Video

Type

PERFORMANCE: Hearing-Visions-Sonores Launch

Jesse Stewart, Joe Sorbara, and Germaine Liu perform a structured improvisation using only percussive instruments.

PERFORMANCE: Ah Raza! The Making of an American Artist

A video recording of a multimedia performative ethnography. Ah Raza! The Making of an American Artist.

KEYNOTE: Tono Rhythymology and Biocosmology: New Paradigms for Creating a Unified All-Pervasive Music

Dr. Milford Graves discusses his theories regarding musical orthodoxies and the connections between music and the biological body

KEYNOTE: Citizen Monk: Stories of Civic Engagement and Visionary Politics

Dr. Robin Kelley discusses the defiance of form that characterized Thelonious Monk’s music, and argues that even if Monk viewed his own music as apolitical, it still inspired political action by exemplifying an ethos of freedom that applies directly to the social world.

KEYNOTE: Improvisation in American Taiko

Dr. Deborah Wong discusses improvised solos in Japanese American drumming and their relationship to ideas about tradition and hybrid cultural identities. Gender is also a focal point of the talk, and numerous video examples of taiko performances are presented.

KEYNOTE: Jazz/Opera and the Staging of Race

While examining the presence of improvisatory practices in opera over the course of history, the Hutcheons discuss the ongoing hybridization of opera with other art forms, and how racial identities have been represented in opera.

KEYNOTE: Improvisation and Diaspora: Why New Orleans Matters

Dr. George Lipsitz discusses transcultural understanding and improvisation in the context of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina’s destruction of New Orleans in 2005.

KidsAbility 2008 Workshop Profile

A profile of a collaborative outreach project conducted throughout the summer of 2008 for youth with disabilities involving ICASP, KidsAbility, and the Guelph Jazz Festival.

Oral Histories: George Elliott Clarke

George Elliott Clarke is one of Canada’s most prolific poets. He is also a renowned essayist, scholar, playwright, and, in many ways, a songwriter. His work largely explores and chronicles the experience and history of the black Canadian community of Nova Scotia, creating a cultural geography that Clarke refers to as “Africadia.” Clarke was born in Windsor, Nova Scotia in 1960, near the Black Loyalist community of Three Mile Plains, as a seventh-generation Canadian of African American and Mi’Kmaq Amerindian heritage.

Oral Histories: d’bi.young anitafrika

d’bi.young anitafrika is a Jamaican-Canadian dub poet, monodramatist, educator, and Dora Award-winning actor and playwright. In this month’s Oral History we are gifted with an on stage interview with d’bi.young, and we get to witness the power of dub poetry in action by one of Canada’s most renowned dub poets.