James Blood Ulmer plays the electric guitar. So do countless professional, semiprofessional and amateur musicians the world over, but none of them sounds like Mr. Ulmer. He has shared concert stages with Ornette Coleman and other jazz artists and with forward-looking rock performers like Public Image Ltd. and Captain Beefheart, and he has been enthusiastically reviewed by jazz and rock critics. But his few recordings have been for independent labels, and he has been little heard outside New York City, where he lives, and a few European cities. That situation will change later this month when Columbia Records releases Mr. Ulmer's new album ''Free Lancing.'' Although it is actually his fourth LP, it will probably be the first of his recordings to penetrate beyond the small circle of new-music devotees that has been aware of his work all along. And it confirms what these devotees have been saying for several years now - that Mr. Ulmer is the most original electric guitarist to emerge since the late Jimi Hendrix, who made his most influential recordings between 1967 and 1970.
The comparison to Jimi Hendrix isn't entirely inappropriate; Mr. Ulmer's singing voice is very reminiscent of Mr. Hendrix's. But Mr. Ulmer sings only occasionally. Three of the 10 selections on ''Free Lancing'' are vocals, and of his earlier albums, only one, ''Are You Glad to Be in America?,'' includes any singing whatsoever. Nor is Mr. Ulmer a flamboyant performer in the Hendrix mode. His vocals can be winning, as they are on the Columbia album, but they are not the main attraction. On the stage and on records, he is first and foremost a guitarist.
Mr. Ulmer, who was born and grew up in South Carolina, played rhythm-and-blues before becoming involved in avant-garde jazz in the early 1970's. He made his first jazz recordings with a group led by the drummer Rashied Ali, but it was only after he became involved with the saxophonist Ornette Coleman in the mid-70's that his style really crystalized. Mr. Coleman is the originator of a theory he calls ''harmolodics'' - the term is a contraction of the words harmony, motion and melodic. In a nutshell, the harmolodic theory overturns more traditional methods of improvisation by allowing spontaneous melodies to generate appropriate chord sequences; in traditional improvising, the player builds melodies on top of predetermined chord sequences, usually sequences derived from popular songs or the blues. Mr. Ulmer's approach to harmolodic playing emphasizes melodies that are often quite lyrical, but as he develops these melodies in his improvisations he throws in bursts of dissonant chording and jagged phrases that eventually lead him far afield. His habit of returning to his original melodies in a surprising but perfectly logical manner is one of the most engaging aspects of his playing.
Much has been made of Mr. Ulmer's debt to Ornette Coleman, but he was playing in a style roughly similar to his present one before he began working with Mr. Coleman. His study of harmolodics did bring focus and depth to his playing, and his use of dance rhythms closely parallels Mr. Coleman's work with the electric band Prime Time. But Mr. Coleman and Prime Time strive for a kind of melodic counterpoint in which each instrument plays an equally important part, and Mr. Ulmer is very definitely a guitar soloist, supported by a rhythm section and, occasionally, by a horn section and background vocalists.
Mr. Ulmer's rhythm section (Amin Ali on electric bass and G. Calvin Weston on drums) has developed a style that is as original as his guitar playing. They pump out kinetic dance rhythms without constricting Mr. Ulmer's freedom of movement; in fact, Mr. Ali often seems to be feeding the guitarist ideas, and Mr. Weston has come up with some fascinating, multidirectional drum patterns that are wholly his own. On four of the 10 selections on ''Free Lancing'' Mr. Ulmer, Mr. Ali a nd Mr. Weston work as a trio, and their redefinition of rock's familiar ''power trio'' instrumenta tion is both radical andutterly assured. Three more selections add a horn section drawn from the best of New York's jazz avant-garde; each of the players (Olu Dara on trumpet, Oliver Lake on alto saxophon e and David Murray on tenor saxophone) gets a brief solo. The three remaining selections find Mr. Ulmer singing, with second guitar by Ronnie Drayton and three backup vocalists. His songs are as melo dically fresh as his instrumental compositions; ''Where Did All th e Girls Come From'' is catchy enough to get some airplay, though it doesn't compromise Mr. Ulmer's originality one bit.
Recording for independent labels before graduating to Columbia did not do Mr. Ulmer any harm. In fact, his earlier albums now sound like rehearsals for ''Free Lancing,'' which is the most intelligently balanced and cleanly recorded of all his disks. He record ed his first album, ''Tales of Captain Black'' (Artists House Records), in 1978, with Or nette Coleman playing alto saxophone and co-producing. The bassist, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, plays spectacularly, and Ornette Coleman's son Denardo is a capable drummer, but this is not a rhythm section that shows off Mr. Ulmer to best advantage. The album is notable for h is exciting guitar playing and for Mr. Coleman's solos, and for the i ndividual contributions of the members of the rhythm section, but it does not offer a coherent ensemble style.
By January 1980, when Mr. Ulmer recorded ''Are You Glad to Be in America?'' for Britain's Rough Trade label, he had made considerable progress in this direction. The rhythm section and horn section were the same players who appear on ''Free Lancing,'' but with a second drummer, Ronald Shannon Jackson, added. The problem with the second album is a somewhat murky sound; the performances are first-rate. Now that Mr. Ulmer is recording for Columbia, another major label has been negotiating for the right to release ''Are You Glad to Be in America?'' in this country.
''No Wave,'' Mr. Ulmer's third album, was recorded for the German Moers Music label in June 1980. It is more a free-form jam session than a program of tightly arranged compositions and is the least successful of the guitarist's recordings. Mr. Ulmer is most effective when he delivers terse, condensed performances of his distinctive compositions. But not even the performances on ''Are You Glad to be in America?,'' the best of the earlier records, matches the lucid organization and inspired improvising captured on ''Free Lancing.'' Moving to a major label can sometimes stifle an artist's creativity, but Mr. Ulmer was ready for the move and has made an album that should delight the fans he now has and win him many new ones.
James Blood Ulmer--Guitar G. Calvin Weston--Drums
Amin Ali--Electric Bass
Alto Saxophone – Oliver Lake (A5, B1, B4)
Backing Vocals – Diane Wilson (A2, A4, B3), Irene Datcher (A2,A4, B3) and Zenobia Konkerite (A2, A4, B3)
Tenor Saxophone – David Murray (A5, B1, B4)
Trumpet – Olu Dara (A5, B1, B4)
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James Blood Ulmer - LIVE
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James Blood's Music Revelation Ensemble Live @ du Maurier Ltd. Downtown (aka. Toronto) Jazz Festival 1993 performing "Street Bride"
James Blood Ulmer - guitar
Amin Ali - bass
Cornell Rochester - drums
http://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/He-s-Been-Working-On-the-Third-Rail-Jazz-2832096.php He's Been Working On the Third Rail / Jazz guitarist Ulmer gets big-name band ready to roll by Dan Ouellette
July 20, 1997
San Francisco Chronicle It's been several years since intrepid guitarist James "Blood" Ulmer brought his funk-ignited jazz to town. Why so long? According to the New York-based avant-funkster, it's been a case of waiting "for the right moment and the right conditions." Hot on the heels of a cooking new album, "South Delta Space Age," by his star-studded band Third Rail -- appropriately named for a subway's power source that can de liver the jolt of your life -- he figured the time was finally right to take a cruise to the West Coast. "I've been working on lots of different projects over the last couple of years," the raspy-voiced Ulmer said shortly before embarking with the group to perform at the North Sea Jazz Festival in the Netherlands. "But I had to get on that third rail to find my way back to San Francisco." Originally conceived as a power trio with bassist Bill Laswell and drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson, Third Rail played one concert in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1990 and slayed the crowd. But then the band got off track. "We went into the studio and cut a bunch of tunes, but nothing ever happened," said Ulmer, who admits to still being perplexed by the lack of forward motion. "You know, I don't even know what happened. Something just didn't work out. But I couldn't stop thinking about it. One day I called Bill and said this thing had been lingering too long. He agreed, and we got the project rolling again."
With the recent resurgence of interest in jazz-funk crossover, especially among younger audiences hungering for edgy grooves, the timing couldn't have been better.
After Laswell scored a deal with a Japanese label, he and Ulmer enlisted a group of simpatico musicians to put the spark and sizzle into the guitarist's compositions: former Parliament-Funkadelic keyboardist Bernie Worrell, jazz-gospel organist Amina Claudine Myers and ex-Meters drumming ace Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste (spelled by Jerome Brailey for Third Rail's appearance at Bimbo's 365 Club this Saturday). "In the past, I worked a lot with younger musicians, being a schoolteacher to them," Ulmer said. "With -- Third Rail, I was playing with people I didn't have to worry about. Everybody has their own musical concept. I didn't have to tell them anything. Can you imagine me telling Zigaboo what beats to play? I presented my music, and he let me know the beat. And Bernie, all he needs to know is the name of the song and he's gone. That's why we're the Third Rail. It's the power. I never went head-on like this before." "South Delta Space Age," which Antilles licensed to release in the United States, is both tethered to earth with Delta blues grit and spun into orbit with soaring improvisation. The band offers a mesmerizing take on hip-hopper Schooly D's "Dusted" and builds the funk fire with "Funk All Night," "Itchin' " and "First Blood," free-spirited and intoxicating Ulmer originals fueled with jazz and soaked in blues, rap, soul and rock. Laswell's and Modeliste's phat beats are charged, and there's plenty of open space for Worrell's sonic booms on organ and clavinet. But Ulmer firmly commands center stage with his grainy party-time vo cals and distinctive blues-toned guitar voicings -- searing riffs, blistering single-note runs, quaking chords and a ton of tonal distortion. Ulmer came up through the jazz ranks in the early '70s as a disciple of Ornette Coleman and his school of harmolodics. After exercising his groove licks in R&B organ ensembles, the guitarist took his music to a new level while gigging with Coleman's group Prime Time. During this period, Ulmer developed his own style, which he called harmolodic diatonic funk, and set out to explore a new musical language informed by the organic rhythms of country blues and the dissonant outbursts of avant-jazz. In the wake of his debut solo album, "Tales of Captain Black," produced by Coleman, Ulmer was heralded as the missing guitar link between Wes Montgomery and Jimi Hendrix. Ulmer continues to acknowledge the impact of Coleman with his latest solo album, "Music Speaks Louder Than Words" (DIW/Koch Jazz), a rousing collection dominated by compositions written by the free-jazz maestro. "I set out to do something special for Ornette," Ulmer said. "I wanted to express his music from the perspective of a guitarist." Interspersed in the collection are three of Ulmer's funk tunes, pop- ish excursions that instead of disrupting the harmolodic flow actually serve as palate-cleansing pauses. A highlight is "Rap Man," Ulmer's perky tune that in the funky chorus sounds like a cross between the "Batman" and "Ghostbusters" themes. Ulmer promises to mix a couple of those tunes into the show at Bimbo's. "That's what Third Rail is all about: expressing my verbal music. I've been recording instrumental music for Ry Cooder's soundtrack of Wim Wender's new film 'The End of Violence' and touring with John Zorn and Pharoah Sanders in another one of my projects, Music Revelation Ensemble. But with Third Rail I get to sing. That's when I get to have a lot of fun." THIRD RAIL The band performs Saturday at Bimbo's 365 Club, 1025 Columbus Ave., San Francisco. Last Poets open at 9 p.m. Tickets: $20. Call (415) 474-0365.
by David Shettler August 26, 2015 Detroit Metro Times James "Blood" Ulmer is a singularity. Beginning with his explosive first solo LP Tales of Captain Black in 1979, he has relentlessly pursued his own unique artistic vision. With that first single statement, he solidified his rank as a prince of the American avant-garde. But it took a while to get to that point. His development into a juggernaut of independent musical expression was one of the reasons we looked forward to speaking with him. Ulmer has maintained a healthy relationship with the city of Detroit since the 1960s, when he lived here under the auspices of finding himself creatively, until just last summer, when he presented a solo guitar performance at DIA. Ulmer performs at the Detroit Jazz Festival on Saturday, Sept. 5. In order to present the interview in full, we're publishing it one week early. Metro Times: How did you get into music? When you were younger, what got you into music? Ulmer: Wait a minute. I'm 75 years old, and I never did nothing but play music. MT: So it just happened? Ulmer: No, I don't remember what. I have just been playing music all my life. MT: It was just there? Ulmer: I don't understand that question. I don't know, I think music is probably something that is a part of a person's makeup, it's what you're gonna do. I don't know how to answer that question. MT: No that was a perfect answer. [laughs] You're coming to Detroit, but you've spent some time here before.
Ulmer: I lived in Detroit for five years.
MT: I understand that you did some session work and taught at the Jazz Workshop?
Ulmer: The name of the place was the Detroit Metro Art Complex, a place where everybody can come and experience music — children growing up, whatever. Any instrument they wanted to play; I was in charge of the guitar department.
MT: So you were teaching children, adults, everybody?
Ulmer: Well not children; Detroit don't have children. [laughs] Young bloods, young groups, young fellas playing music, and older people too. Some people already playing music would come and see what the complex was offering.
MT: Were you in there with dudes like the Tribe, Phil Ranelin, those kinds of dudes?
Ulmer: Phil was one on the trombone, Sam Sanders played the saxophone, and Marcus Belgrave, plus a lot of other brothers I can't bring to mind right now.
MT: Maybe Wendell Harrison?
Ulmer: Yeah I think so, yeah. Anybody that was in Detroit that played an instrument was in it, I guess. I stayed in Detroit for five years. I didn't go on the road or out of town or anything.
MT: You went to New York after that.
Ulmer: I went to New York, and I've been in New York ever since.
MT: I know a lot of people that when they got to the 1980s and all the changes that were happening, they got shell-shocked by the music industry. But it seems like you just thrived in the '80s. You did what you wanted and were putting out tons of records, and making this beautiful music. And you didn't care what anybody else was doing.
Ulmer: That's true, yes.
MT: It seems like you never rest on your laurels and are always looking for something that you can create new.
Ulmer: That's why I stayed in Detroit, to figure out how to do that. I came to Detroit in the '60s, '65, '66. I studied music and explored my own self at that point. I was playing on the road with organ players before I came to Detroit.
MT: Oh yeah, with John Patton?
Ulmer: I made a record with John Patton while I was in Detroit and he was one of the reasons I left Detroit. I went to play with Patton in New York.
MT: OK. It's coming together. So, what do you think about rock 'n' roll?
Ulmer: Rock 'n' roll. I don't know. I've never played rock 'n' roll. I think rock 'n' roll came out of blues. That's the only thing I know about it.
MT: You just rock so hard. I've seen you make heartbreakingly beautiful string music, and I've seen you just destroy a stage with the rock 'n' roll. What are you going to bring to Detroit for jazzfest?
Ulmer: Let me get that straight. You've heard me do some rock 'n' roll?
MT: Well, I would call it that, yes. I mean, you were rocking. [laughter] You rock, dude.
Ulmer: What time? What year was that? You're talking about Detroit? The first record I made was called Tales of Captain Black, produced by Ornette Coleman. That was my first record and my first admission into standing alone on my own music, playing with no one but my own self, and in my own way.
That's what you call rock — I call it harmolodic funk. I was introduced to harmolodics from Ornette Coleman. He told me I was a natural harmolodic player. It's total rebellion against Western music. If you know the system of Western music and how the music is played, it's rebelling against that. The laws and the rules are a little different. Most people try to call it free music, but it's not free music.
MT: What do you do all day? You play guitar all day?
Ulmer: Boy, I tell you, I'm 75 years old. Play this damn guitar every day? I work on what I'm doing. I started playing guitar at 4 years old. I've been playing guitar for 71 years. So, you think I still play guitar all day? I'm working on music most of the time.
MT: Every day?
Ulmer: Yeah that's all I do, man. I tell you. Every other minute I would just play music. What do you do?
MT: I do music.
Ulmer: You do anything else?
MT: Well, I've got two kids.
Ulmer: I mean, you do anything else to feed them?
MT: I do a bit of woodworking too.
Ulmer: Well shit, I've got seven children, and I had to feed them all through music.
MT: That's beautiful. It's getting harder these days to do that because records are different, and the industry is different.
Ulmer: If you have something you want to do, I don't think things have changed at all. A lot of people before now used to play music and had a day job and all kinds of shit — play music, drive taxis. Music was a hobby. Everybody was playing an instrument. I can't explain it.
MT: If you have it in you, you just have to do it. It's not a choice.
Ulmer: You don't have nothing else to do. There you go. It ain't like something you choose. Wow.
MT: What are you going to do in Detroit when you come? Are you bringing a band?
Ulmer: I'm bringing the Black Music Experience.
MT: So it's gonna be full-on?
Ulmer: It's going to be all kinds of shit. I love Detroit. I played at the museum last year, solo.
MT: You're composing pieces for strings, right?
Ulmer: I got a project I do with that, yeah. They haven't hired me to do that in Detroit yet. I wish they would; I'd be glad to bring the string quartet there. Harmolodic guitar and strings. I brought the Memphis Blood Blues Band to Detroit before that. This is a different project. I have about five different projects.
MT: You've got five bands in New York going all at once.
Ulmer: No, one at a time.
MT: Well you've got to keep busy.
Ulmer: I've made 50 records. I revisit records that I made and I find how that works. This year I'm going to revisit my first record, and my second record called Are You Glad to Be in America? I'm playing in Austria in a week or two with the original people on that record made in 1981. I'm revisiting my records, and I'm getting a good response with that.
MT: You'll be improvising though, right?
Ulmer: You can't copy the record. I'm just saying you're going to revisit the music that you're playing on the record. People dig the same music all the time, but they can't play the same music the same way every time and that's the way it goes.
MT: Are you going to revisit a record for Detroit?
Ulmer: No, I'm not revisiting the record. I'm just revisiting the music that I used to play. It's vocal funk, the same kind of music you thought I play — rock 'n' roll. Rockin', funkin' — you know. Harmolodic funk.
MT: Who are some of your favorite guitarists that you listen to?
Ulmer: I don't listen to no damn guitar players. I don't listen to a guitar player. What guitar player would I listen to?
MT: What do you listen to?
Ulmer: I don't even know the guitar players. Who plays the guitar? I don't even know. I've played with a few guitar players, but I don't really hang out with guitar players.
MT: And you tune your guitar in a different way than most people.
Ulmer: Yeah, no guitar player is using that tuning at all. I have no relation. I'm trying to get some of them to come learn this tuning, but it hasn't happened yet.
MT: It's just your own thing.
Ulmer: I've been playing the guitar a long time, man. Like I said, I've been playing the guitar for 71 years.
MT: That's a pretty good run.
Ulmer: [laughs] Yeah, it is. So who the fuck am I gonna listen to? Everybody I listened to is dead; everybody I know who played a guitar is dead.
MT: A lot of people going like that.
Ulmer: Yeah, that's what I'm talking about. I moved to New York in 1971, and Jimi Hendrix died.
MT: Jimi was huge, man.
Ulmer: They made Jimi huge. Jimi Hendrix died 27 years old. He wasn't huge at all. He made three records, and they made a whole spectacle out of Jimi Hendrix. They make a lot of money off of Jimi Hendrix — trying to get his sound through these machines and his guitars and shit. But Jimi Hendrix didn't ever get a chance to get started yet. He didn't even get the chance to get back in New York. He died in London.
MT: I've got some crazy recordings that they put out after he died.
Ulmer: Oh, they put out a lot of the shit out after he was dead, I'm telling you. Everything he rehearsed, every concert he ever played at, every back room he played in, they made a record out of it.
MT: And sold them too.
Ulmer: Of course. They sold it and sold it. They made an icon out of him. He don't know about it, though. That's the thing. He got much bigger since he was dead. You know, that's a shame people do that to you. I don't want that to happen to me. I want to do the thing I'm doing living, and I want to stop doing it before I'm dead. [laughs]
MT: Oh, you're gonna take a little break?
Ulmer: I'm already leaning towards not being a guitarist, but working with people who want to exploit the harmolodic music system. I'll work on music itself. I'm not trying to be a person who plays an instrument, but I try to work on music itself. That's why I write music. I write a lot of music, and, you know, hopefully someone will play it at some point. I'm working on music publishing. Publishing — that's what I want to work on.
MT: You write it out by hand, or what do you do?
Ulmer: Well, you can't write it out by toes. You've got to write it, record it, and have it available for people to listen to it and play it. Music is something I can study. I study the harmolodic guitar music.
MT: Right.
Ulmer: I can tell you're no journalist.
MT: You can tell I'm not a journalist?
Ulmer: That's what I'm saying; I can tell. We're talking a long time. We're talking about all kinds of shit. I feel like I'm talking to my boy who I could play music with or something. You play the drums, right?
MT: Yes, I play the drums.
Ulmer: You're gonna get our conversation in the newspaper or something?
MT: I'll give it to them, and see what they can do with it.
Ulmer: Well, they're working on the city of Detroit, alright.
James "Blood" Ulmer and the Black Music Experience featuring Queen Esther performs at the Detroit Jazz Festival on Saturday, Sept. 5 at the Carhartt Amphitheater stage, in downtown Detroit.
James Blood Ulmer & Music Revelation Ensemble "Sound Check" from 'No Wave':
James Blood Ulmer--Guitar, David Murray--Tenor Saxophone, Ronald Shannon Jackson--Drums & percussion & Amin Ali--Bass
Düsseldorf, Germany June 1980. From the Moers Music album "No Wave".
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