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Bunky Green: Urgency and Continuity

You can play so many things. You can play whatever you hear, but it has to have continuity for it to all hang together.
During the early days of his career, Green took over for Jackie McLean in

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Sonny Stitt
saxophone1924 - 1982

Yusef Lateef
woodwinds1920 - 2013

Andrew Hill
piano1931 - 2007
Unhappy with how he was treated by labels and the music industry in general, Green began transitioning into jazz education in the early '70s. He taught at Chicago State University from 1972 to 1989, while sporadically recording. During the late '70s, he released three albums for the Vanguard label: the commercially oriented Transformations (1977) and Visions (1978), as well as the uncompromising Places We've Never Been (1979). Places We've Never Been features six expansive post-bop pieces with an all-star band including

Michael Brecker
saxophone, tenor1949 - 2007

Eddie Gomez
bassb.1944

Freddie Waits
drumsb.1943
In over three decades since Places We've Never Been, Green has only recorded a handful of albums, but several are outstanding. Healing the Pain (Delos, 1989), which explores the complex emotional landscape related to the death of his parents, is a soulful, slow-burning affair and a career highlight. Another Place (Label Bleu, 2006)produced by

Steve Coleman
saxophone, altob.1956
Green's most recent recording, Apex (Pi Recordings, 2010), is another ambitious effort. It's a cross-generational collaboration with

Rudresh Mahanthappa
saxophone, altob.1971

Jason Moran
pianob.1975

Francois Moutin
bass
Damion Reid
drums
Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942

Bunky Green: We were both at an International Association of Jazz Educators (IAJE) conference, and he brought me a tape. He was playing with a college band in Chicago, and he wanted me to listen to it. So I did, and I got back to him. It was as simple as that. I told him, "It's wonderful, man. Join the club. You're one of us." I said that because there are certain people who play a little differently and don't adhere to the older school as much as others. Rather, they map their own way harmonically. I'm talking about people like Steve Coleman and

Greg Osby
saxophoneb.1960
AAJ: Describe the seeds of your interest in Indian music.
BG: Many years ago, Donald Garrett told me about

Ravi Shankar
sitar1920 - 2012

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
AAJ: Tell us about the collaborative model you adopted when working with Rudresh Mahanthappa on Apex.

From left: Bunky Green, Rudresh Mahanthappa
BG: The Apex story started in Chicago in 2009, when we played in Millennium Park together. Rudresh wanted me to play with him and called me to ask. At first I said, "I don't know."
But he was pretty persistent and said, "I just want you to do this gig with me. Come on, you can do it."
So I agreed and we did it. I realized when you're on the bandstand with Rudresh, you better come to play. Oh yes. And that's because it's so intense from the moment you start to the moment you walk off the stage.
We heard the recording of the performance and said, "Wow, we need to record this." Rudresh took it from there. In terms of the material, there was never any problem because I've got material going back, stylistically, using those Eastern scales, all the way to the '70s, when I recorded for Vanguard Records. There are a bunch of albums I did for Vanguard with

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
People ask, "How can a person Bunky's age play so young?" That's been the game lately for the last few years. It's like people rediscovered me. And every time, I have to say, "Wait, have you thought about going back and listening a little bit? Put some time in, and you can really see I've played like that throughout my career. You'll also see it was picked up by some other people after they saw where I was going."
So when Rudresh and I got together, everything was fine. There's a kind of continuity between what we do together and what I did before. I tend to be more harmonically oriented than Rudresh, because I have an entire history coming up through

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
We just sat down and said, "Okay, let's compose this stuff, construct this thing architecturally and do what it takes to make it work, because it's already there. All we have to do is go down and rehearse with the appropriate people and do it." Jason Moran was marvelous, because he's so flexible and able to relate to wherever you're going. Not only that, he'll take you some other places. Jack DeJohnette has always been the type of player he's been. He plays the history of jazz and goes into the future. So Apex was set up for some degree of success. And apparently, the album has been very successful.
AAJ: Were there any challenges you and Mahanthappa faced when putting the album together?
BG: It was a unique situation, in that the only challenge was getting everyone together so we could map things out, architecturally speaking. We said, "We have all the pieces. Now how shall we put them together as a consummate whole?" It all came so fast, it was incredible. I brought my music in, and the rhythm section absorbed it immediately. We would run through things a couple of times and have it. By the third time, people were just playing the tune. It was a very natural thing. Rudresh and I quite often run so close that we sound alike, and it's hard to differentiate sometimes. [Laughs.] That shows you how compatible everything is. This is an ongoing collaboration, and we're going to see where it goes.

BG: I think it was apocalyptic, really, because there it was: Eastern echoes in that kind of playing. You also hear them in the stuff I did with Elvin Jones. During those sessions, I was just playing what I wanted. I didn't have someone breathing down my neck. The record company wasn't saying, "We want this kind of product." On those sessions, it was more or less the product I wanted it to be. Places We've Never Been was far reaching, stylistically, in terms of what I was doing as a player. That's what interested Rudresh. The way I approached the harmonic fabric was suggestive, rather than just playing the harmony as it was. I created a lot of tension and relief by going against standard harmony and then ultimately resolving it with continuity. That's the whole bag. You can play so many things. You can play whatever you hear, but it has to have continuity for it to all hang together.
AAJ: When you were with Vanguard, you had a deal in which they let you make Places We've Never Been in exchange for doing several albums their way.
BG: [Laughs.] Exactly. And even doing one album your way wasn't really always the case for most people. It was something the person handling me at Vanguard let me do. His name is Ed Bland. He was the producer and knew where I was coming from. If it had been someone else, I don't think I would have been able to get that album out. I knew I really needed to document it, and he gave me that opportunity.
AAJ: How do you feel about the other albums you released on Vanguard?

From left: Matt Mitchell, Carlos De Rosa, Bunky Green, Damion Reid, Rudresh Mahanthappa
BG: A lot of them are commercial, and they were designed to be that way. But I did get to make another album with Ed later called Healing the Pain that came out in 1989 on the Delos label. I was able to go where I wanted to go on that one. I was recording for my parents, because they died pretty close together and I was in one of those moods, musically speaking, in which I reached a high point of transcendence beyond the regular way of doing things. On "Seashells," I play a melody that's very different and difficult. It involves playing octaves very close together, so it sounds like I'm playing two notes at once. That was a challenge, and it came off successfully.
AAJ: Was Another Place, your 2006 album produced by Steve Coleman, conceptually related to Places We've Never Been?
BG: You hit it. It's another place we hadn't been to. [Laughs.] They are related, title-wise. I really enjoyed that album because so many interesting things come up on it. It had Jason Moran on piano, who makes me think differently. I really start concentrating and listening to how he puts things together, and my mind would go along with that. It helped encourage me to do the things I do naturally, but in other contexts. No matter how great a pianist is, if you're not together with him conceptually, things can come out rather stiff, sound forced, or not come out at all. But with Jason and

Nasheet Waits
drumsb.1971

Freddie Waits
drumsb.1943
AAJ: How did Coleman influence the album as its producer?
BG: Steve is a wonderful player and never got in the way. He said, "Just do what you want to do." Steve damn near forced me to make the album. He and I are very close. He said, "You've got to do this album."
I said, "I don't want to record at this particular time because I'm disgusted with the scene and how record companies aren't fair to artists, financially speaking." I was so disgusted with some of my previous experiences that I said, "I'm not going to record again." I really didn't care if I ever did at that point. It just wasn't important to me under the conditions the record companies impose.
Steve kept pressing and said, "These people at Label Bleu want to do it. It's a cool label in France."
I finally said, "All right, Steve, I'll do it. I'm only doing this because I trust you." That was it. I did it, and Steve was right. I think it's a great album and a historic one. It was very well put together from a production standpoint, and playing-wise, it was fresh.
AAJ: Reflect on your time working with Elvin Jones.
BG: It was great working with Elvin. We were pretty much on the same track musically at that time. He happened to become very famous very fast. I chose a different route. I was on the track to fame, but I decided to go into education. I could have stepped into that particular world of traveling and fame. I would have been pretty much made. When I worked with Elvin, it wasn't that I learned anything from him. Rather, I had the opportunity to play with a drummer I admire and get my message across with him. He was such a fine drummer.
AAJ: You received some attention for appearing on

Travis Shook
pianob.1969

Tony Williams
drums1945 - 1997
BG: Travis is a wonderful pianist. It was his album, and he made a really fine one. I played only on a couple of tunes. I wasn't really able to get into what I'm capable of doing with my style on it. You would have to look to my other albums for that. My stylistic approach is very personal, and that album isn't indicative of what I do. I did play with Tony on that album, and he was a wonderful player, but it was a pretty straight-ahead albuma good one though. I'm not trying to be critical. I thought I played okay, but it wasn't the sound I wanted, to be honest.
AAJ: What are some of the key perspectives you consider and impress upon your students, as a jazz educator?


Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
From the very first day, I have my students understand that the real school is the streetit's as simple as that. You can get an instrument and become an advanced player, but you have to get into the nightclubs or other environments where you're playing the music. You have to venture into an environment where things aren't all planned and you're living very much in the moment. You have to think and be creative on the spot. You have to marinate in an environment where things change around you. You can't just practice with a CD, because then you're just working and designing what you do to fit what's on the CD. You can't play as freely as you would as an improviser in an environment where the drummer, bassist or pianist changes night to night. You need to hear other people, how they think and respond to the immediacy of everything going on.

BG: I say to them, "Don't look to get rich. Very, very few jazz musicians have been very successful monetarily. That's not the norm. If you're looking for a high-paying job that's going to make you $250,000 a year, it might not be the path you're looking for." [Laughs.] However, that's not the real point of this. I ask them, "Do you love it? Is this something you truly want to do? Do you have a burning desire to do it? Is there a fire inside you that you can't put out? If that's your desire, go for it and let the chips fall where they may. More than likely, you'll work it out and find a way to make a decent living. Maybe you can be one of those people who get rich doing it, but it's about the fire in the belly. You have to know that you have one life to live, and this is what it's going to be about." This is exactly how I talk to my students. This is real life. I tell them about all the wonderful musicians I play with and bring back knowledge from the street. I tell them, "No one's going to protect you if you do something wrong or didn't get something right on the street. When you go out there, you are out there. And the learning environment out there can be very cold sometimes. It's all part of the process. But if you're learning, you're cool."
AAJ: What did Through His Eyes, the 2004 student tribute album by the University of North Florida Jazz Ensemble (Sea Breeze Vista), mean to you?
BG: That was wonderful. It was a marvelous thing as a tribute from the students. It made me feel very good and needed. It also made me feel like I had done something to really affect the lives of some young people in a positive way. Keith Javors, a wonderful pianist, put it together and came up with his own take on things with his great band, and did a beautiful job.
AAJ: You've been working on a lot of new music. What's the status of getting some of it released?
BG: I'm looking forward to putting an album together and moving forward with it. Inevitably, someone will come up to me and say, "I want to record a project of your music." But I'm not overeager to put something out unless everything is right with the record company. When they do come along, I have to ask, "Is it my show or is it your show? If it's your show, you have an idea of how I should sound. But if you want me to record for you, you have to like what I'm doing, so go ahead and let me do it." I've been concentrating on Apex, which has us both out front, in terms of performing. Rudresh continues performing everywhere on his own, and I'm still teaching. So I'm not in a hurry to be recorded, but if the right situation comes along, I'll more than likely go along with it. I've already got great documentation of what I've done, but I am thinking about the future.
AAJ: You once said, "Unless a musician keeps his mind free, the rebel becomes the conservative." How do you keep out of that trap?
BG: It's just part of my DNA. When a person with great ideas comes along who changes the system, eventually someone else comes out with an idea that's even more rebellious. Even if the newer idea is right, the first person may say, "I don't want to change this." Why? Because that person is comfortable in his position. So the rebel has become the conservative. You have to be very careful to not become the conservative.
So here's Bunky Green. This is how I play now. People ask, "Bunky, will you be playing like this years from now?"
I respond, "Well, if I'm alive, hopefully not. I want to keep evolving."

AAJ: You've also described creativity as a matter of life and death. Elaborate on that.
BG: In order to be great at what you do, it is a matter of life and death. It's a case of you almost having to do what you do, in that you can't really live unless you do it. If you don't do it, you're unhappy with yourself and this unproductive state you're in, and in a way that's a sort of death. I don't mean it literally, but it's about having a need to express yourself that is so urgent. You're saying to yourself, "I've got to do this thing. It possesses me so much that it never leaves me. It's with me all the time." I'm talking about musicians who are thinking about phrases all day and night. They can't sleep because they're thinking about them. And when they're asleep, they wake up practicing without the instrument. They're mentally practicing and it becomes part of their living process. So all of this is a metaphor for the idea of life and death.

BG: Yes, yes, yes. There's definitely a spiritual element. I can only do the things I do because God gave me this talent, and it's really not mine. Because God gave it to me, it's my duty to develop it to the highest level I possibly can. It's something that will only shine through me if I'm in contact with the Creator. It's this light of mine, and I'm going to let it shine. It's not about ego. It's about getting ego out of the way. In my case, the only ego part is that I feel good in that after all of these years, I'm getting credit for creating a style. There are thousands of marvelous saxophonists wonderfully endowed with technique, but it's not about that. It's about having someone say, "There was a person who came along named Bunky Green, and he left something behind for other saxophonists to work on stylistically. He was his own person. He's a creator." And that's in line with the Creator, period.
Selected Discography
Rudresh Mahanthappa/Bunky Green, Apex (Pi Recordings, 2010)
Bunky Green, The Salzau Quartet Live at Jazz Baltica (Traumton Records, 2008)
Bunky Green, Another Place (Label Bleu, 2006)
Bunky Green, Healing the Pain (Delos, 1989)
Bunky Green, In Love Again (Mark, 1987)
Bunky Green, Places We've Never Been (Vanguard, 1979)
Bunky Green, Visions (Vanguard, 1978)
Bunky Green, Transformations (Vanguard, 1977)
Bunky Green, The Latinization of Bunky Green (Cadet, 1967)
Bunky Green, Playin' for Keeps (Cadet, 1966)
Bunky Green, Testifyin' Time (Argo, 1965)
Bunky Green, Step High (Exodus, 1960)
Photo Credits
Page 1: Courtesy of Label Bleu
Page 2: Courtesy of

Rudresh Mahanthappa
saxophone, altob.1971
Page 3: John Kelman
Page 4: Courtesy of Pi Recordings
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Bunky Green
Interview
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Charles Mingus
Sonny Stitt
Yusef Lateef
Andrew Hill
randy brecker
eddie gomez
Freddie Waits
Steve Coleman
Rudresh Mahanthappa
jason moran
Francois Moutin
Damion Reid
Jack DeJohnette
Greg Osby
Ravi Shankar
John Coltrane
Elvin Jones
Charlie Parker
Sonny Rollins
Nasheet Waits
Travis Shook
Tony Williams
Ornette Coleman
Keith Javors
John Kelman
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