About Civic Minded 5

The Civic Minded 5- presenting creative music in Central Florida

Tickets, posters and condiments: Help the cm5 raise funds now

After careful planning of our first half of 2013, Peter Brötzmann and Joe McPhee in Orlando on June 3rd entered the realm of possibility and we knew we should be involved. In order to keep our plans for 2013 intact, we decided that this concert would be less of a pro forma, ticketed concert and more of a fundraiser for our season. So here it goes; after twenty-six free creative music concerts presented at Timucua white house, here is your chance to become a philanthropist. Micro to macro, choose your level- from tickets to premiums or write a check for the cause. Claim your cm5 premiums at the concert.

Peter Brötzmann and Joe McPhee tickets:

Let’s start here. This is a concert event and we have a commemorative ticket, no ticket_half_sizematter where you make your purchase.  Buy an advanced ticket and secure your seating for $20 in-person at Park Avenue CDs in Orlando or from anywhere in the wired world here.

Peter Brötzmann and Joe McPhee screen printed concert poster:

More casually hot work from the cm5's Jim Ivy. A limited edition, screenprinted poster is coming.

Help the cm5 extend our concert season by purchasing the Peter Brötzmann and Joe McPhee at Timucua white house concert poster in a super-finite screen printed form minted by the superbad Flying Horse Editions shop. The design is by the cm5′s Jim Ivy and is 18″ X 24″, printed on a fine art quality paper stock. The poster is conveniently fitted to a standard artwork size if you choose to treat this to matte and frame. $25 donation for each copy. Preorder here or see us at the show.

cm5 Machine Gun Pepper Sauce:

brotzmann machine gun artThe Peter Brötzmann Octet Machine Gun album is, aural and visual, one of the iconic statements of 1960′s new jazz music. Celebrate Peter Brötzmann’s visit to the tourist destination with a suitably commemorative gift shop-style homage. cm5′s Machine Gun Pepper Sauce isn’t some simple, macho-hot, endorphin drainer. The pepper sauce taste mirrors the layers of sonic sophistication that we present in concert, while the artwork triggers a Fair Use Parody clause. Probably to the chagrin of Wayne La Pierre and Jim Porter, we turn the .30 caliber water-cooled barrel into a capsicum-centric gastric projectile guide. A tasty, philanthropic, swords to plowshares memento awaits. $10 donation for each (now 8 oz.!) jar. Preorder here or see us at the show.MachineGunSauce

Peter Brötzmann and Joe McPhee at Timucua white house- Monday, June 3rd

CM5 and Timucua Arts Foundation presents
Peter Brötzmann and Joe McPhee
Timucua white house
2000 S. Summerlin St., Orlando
7:30 pm concert, $20 admission, all ages welcome
Tickets available at Park Avenue CDs and online here

Brotzmann_McPhee1

The quick pitch: This is the chance to see these two legendary, wide-open masters of high energy music and proprietary extended wind instrument techniques in Orlando. The long read: Although this was a late addition to the cm5 2013 playbook, we gladly altered our careful work to make this a reality in town. View this concert both as a visceral fireworks-laden affair and as a pocket fundraising for all of you that have offered to help at varying levels. Since the reemergence of the Civic Minded 5- spurred on by the existence of the building of the Timucua white house- we’ve only asked for an admission for one other concert after altering our model from tickets to regular patrons (the cm5 members) and freely donating friends compelled by the music.

Peter Brötzmann and Joe McPhee, while born and raised during a very different time for their respective countries of Germany and the U.S., would be drawn to similar revolutions in the arts and are now known as regular collaborators in the world of improvised music, free jazz and world music. Both gentlemen started recording creative jazz-based music in the 1960′s. Both have had prominent record labels started to release their music. Both began as second-generation artists driven by “The New Thing” of Cecil Taylor, Ornette Coleman and Jimmy Giuffre- all of whom were able to make readily available recordings to disseminate a more open, bracing language for jazz music. The combined discographies of Brötzmann and McPhee hovers between three and four hundred releases.

You can make some connections between Peter Brötzmann’s visual arts pedigree and his later developing musical career. The reedist’s still-produced paintings have strong emphasis on color, texture and shape, opposed to detailed replications of extant imagery. That’s a fair jumping off point for Brötzmann’s playing on soprano, alto, tenor, baritone and bass saxophones, a-clarinet, e-flat clarinet; bass clarinet and tarogato. The same departure point can apply to his compositional styles, never tracking very close to the American jazz musicians- including The New Thing pioneers- that provided the Brotzmann_1978original impetus. The multi-reedist has developed and applied another pan-ecstatic, ritual music frame appending to his American predecessors and contemporaries, which were first strongly rooted in the blues form, eventually supplanted by pan-African and Far Eastern forms. Like many of his contemporaries, the America free music was suffused with the music and teachings of Karlheinz Stockhausen and John Cage. By the mid-1960′s, Brötzmann had toured with the world-traveling Don Cherry and returned to Germany to define the ground floor gestures of the countries’ new jazz scene. Bassist (1990′s cm5 concertizer) Peter Kowald, pianist Alex Von Schlippenbach, trumpeter Manfred Schoof, and drummer Sven-Ake Johannson. Aggregates of these players resulted in Brötzmann’s entry into DIY record making via 1967′s For Adolfe Sax and 1968′s iconic, rumbling freedom of Machine Gun. A long-standing trio of pianist Fred Van Hove and drummer Han Bennink- both previous cm5 guests- could be sourced via Berlin resident Jost Gebers’ Free Music Production (FMP) label. In addition to this trio, Brötzmann has been involved in a number of iconic outfits. The saxophonist was one surface of the gritty, diamond-hard electric jazz quartet Last Exit, with guitarist Sonny Sharrock, electric bassist Bill Laswell and drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson. A one-time Chicago project with Brötzmann has endured as the Chicago Octet/Tentet, full of composers and conductors including Joe McPhee.

Joe McPhee’s unusual aesthetic/instrumental flexibility could define his both his legendary status within the creative jazz music scene and the relative inability for a listener to sum up McPhee’s career with the catchphrase or conversational soundbite. If we were to arm you with your McPhee talking point, we could start with his tenor saxophone continuum along the lines of John Coltrane’s 1964 to 1967 astral, Pan-African spiritualism. He was first on record in 1969 with trombonist Clifford Thornton’s Freedom and Unity album, followed by again available releases Nation Time and Underground Railroad. In 1970 the Swiss label Hat Hut (later Hat Art and Hatology) started to release McPhee’s work, amongst which his solo statement Tenor arose. His collaborations on the three figure count discography echoes Don Cherry’s world travel with stops to record with another of the waiting myriad creative aggregates. Joe McPhee has appeared as a distinctive voice on tenor, alto and soprano saxophones, JoeMcPhee_goldengodtrombone, clarinets, pocket trumpet and valve trombone. Amongst McPhee’s best-known reoccurring projects include  Deep Listening Band collaborations with electronic and minimalist legend Pauline Oliveros, Trio X with bassist Dominic Duval and drummer Jay Rosen, and the afore-mentioned Chicago Octet/Tentet project. Manhattan’s free music State Of The Union-harkening Vision Festival honored Joe McPhee with their Lifetime Of Achievement in 2012. Looking back, McPhee appeared with electric guitarist Davey Williams and shakuhachi player Philip Gelb at the sonorous Rollins College Knowles Chapel in 1996 for one of the first proto-cm5/WPRK concerts. The multi-instrumentalist narrowed his focus to the soprano saxophone and pocket trumpet, ringing out the warm acoustics during the trio’s take on Duke Ellington’s sacred music standard Come Sunday and a solo take of his signature theme, Voices.

The Monday, June 3rd concert is your Orlando chance to witness two senior masters of their forms, both as soloists and duet partners. This rarified event amongst a week-long U.S. tour also doubles as a chance to participate in raising funds for more cm5 leaps of faith. Buy tickets here to support the cm5.

Participate in the Timucua instant arts community created at each event by appearing willing - described by composer Anthony Braxton as the “friendly experiencer.” Timucua encourages a small plate dish and a bottle of wine for community distribution. We’ll see you there.

Jazz On Edge #5 with Brian Groder and Tonino Miano, 4/5 and 4/7

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If you walk into the Timucua white house on Sunday, April 7th after Benoit Glazer’s almost certainly extemporaneous opening announcements, you might mistake trumpeter Brian Groder and pianist Tonino Miano’s concert as the next effort of the cm5. It will be the … Continue reading

More Xenakis, Orlando! Saturday, March 30th at UCF

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From the desk of Thad Anderson, the Director of the UCF Percussion Ensemble. UCF PE left a serious, indelible psychic mark on many experiencers at the Timucua white house on March 17th. You’ll witness a different environmental and dynamics take on Persephassa if you … Continue reading

Zs solos: Diamond Terrifier and Higgins plus Guardian Alien at Will’s Pub- Monday, March 18th

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Tiny Waves, Accidental Music Festival and CM5 present: Zs solos: Diamond Terrifier (Sam Hillmer) and Higgins (Patrick Higgins) plus Guardian Alien  Will’s Pub 1036 N. Mills Ave, Orlando, FL 32803 7:00 pm doors, 8:00 pm concert, $8 admission (407) 898-5070 After wringing our hands, meditating on … Continue reading

Zs and UCF Percussion Ensemble at Timucua white house- Sunday, March 17th

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CM5 presents Zs and UCF Percussion Ensemble play Iannis Xenakis’s Persephassa Timucua white house 2000 S. Summerlin St., Orlando 7:30 pm concert, free admission, all ages welcome Take this cm5 event as a challenge if you’d like. Find that friend or acquaintance that … Continue reading

Jazz In The Bible Belt playlist- Sunday, January 20th

Here is a reassembled version of WPRK’s Jazz In The Bible Belt show from Sunday, January 20th. Three pieces; Sam Rivers- Aspect from Concept, Herb Robertson- Glass Enclosure from Shades of Bud Powell and Sonny Simmons Quartet- Waltz For Josette from Judgment Day were not available to stream here.

Jazz In The Bible Belt has been a Sunday fixture on WPRK 91.5 fm-Rollins College for better than 20 years. The original efforts to create the cm5 emanated from DJs, student and community alike, at WPRK in the second half of the 1990′s. Jazz In The Bible, currently at 6-8 pm EST Sunday is DNA linkage to the cm5. Find it under College/University at the Radio button on iTunes. Find it here online:

http://asp4.rollins.edu/wprk/ or http://streema.com/radios/WPRK_FM_91.5

Jill Burton and Wade Matthews at Timucua white house- Sunday, March 3rd

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CM5 One and One Series: Timucua white house 2000 S. Summerlin St., Orlando 7:30 pm concert, free admission, all ages welcome The CM5 One and One Series started in 2012 with the simple premise of pairing up solo acts who … Continue reading

Give and go: reasons to attend the Accidental Music Festival- November 8th -11th

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Friends of the CM5, While we don’t have an event in this year’s Accidental Music Festival, we’re supporting this event financially and otherwise. You can attend many of these events free of charge, but you can also become a patron … Continue reading

OneBeat at Timucua white house on Saturday, September 22nd

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OneBeat presented by Found Sound Nation, Bang On A Can and Atlantic Center For The Arts with sponsors Timucua Arts Foundation and Civic Minded 5 Timucua white house 2000 S. Summerlin St., Orlando 7:30 pm, free admission, all ages welcome … Continue reading

Trevor Watts and Veryan Weston at Timucua white house- Sunday, July 8th

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Trevor Watts and Veryan Weston Timucua white house 2000 S. Summerlin St., Orlando 7:30 pm, free admission, all ages welcome One last shot at a CM5 concert and intensive summer improvisation fun before fall and winter beset us, folks. After … Continue reading

CF2 premieres at the Orlando White House, April 29

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The Central Florida Composers Forum presents their debut concert at Timucua white house, featuring works by Benoit Glazer, Rebekah Todia, Daniel Crozier and Charles Griffin. Here’s a detailed post from their blog that previews their event on Sunday, April 29th. … Continue reading