Poetry Wednesday 06/17/09: Ask Your Mama: 12 Moods for Jazz
Link: www.ronmccurdy.com
Jazz Montage: A Multimedia Concert Performance of Langston Hughes’s
Ask Your Mama: Twelve Moods for Jazz
The Langston Hughes Project is a multimedia concert performance of Langston Hughes’s kaleidoscopic jazz poem suite. Ask Your Mama is Hughes’s homage in verse and music to the struggle for artistic and social freedom at home and abroad at the beginning of the 1960s. It is a twelve-part epic poem which Hughes scored with musical cues drawn from blues and Dixieland, gospel songs, boogie woogie, bebop and progressive jazz, Latin “cha cha” and Afro-Cuban mambo music, German lieder, Jewish liturgy, West Indian calypso, and African drumming — a creative masterwork left unperformed at his death.
Jazz was a cosmopolitan metaphor for Langston Hughes, a force for cultural convergence beyond the reach of words, or the limits of any one language. It called up visual analogues for him as well, most pointedly the surrealistic techniques of painterly collage and of the film editing developed in this country in the 1930s and 40s, which condensed time and space, conveyed to the viewer a great array of information in short compass, and which offered the possibility of suggesting expanded states of consciousness, chaotic remembrances of past events or dreams — through montage. “To me,” Hughes wrote, “jazz is a montage of a dream deferred. A great big dream — yet to come — and always yet to become ultimately and finally true.”
By way of videography, this concert performance links the words and music of Hughes’ poetry to topical images of Ask Your Mama’s people, places, and events, and to the works of the visual artists Langston Hughes admired or collaborated with most closely over the course of his career — the African-inspired mural designs and cubist geometries of Aaron Douglas, the blues and jazz-inspired collages of Romare Bearden, the macabre grotesques of Meta Warrick Fuller and the rhythmic sculptural figurines and heads and bas reliefs of Richmond Barthe, the color blocked cityscapes and black history series of Palmer Hayden and Jacob Lawrence. Together the words, sounds, and images recreate a magical moment in our cultural history, which bridges the Harlem Renaissance, the post World War II Beat writers’ coffeehouse jazz poetry world, and the looming Black Arts performance explosion of the 1960s.
Ask Your Mama was dedicated to Louis Armstrong, “the greatest horn blower of them all,” and to those of whatever hue or culture of origin who welcomed being immersed in the mysteries, rituals, names, and nuances of black life not just in America but in the Caribbean, in Latin America, in Europe and Africa during the years of anti-colonial upheaval abroad and the rising Freedom Movement here at home. Not only the youthful Martin Luther King, Jr. but the independence leaders of Guinea and Nigeria and Ghana and Kenya and the Congo fill the chants and refrains of Hughes’s epic poem.
Originally, Langston Hughes created Ask Your Mama in the aftermath of his participation as an official for the five-day Newport Jazz Festival of July 1960, where he shared the stage with such luminaries as Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Horace Silver, Dakota Staton, Oscar Peterson, Lambert, Hendricks, & Ross, Otis Spann, Ray Charles, and Muddy Waters. The musical scoring of the poem was designed to serve not as mere background for the words but to forge a conversation and a commentary with the music. Though Hughes originally intended to collaborate with Charles Mingus, and then Randy Weston, on the full performance of his masterwork, it remained only in the planning stages when Langston Hughes died in 1967. Its recovery now in word, music, and image provides a galvanizing experience for audiences everywhere.
Source: http://www.ronmccurdy.com/about_hudges_project.htm
The Langston Hughes Project – Ask Your Mama: Twelve Moods for Jazz, a masterwork written in twelve-parts by Hughes in the early 1960s. This production is brought to life in a multimedia production is Langston Hughes at his best: insightful, wise, poignant, funny and soulful.
On stage the audience experiences the mood of the Harlem Renaissance in this 800-line suite of poems illustrated by the spoken word, accompanied by a live quartet and the large as life visual illustrations on screen of Hughes’ world through his collaborators and contemporaries. The work is described as a multimedia performance involving spoken word artist, jazz quartet and a slide presentation of images from the Harlem Renaissance. All of these components occur simultaneously.
This multimedia presentation recreates Hughes’s vision of the global struggle for freedom in the early 1960′s. African American artists and photographers including Jacob Lawrence, Gordon Parks, and Romare Bearden link words and music to a kaleidoscopic collection of images.
Music director and composer Ron McCurdy orchestrates the original musical based on the music cues suggested by Langston Hughes. Ron McCurdy is available to present masterclasses in addition to the concert.
Masterclasses can be tailored depending upon the age group or duration allotted for the masterclass. We are now accepting bookings for 2009-2010. The Langston Hughes project, Ask Your Mama: Twelve Moods for Jazz, would be ideal if you are planning for your Black History Month Celebration, or any of your other programming needs.
Link back to the Poetry Wednesday tour on Laurita’s page
instrumentalpavilion wrote on Jun 15, ’09
Oh cool……thanks Laurita! Fred
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sanssouciblogs wrote on Jun 15, ’09
Beautifully done. I need to explore this post more.
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sanssouciblogs wrote on Jun 15, ’09
It’s almost like opera, poetry slam, music video. Hughes was ahead of his time.
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lauritasita wrote on Jun 16, ’09
sanssouciblogs said
It’s almost like opera, poetry slam, music video. Hughes was ahead of his time. Yes, it is a multimedia presentation.
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bostonsdandd wrote on Jun 17, ’09
This is a great post! I loved reading it and found it full of informative information. THANKS!
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instrumentalpavilion wrote on Jun 17, ’09
: )
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sugarpiehuny wrote on Jun 17, ’09, edited on Jun 17, ’09
Oh yes.. more jazz… yea.. great information
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lauritasita wrote on Jun 17, ’09
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forgetmenot525 wrote on Jun 21, ’09
me too…………………we will all soon qualify as ‘jazz experts” curtisy of YOU thanks, the write up is really interesting, as is the info on the videos
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