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Bobby Zankel - A Change of Destiny


GA Russell

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Alto Saxophonist-Composer

Bobby Zankel

Shines a Brilliant Light on American, Philadelphia History with

"A Change of Destiny,"

Set for September 22 Release by Mahakala Records

Zankel Examines the Lives of Slaves Kept by George Washington

At the President's House in Philadelphia &

Offers a Blueprint for Transforming America's Historical Legacy

 

Zankel's Band, the Wonderful Sound 8,

Is an All-Star Octet Featuring Trombonist Robin Eubanks,

Alto Saxophonist Jaleel Shaw, Violinist Diane Monroe,

Pianist Sumi Tonooka, Bassist Lee Smith,

Drummer Pheeroan AkLaff, Vocalist Ruth Naomi Floyd

 

CD Release Shows at Mt. Morris Ascension Presbyterian Chuch, NYC,

Friday, October 20, Curated by Craig Harris;

Painted Bride Art Center, Philadelphia,

Saturday, October 21

July 28, 2023

S.gif Bobby Zankel A Change of Destiny

Philadelphia alto saxophonist and composer Bobby Zankel explores a darker side of his longtime city’s history with A Change of Destiny, set for a September 22 release on Mahakala Records. The album is a distillation of music that Zankel wrote for a dance piece, The Spirits Break to Freedom, in the 2010s, and was recorded with Zankel’s Wonderful Sound 8 (a byproduct of his Warriors of the Wonderful Sound Big Band), featuring Philadelphia jazz greats drummer Pheeroan AkLaff, trombonist Robin Eubanks, vocalist Ruth Naomi Floyd, violinist Diane Monroe, alto saxophonist Jaleel Shaw, bassist Lee Smith, and pianist Sumi Tonooka.

 

A six-section suite of “resistance, revolution, and renewal,” according to its composer, A Change of Destiny is a response to the 2007 excavation of slave quarters on the site of the President’s House—George Washington’s residence in Philadelphia. The opening track “Destiny,” based on a Jymie Merritt–inspired cross rhythm, asks the question “Why have we been brought here?” and proclaims, “My destiny belongs to me!”

 

Spirits Break to Freedom” is an epic journey from rainforest hocket rhythms to Afrobeat groove, 21st-century urban angularity, and freedom. “Naming Names” is an Ornette Coleman–influenced praise song in which vocalist Ruth Naomi Floyd intones the names of “our nation’s nine founding mothers and fathers whose forced labor made the President’s House functional.” The gospel ecstasy of “Ring Shouting” and the Billie Jean groove of “Rituals of Resistance” express two cultural revolutionary modes of joyful freedom, while “To Be a Human Being,” constructed over a 14-beat rhythmic mode, features the powerful self-declaratory words of Malcolm X.

If the octet here is a spin-off of Zankel’s large ensemble, it is also a new band unto itself. Similarly, while A Change of Destiny is related to the prior work Spirits Break to Freedom, it is also a stand-alone project, with fresh arrangements written especially for the Wonderful Sound 8. “It becomes easy to write when I know who I’m writing for,” says Zankel. “And having those players provides such a rich palette. I like a big band, but I prefer a midsize unit because you can hear everything.” On A Change of Destiny, there is indeed much to hear.

Bobby Zankel

Bobby Zankel was born December 21, 1949 in Brooklyn. He first began attracting national attention in 1971, while at the University of Wisconsin as a member of Cecil Taylor’s Unit Core Ensemble and simultaneously working with drummer George Brown’s quartet with organist Melvin Rhyne.

 

In the early to mid-1970s, Zankel’s underground reputation grew on the New York loft scene, where he performed with the likes of William Parker and Ray Anderson while continuing his apprenticeship with Taylor. In 1975, Zankel moved to Philadelphia to raise his family and expand his artistic vision without heed to commercialism or the trends of the times. He has performed and recorded with such diverse masters as Johnny Coles, Odean Pope, Ralph Peterson, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, Oliver Lake, and Marilyn Crispell, among others. Zankel continued working occasionally with Taylor for the remainder of the pianist’s life.

 

The saxophonist became a devoted son to his adopted city, working with several generations of the finest of Philadelphia jazz musicians. In 2001, Zankel founded the jazz advocacy and education nonprofit Warriors of the Wonderful Sound, Inc., and established an eponymous 18-piece big band as its centerpiece. Composers from Muhal Richard Abrams to Rudresh Mahanthappa have written for the ensemble. All of this creative work has been balanced with 32 years of teaching in the Pennsylvania prisons.

 

The Bobby Zankel Wonderful Sound 8 will perform at Mt. Morris Ascension Presbyterian Church, 15 Mt. Morris Park (at 122nd Street), NYC, on Friday 10/20, a performance curated by Craig Harris; and at the Painted Bride Art Center, 5230 Market Street, Philadelphia, on Saturday 10/21

 

 

Photo: Michelle Lyu

 

EPK: Bobby Zankel | A Change of Destiny

EPK: Bobby Zankel | "A Change of Destiny"



 

Bobby Zankel Web Site
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Bobby Zankel is an excellent musician and a good guy.  Ruth Naomi Floyd is my wife's old roommate, an incredible talent.  She and Zankel have done a lot of work together.  Sumi Tonooka is a masterful Philly pianist who has always been greatly underappreciated.  First saw her in the 70's at the Ethical Society, when she was barely 20 years old, but she was special even then.  The Painted Bride Art Center is my favorite venue in Philly for hearing jazz, so will look to make that show as well as acquiring the CD.  I haven't been to a live jazz show in several years, so this will be very special for me.    Really looking forward to this one, thanks for the heads-up.  If anyone else in the Organissimo community thinks they may make that October 21 show at the Painted Bride Art Center, let me know.  Would be great to meet you in person!

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