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Matthew Shipp: Invisible Light - Live S?o Paulo
ByFor a surgeon, a writer, or a painter we might describe the act of losing one's self as a "flow state." Jazz improvisation has often been cited by neurologists as a classic example of a flow state. Certainly it is, but let's consider Shipp's journey of construction and deconstruction within the context of wu-wei.
No jazz musician emerges fully formed. That said, some conservatory trained musicians become proficient in a style and draw upon it for an entire career. Other musicians, like Shipp are forged by not only training, but also their environment and culture at large. A resident of New York's Lower East Side since the 1980s, Shipp was influenced by the avant-garde scene in jazz, plus the post-punk revolution of rock music and the emergence of hip-hop. Some of his earliest recordings were released by the former Black Flag frontman Henry Rollins. Maybe that's why when other conservative musicians were recycling

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Roscoe Mitchell
saxophoneb.1940

William Parker
bassb.1952

David S. Ware
saxophone, tenor1949 - 2012

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993
There has always been a mystical connection between Thelonious Monk and Shipp, just not in the music they play. Monk, a student of Harlem stride piano, was present at the birth of bebop. Shipp, born in 1960, has always been associated with the avant-garde and free jazz/improvisation. The connection between the two pianists is their creation of a distinctive and personal language. Monk's melodic twists were foreign to many listeners and were put down as being weird and unconventional. It may be surprising today to read reviews of Monk's music from back in the day describing his playing "wrong notes." Today we hold up the music he wrote and perfected over many years of practice and application as untouchable genius, and it seems strange to us that many couldn't "hear" it.
Much of the same can be said of Shipp's music. Part of his wu-wei training has been building a personal lexicon. His language of sound was distilled through his longstanding collaboration with his two brothers from different mothers, saxophonist

Ivo Perelman
saxophone, tenorb.1961

Mat Maneri
violab.1969

Michael Bisio
bass, acoustic
Newman Taylor Baker
percussion
Joe Morris
bass, acousticb.1955

Evan Parker
saxophone, sopranob.1944
This live recording from the 2016 Jazz na Fábrica Festival (Jazz at the Factory Festival) in Sao Paulo, is a nice bookend to one of the pianist's earliest solo recordings, the 1995 studio recording Symbol Systems (remastered and reissued as hetOLOGY 749). I say "bookend" with all due respect to Shipp's ever ongoing assertion he is retiring from recorded music. His first "retirement" came in 1999, but like many a great athlete, he has un-retired several times. In contrast to a boxing champion, Shipp's skills have not diminished. I'd argue his music, the music witnessed here from Brazil, is proof of an artist in full flight, and in command of his wu-wei.
If you are unfamiliar with his compositions like "Whole Movement," "Gamma Ray," "Blue In Orion" and "Symbol Systems," pieces he returns to often, then his renditions of standards like ""Angel Eyes," "On Green Dolphin Street," "There Will Never Be Another You," "Yesterdays," and "Summertime" will inform you. The latter piece by George Gershwin is disassembled sometimes carefully, other times with fistful of Shipp's percussive attack and thunderous block chords. The music taps, not into the slow, cold rational brain of the pianist but the much quicker unconscious mind. He surrenders to a state of trying not to try and his pure self is revealed.
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 Mark Corroto.
Invisible Light - Live S?o Paulo can be purchased here.
Contact Mark Corroto at All About Jazz.
Mark misses his dogs Louie & Freddy, but endeavors daily to find and listen to new and interesting sounds.
Track Listing
Symbol Systems; Angel Eyes; Whole Movement; On Green Dolphin Street; Invisible Light; There Will Never Be Another You; Blue In Orion; Yesterdays; Patmos; Gamma Ray; Summertime.
Personnel
Matthew Shipp
pianoAdditional Instrumentation
Matthew Shipp: piano.
Album information
Title: Invisible Light - Live S?o Paulo | Year Released: 2019 | Record Label: Ezz-thetics
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