Phill Niblock 1933 – 2024

death

Sorry for this text, it’s garbled, but I can’t make it less so in the moment. Check out some of the links below for more considered words and documentation of Phill’s presence and creative expressions. I’m dismayed at the number of obits that are appearing here … sheesh …

The other day I was reviewing older sound recordings on the website, one of which is a remix of sounds recorded at one of Phill Niblock’s annual Solstice events at his and Katherine’s loft in New York. Back in 2007 I was in the NYC area and was able to make it to one of these legendary happenings. A number of ShareNY friends had reminded me of them, and my modus operandi generally is when in town, check stuff out. And if Phill Niblock is doing something, well, there’s no excuse!

Winter Solstice event @ Phill and Katherine's place, New York City, NY, 21 December ©2007 hopkins/neoscenes
Winter Solstice event @ Phill and Katherine’s place, New York City, NY, 21 December ©2007 hopkins/neoscenes

So, it was sad to hear of Phill’s passing. The hundreds, thousands of performances that he made, participated in, or facilitated for other artists—most often within the aegis of the Experimental Intermedia Foundation over the years—had a profound impact on all who experienced them. The annual Winter Solstice events at their loft were especially intense both in the immersive visual-sonic sense, but also in the powerful element of basic human encounter: always a slew of interesting folks attending!

As is noted in other obits, being and doing were things that Phill did with a profuse and personable energy. I was lucky to cross paths repeatedly with he and Katherine on their numerous transAtlantic forays and in NYC related to some ShareNY events.

Phill’s experimental visual and sonic work implemented a solid-and-shimmering tableau of full-on psychic immersion in live performance. The Solstice happening was merely one of the hundreds that Niblock brought into this universe from another, parallel universe, where time, sound, and Light have both more subtle and more tangible presence and energy.

An openness for exploring the profundity of the temporal was something that Bruce Elder and Stan Brakhage exposed me to back in the 80s, so Phill’s monumental 16mm opus, The Movement Of People Working, was immediately, electrically, attractive. It forms a compelling exploration of what human presence and be-ing actually is, not merely how it manifests: this element of lived immediacy imprints itself, over time on the receiver. And, combined with the sonic expressions forms a holistic, immersive experience. (Morton Feldman‘s influence.) Transcendent!

We shared the idea of duration in performance work: perhaps related to our separate instances of experiencing the work of Feldman. Phill often bringing duration to a beautiful extreme that inevitably sparked internal change within the witness/participant (there is no audience in this regard, there is only the Void!).

Condolences dear Katherine, and for our shared loss.

Visit Phill’s website for a deeper plunge. This obit by Lawrence English is especially illuminating. And the NYT obit gives a wide view on Phill’s life.

Further insight into the Solstice Events with some documentation at Roulette; along with a 12-hour video.

Joe Sample 1939 – 2014

death

Joe Sample (piano) with Winton Felder at a Montreux Jazz Festival jam session, Montreux, Switzerland, July 1982

Thanks to Randy, and the miracle of the Internet, the playlist for that long ago concert, where Gilberto Gil, Jimmy Cliff, Larry Graham, and others showed up to jam. The 00:00 for “Satisfaction” may have something to do with Jimmy Cliff not knowing the lyrics at all…

THE CRUSADERS, 12 July 1982, Montreux Casino — 02:23:08
Joe Sample (p) Wilton Felder (s) Stix Hooper (dr) Barry Finerty (g) Eddie M. Watkins (b) Rena Scott (voc)

1 It Happens Everyday (11:36)
2 Rhapsody In Blue (12:54)
3 Free Drumming (10:39)
4 We All Have A Star (08:34)
5 Satisfaction (00:00)
6 Vi, Vi (09:02)
7 Dance To The Music (04:29)
8 One In A Million To You (04:39)
9 Montreux Jamming (13:48)
10 Street Life (11:24)
11 Put It Where You Want It (04:54)

Bruce Springsteen

portrait, Bruce Springsteen, McNichols Arena, Denver, 1980
portrait, Bruce Springsteen, McNichols Arena, Denver, 20 October ©1980 hopkins/neoscenes.

digging deep into the 35mm archive, from 30 years ago now. 18,000 images. back from the time I covered around 150 concerts in two years, as well as being the photo editor for the yearbook, special editor for the newspaper, and doing some advertising photography — at the same time as slogging through one of the toughest engineering schools in the country, argh. hard days … but much fun: our motto was work hard, play hard. doing all that with good friends, what more can one ask?

this archive will surface in some form in this thesis project, possibly, and if not within that framework, it will simply surface as possible. the (life)-time required to do this is significant. and perhaps that time is short.

Bo Diddley 1928 – 2008

Bo Diddley went on to heaven yesterday it is said:

Garry Mitchell, a grandson of Diddley and one of more than 35 family members at the musician’s home when he died at about 1:45 a.m. EDT, said his death was not unexpected.

“There was a gospel song that was sang and he said ‘wow’ with a thumbs up,”
Mitchell told Reuters, when asked to describe the scene at Diddley’s deathbed.

“The song was ‘Walk Around Heaven’ and in his last words he stated that he was going to heaven.”

I took this photo at a concert that Bo did in the Green Center at the Colorado School of Mines as the kick-off concert of the annual E-Day party weekend, April 1979. As Special Editor for the student newspaper, hung around back-stage with Bo and his band, made some shots there, but unfortunately don’t have those scanned yet in my digital archive at the moment. The acoustics of the auditorium were lousy, and the concert wasn’t particularly memorable, but the guy can definitely rock!

Bo Diddley, Golden, Colorado, April ©1979 hopkins/neoscenes
Bo Diddley, Golden, Colorado, April ©1979 hopkins/neoscenes

Moers Jazz Festival

portrait, Frank Köllges, Moers International Jazz Festival, Moers, Germany, May 1996

Today we head off early to Köln to pick up saxophone reeds and head north to the site of the 25th annual Moers Jazz Festival. Volker is playing saxophone in the band INTERMISSION ORCHESTRA, a colossal conglomeration of people under the baton of Frank Köllges. As we were back stage all day and night, I ended up having some interesting conversations with Famoudou Don Moyé (percussionist with the Art Ensemble of Chicago) and Alan Silva, one of the most important jazz music educators (and jazz performers) in Europe. AEC has always been a big influence on me (thanks Randy & Gunter!), and I clearly remember a concert they gave on a hot July evening in NE Washington, D.C. back in 1986 with friends Randy and Gary. So, I couldn’t believe it when I sat down in the backstage tent, and across the table was Don. COOL! The other bands included Cohan, a group of Japanese percussionists; Tyrone Brown, bassist for Max Roach; and Maceo Parker, former saxophonist for James Brown, with his HOT HOT HOT FUNKY band including Tyrone Jefferson on trombone, Jerome Preston on bass, Darlene Parker on vocals and Jamal Thomas on drums! A party. Didn’t get home until 0300, bwah!.

Tyrone Brown solo (USA)
Tyrone Browne, b

Cohan (Japan)
Megumu Nishino, taikos, trad. instr — Yoshimi Tsuneda, taikos, trad. instr — Hironobu Tanaka, taikos, gong, trad. instr — Keizo Iwakiri, taikos, trad. Instr

Adam Noidlt Franzendentale (BRD)
Frank Köllges incl. Jugend-Symphonieorchester der Rheinischen Musikschule Köln, all members of Para Transmit Orchestra of the last four years in Moers plus Adam Noidlt lntermission : Le Grand Orchestre Kybernetic — feat. Garde Musikzug Blau – Weiß Moers – Asberg & many Surprise acts : Trampolin jumping with Hiltrud Roewe – Daniela Reis – Simone Calefice – Julia Calefice

Maceo Parker & Band (USA)
Maceo Parker, reeds, voc — Tyrone Jefferson, tb — Darliene Parker, voc — Bruno Speight, g — Kellis Parker, g, voc — Will Boulware, organ — Jerome Preston, b, voc — Jamal Thomas, dr

portrait, Cohan, Moers International Jazz Festival, Moers, Germany, May 1996

Setlist: The Rolling Stones

Under My Thumb; When the Whip Comes Down; Let’s Spend the Night Together; Shattered; Neighbours; Black Limousine; Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me) (The Temptations cover); Twenty Flight Rock (Eddie Cochran cover); Going to a Go-Go (The Miracles cover); Let Me Go; Time Is on My Side (Kai Winding & His Orchestra cover); Beast of Burden; You Can’t Always Get What You Want; Little T&A (Keith Richards on lead vocals); Angie; Tumbling Dice; She’s So Cold; Hang Fire; Miss You; Honky Tonk Women; Brown Sugar; Start Me Up; Jumpin’ Jack Flash; Encore: (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
, Basel, Switzerland, July 1982. Photo credit: Barfi.ch.
Rolling Stones, Basel, Switzerland, July 1982. Photo credit: Barfi.ch.

The story on this stroke of luck: The two Swiss gals we met at the Jugendherberge outside of Brig (?) had a pair of tickets to this concert in Basel. YES!

We drove up to Basel from Montreux where we were staying at a campground, and attending shows at the Montreux Jazz Festival, arriving outside St. Jakob’s Stadion hours before the concert. Randy decided to go see one of the gals in town, I decided to hang out, as we were able to walk into the stadium without even using our tickets. There was no one at the gates yet! The J. Geils Band was playing warm-up for the Stones, and as I had met them in Boston a few times back in 1978 when I had taken a year off Mines for a breather, I was able to mingle backstage. However, one of the two most overwhelming regrets in my life occurred: when we were first heading into the stadium, I decided that there was no way I could get my cameras in to a Stones concert, given all my experiences in the recent past with shooting concerts in Colorado and Boston. So, I stashed my cameras under the car seat. Once I figured out I could have brought them in, it was too late and staff had started manning the entrance gates. DAMMIT!

Long story short: a memorable moment when hanging upstage, when the stadium gates finally opened, the Tubular Bells theme music for The Exorcist was playing. I watched, with goosebumps, as a flood of people came over the rear of the stadium rushing to get to stage-front: let the show begin!

Randy finally showed up with a compelling story about his visit to one of the gals’ house in Basel. And, despite a heavy rainstorm that delayed the Stones’ arrival onstage, the concert was awesome from our stage-front vantage.