Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Whit Dickey / William Parker / Matthew Shipp: Village Mothership
Whit Dickey / William Parker / Matthew Shipp: Village Mothership
ByWhit Dickey
drums
William Parker
bassb.1952

Matthew Shipp
pianob.1960

David S. Ware
saxophone, tenor1949 - 2012
Back in the day, you might have first thought this trio was a rock band because that reissue of Circular Temple was on former Black Flag frontman Henry Rollins' label, which he co-founded with Rick Ruben of Beastie Boys fame. The liner notes to that reissue even asked "Is this jazz?" A proper question to ask because, remember in 1994 we were in the heyday of neocon jazz, where the anointed young lions were paring down the jazz canon. It was their "we will not be replaced" (by innovative music) moment. As with seemingly all conservative movements, the young lions have hoisted themselves on their own musical petards.
So what do we have thirty years later? Village Mothership is a vibrant and resonant recording that is as much jazz as it is not jazz. It is three freewheeling, co-equal musicians improvising, pulling music out of thin air. Correction, not out of thin air, but music drawn from decades of interaction and exchange. Where thirty years ago listeners struggled to identify Shipp's influences, often citing

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Lennie Tristano
piano1919 - 1978

Andrew Hill
piano1931 - 2007
Track Listing
A Thing & Nothing; Whirling In The Void; Nothingness; Village Mothership; Down Void Way; Nothing & A Thing.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Village Mothership | Year Released: 2021 | Record Label: Tao Forms
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Whit Dickey Concerts
Ingardens Festival
First Street Green Cultural ParkNew York, NY
Ingardens Festival
First Street Green Cultural ParkNew York, NY
Support All About Jazz
