Where is downtown?

(Posted this afternoon on the TONY Blog)

John_zorn_2
Peter Cherches — poet, occasional vocalist, jazz fan and food blogger extraordinaire
— compiled a concise but thorough research guide covering the history
of New York’s downtown music scene(s) for the Fales Library at New York
University earlier this year. Today he posted his work online for
everyone’s enjoyment and edification. At a glance, it’s a terrifically
useful starting point for anyone still baffled by the term downtown music and its varying meanings.

Cherches’s Downtown Music 1971-1987: An Overview and Resource Guide
provides an overview of major figures (such as archetypal downtowner
John Zorn, left), performance venues and stylistic developments during
the period defined by its title. The first section covers downtown music in the contemporary-classical sense: the territory Tom Johnson and later Kyle Gann
valiantly detailed in the Village Voice. Laurie Anderson, Julius
Eastman and Bob Telson are included, as is virtually every figure whose
name was mentioned in the Great Minimalism Debate of 2007.

Part two deals with the punk scene that primarily developed around CBGB
from 1974 to 1978. The third section takes on No Wave — DNA, James
Chance, Lydia Lunch and so on. The fourth part handles the loft jazz
scene that took root at Sam Rivers’s Studio Rivbea, Rashied Ali’s Ali’s
Alley, Environ and the like: a movement whose current descendant is the
Vision Festival scene fostered by William Parker and Patricia
Nicholson. Part five covers the music most commonly associated with the downtown music tag these days: the era of John Zorn, Eugene
Chadbourne, Jim Staley, Kip Hanrahan, etcetera.

In each section, Cherches offers a short, smart introduction to the
major movers, scenes and stylistic trends. Each essay is followed by a
list of prominent artists and venues, a selected bibliography and
discography, and a list of hyperlinked web resources.

It’s a major piece of work, and it’s also intended to be a starting
point rather than a conclusion. To that end, Cherches has also launched
a related blog, Downtown Music, 1971-1987, for commentary and additional feedback.

(Non-TONY note: Thanks, Pete, for sharing this outstanding project.)

One response to “Where is downtown?”

  1. Wow! Thanks for this. I looks forward to digging in to the site.
    A relevant quote from Greg Tate that haunted me ever since I read it:
    “I first started coming up to New York from DC at the tail end of the loft era, and that was the last time jazz had a street life in New York…by the time I got up here around 82 that’s when the whole No New York, punk jazz, James White and the Blacks, Defunkt, Laswell and Zorn kind of get mixed in, it was this moment where the segregation between black and white avant-gardes momentarily dissolved and then reformed again.”
    The segregation Tate describes does exist, and how a creative person might address that in their art is a thread that runs through all of my own work.
    One reason I love living in NYC is for this sort of historical precedent. It is a vein one can tap into even in this 21st century.

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