One Sheet

You don’t find too many bass clarinets in Santo Domingo but Paul Austerlitz packs his whenever he goes. That and a pen. Over the years he has returned home to Gettysburg not only with hot musical contacts in his address book but also material for two seminal books on the music of the Dominican Republic: “Merengue: Dominican Music and Dominican Identity” and “Jazz Consciousness: Music, Race and Humanity.”

This CD, Journey, turns those themes–the influence of African music traditions–into music at once freshly individual and rooted in a wider community. There’s forward-looking melodic jazz, infectious Afro-Caribbean rhythms, and creative directions not heard before (did someone say “Indian raga meets Merengue”?). 

Austerlitz is a scholar with a horn; he puts his research into practice. His “dark, voluble bass clarinet work” (Cadence Magazine) is intrinsic to his (sometimes multiphonic) voice. It is uncommonly smooth throughout the registers. If you like Eric Dolphy or Bob Mintzer you will love this. Austerlitz’s previous collaboration with Michael S. Harper, the poet Laureate of Rhode Island, is also on innova: Double Take: Jazz Poetry Conversations (innova 604) 

“African American improvised music (also known as jazz) is an ‘arena’ of ‘word-consciousness,’ one peace of powerful sisterhood and brotherhood. I offer the creative fruit of my ethnomusicological journey as a universal communion.” Paul Austerlitz