on Stash in 1988, and featured liner notes by 'New York
School' poet, Ron Padgett, CD cover art by painter Bob
Tuska, and cartoons by Collin Kellogg. It
generated positive reviews not only in the music press, and helped
capture the interest of mainstream, general interest publications. Vanity
Fair announced that "If they don't watch their step, the
Microscopic Septet, lovingly known as "the best New York band that
hardly anybody's heard of," is going to have to change its tune....the
Katzenjammer Kids of postmodernism have arrived."
As the 90s arrived, the Microscopic Septet was
poised on the edge of mainstream success. In Jan. 1990, it recorded
several versions of a new theme song for NPR's Fresh
Air with Terry Gross, composed by Forrester, which
have aired continually ever since. Also in 1990, the Micros recorded a
single, "You Know What You Know", the only recorded
Micros vocal tune. Frances Davis, who had championed the band from its
beginning, advocated for a Micros' TV show:
"When I replace Letterman...the World's Most Dangerous Bar
Mitzvah Band has to go. The band I'm considering as a replacement is
the Microscopic Septet, a New York saxophone quartet (plus rhythm)
whose riff do what riffs are supposed to do: set your pulse racing and
stick in your noggin for days on end. ... So why aren't these guys rich
and famous, or at least universally adored by those in the know? ...on
the bandstand, their high-spirited humor is difficult to resist. This
is a band that knows how to have fun while going deep, and one would
think that, with proper exposure, that combination would give them
widespread appeal. Somebody oughta put these guys on TV."
- Francis Davis, Outcats,
Oxford University Press: 1990
"Micros History" written by Joyce Nalewajk, Cuneiform Records, Sept 2006
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The Microscopic Septet.