As with the phrase “Black Lives Matter,” this simple statement of fact interjects clarity and controversy into conversations about improvisational music. For many it’s a righteous claim to the world-class contributions Black Americans have made towards every major musical tradition in the US and beyond. For others it’s a confusing affront to the word “Jazz,” an enduring label with a curious and complicated history.
Almost every American musical river leads to the oceanic influence of Black sonic traditions. From spirituals, gospel, ragtime, blues, and R&B, to rock, country, soul, funk, Jazz and hip hop, American music has consistently utilized the experienced of Blackness as it’s creative north star. Accepting and honoring that experience remains a work in progress. Now society’s culture wars include camps that embrace and struggle with this phrase and all it’s ramifications.
Bassist Ben Williams has spent his entire career steeped in Black American Music. Born and raised in Washington, D.C., Williams heard first hand the remarkable level of ingenuity and innovation within a city known for minting Black musical pioneers. In time Williams was playing in a wide variety of styles that fortified his musical foundation, unique vision, and fundamental respect for Black music.
Touring with Pat Metheny, George Benson, Stefon Harris, David Sanborn, Lauryn Hill, Wynton Marsalis, Robert Glasper, Maxwell, and Nicholas Payton, Williams has experienced the sophisticated concentric circles of genres that have informed his own critically acclaimed work. His 2020 album I Am a Man celebrated Black American Music, combining various aspects of Black American Music while revisiting the spiritual foundation of the Civil Rights Moment.
After he posted “Black American Music” on Twitter several months ago, I reached out to Williams inviting him to create a playlist of music that reflected his personal understanding of the term, while speaking to his personal, musical, cultural and political understanding of the term.
Michael Ambrosino writes about music, and culture, producing and hosting a variety of Jazz programs on 33third.org.
- KBOO