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By
approaching jazz from a wide scope, Afro-Danish-American John Tchicai
has been continuously progressive throughout his life. Born in Copenhagen,
Denmark, in 1936, of a Danish mother and a Congolese father and growing
up in healthy surroundings, John Martin Tchicai became a leading exponent
of the jazz avant-garde in New York in the '60s and a father-figure for
the European avant-garde after that. Now based in Davis,
California, and Claira, France, by
a single-mindedness of purpose and action, his work still reflects what
he's always been doing, which is innovate and inspire other people, in
a most refreshing way. The Danish ministry of Culture recognized his work
by awarding him a lifetime grant.
instruments
John first began to
play the violin as a child, and switched to the alto saxophone and clarinet
at age 16. He studied with private teachers and attended the Conservatory
of Music in Aarhus, Denmark, for two years. During the late '60s and early
'70s, John began to play bamboo flutes, bass clarinet, soprano saxophone
and some percussion, and when he discovered the tenor saxophone in the
early '80s, he put the alto aside in favor of this, which has become his
main instrument. John uses keyboards and sequencers as tools for composing.
chronology
In the late '50s and
early '60s, John explored the Danish and Northern European jazz-scene.
He moved to New York City in '62. In the following 4 years, he recorded
on 11 albums (a.o.
"Mohawk", "Ascension" with John Coltrane, "New
York Eye and Ear Control" with Albert Ayler), co-founded 2 ensembles
("New York Contemporary Five" and "New York Art Quartet"
which was a harbinger of collective musical approaches and philosophies
that leading avant-groups of the '70s would develop) that he toured Europe
with, and was a member of "The Jazz Composers Guild". He moved
back to Denmark in '66 where he co-founded "Cadentia Nova Danica",
at one time a 30-piece ensemble which recorded "Afrodisiaca".
In the '70s, John discovered hatha yoga and meditation which became lifelong
focusing points in his spiritual development. He performed less often
in this period, but taught elementary schools, composed, and led workshops.
By the '80s, he had picked up touring and recording internationally again,
traveling through Europe, to India, Japan and Africa, performing as a
sideman as well as leading his own groups.
In 1991 John moved to California. Here he founded "John Tchicai and
the Archetypes", a 7-piece band that fused afro-jazz with blues-rock
and released the album "Love Is Touching". Currently, he teaches
workshops in schools and in prisons, composes and works on new projects.
He practices yoga, pranayama and meditation, and still tours internationally.

recognition
In 1966, Downbeat stated
that John "stands out among the jazz avant-garde, musically and personally".
Official recognition has grown steadily for John. In '77, he was the first
jazz-musician to receive a three year-composing stipend from the Danish
Ministry of Culture, and in '90, he received a lifetime-grant from the
same Ministry. In the U.S., he was a California Artist-in-Residence in
'96-'97, and he was awarded a fellowship for composition by the National
Endowment for the Arts in 1997.
composition
John's compositional
activity has always had a high priority in his work, as he strives to
reach a balance between composition and improvisation. The music of other
cultures (African, Oriental, etc.) has been a continuous inspiration,
and John's work has a highly rhythmic and poetic melodic-lyrical quality.
He composed for his own ensembles, but also on commissions for other jazz
and/or classically trained ensembles: a.o. for wind-orchestra, for three
celli + jazz quartet, for strings- and winds double quintet, for percussion
ensemble and for symphony orchestra.
performing
John worked with and
is peer to the greats in the field of "jazz" music. To name
but a few, he played with John Coltrane, Don Cherry, Archie Shepp, John
Lennon/Yoko Ono, Johnny Dyani, Roswell Rudd, Albert Ayler, Dollar Brand,
Makaya Ntshoko, Carla and Paul Bley, Misha Mengelberg, Lee Konitz, Cecil
Taylor. He performed at festivals, conservatoria, in churches, schools
and concert halls from Bombay and Kyoto in the East to Vancouver and Seattle
in the West; from Conacry, Guinea, Africa in the South to Reykjavik, Iceland,
in the North. Poetry and audience-participation are often part of a Tchicai-performance.
recording
Not only did John record
over 20 albums as a leader (with "New York Contemporary Five",
with "New York Art Quartet", with "Cadentia Nova Danica",
with "John Tchicai Trio", "J.T. Group", duo's, with
"John Tchicai & the Archetypes"), and many more as a sideman
(with John Coltrane on "Ascension", with "Pierre Dorge
& the New Jungle Orchestra", a Danish Ellington-African inspired
big band, with South African bassist Johnny Dyani, with Faroe Islands-pianist
Kristian Blak, with Dutch saxophone sextet "The Six Winds",
with John Lennon and Yoko Ono and with Cecil Taylor on "Winged Serpent"),
but he also took part in collaborations with artists of disciplines other
than music (with poets Amiri Baraka, John Stewart, David Gitin, with painters,
actors and dancers). He composed for film, theater plays and video-projects.

teaching
John utilizes available
resources in a patient, positive way, whether it concerns improvisational
or compositional material, instruments, time, space, energy or: people.
His vast teaching experience was accumulated through working in elementary
schools as a music teacher, teaching private lessons and international
workshops for musicians of jazz, classical and other backgrounds, workshops
in prisons and masterclasses at conservatories. His book for music students,
"Advice to Improvisers", which includes compositions and exercices
for all instruments, was published in '87. It is available at the addresses
listed in Orchestral
compositions .
bibliography
For a bibliography
on John Tchicai, see "Fire Music", a bibliography of New Jazz
by John Gray, ref. coll. #31, Greenwood Press.
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