Mixtape #170

Belgium-born, Berlin-based composer, singer-songwriter, and producer Manu Louis is a multifaceted musician, with a unique ability to mix diverse musical elements and genres, from jazz, art pop and electronic music to punk and chanson française. Louis is as comfortable performing everything from completely acoustic solo shows to large-scale performances, often incorporating video projections and even dancing. With several albums and singles under his name, and more than 500 live performances across Europe and Asia, he has built a reputation for his energetic and unpredictable shows. We’re excited to have Louis curate this month’s mixtape, and here’s a few words from him about it:

“In 2008, after the subprime crisis, when Germany asked Greece to pay its debts and refused to help, Jean-Luc Godard said that the cultural debt we owe to Greece is incalculable. If you consider the value of life outside the market, it is hard to disagree with Godard, and the German claim should logically have failed.

When I was asked to make a mix based on the music that influenced me, I turned the question directly to myself: what music should I save more than any other? In Godard's terms, to whom do I owe the greatest musical debt?

The cultural debt we owe to Black music is incalculable. Where would music be today without hip-hop, blues, Detroit techno, Chicago house, funk, soul, jazz, dub, reggae, to name but a few? To me, no music of the 20th century ran deeper than jazz. As much as I admire certain 20th-century European composers, songwriters, or eclectic outsiders, nothing comes close.
There are several reasons for this. One that has always fascinated me is how, unlike the avant-garde in classical music, the avant-garde in jazz evolved with the community and not only with decisions made by an individual genius in his room. This is exactly where, to me, classical music lost track, and jazz or many different Black music genres have been constantly rebirthing.

So this mix will be about jazz. The adventurous and the historical (mostly from bebop to free). But it's not a compilation of my top 12 favorite tracks. I’ve chosen 100 tracks and crafted this mix live, in the moment, as a performance. If I create another mix tomorrow, it will be completely different. So, there’s no Coltrane, no Monk, no Duke—not because they aren’t central but simply because they didn’t emerge during this particular moment.”

Audio Player
  1. Ornette Coleman – Unknown Artist [Portrait]
  2. Dizzy Gillespie – Bebop [Telarc]
  3. Eric Dolphy – Hat and Beard [Blue Note]
  4. Charlie Christian with Benny Goodman – Till Tom Special [Universe]
  5. Charles Mingus – Music for “Todo Modo” [Rhino Atlantic]
  6. Cannonball Adderley – Autumn Leaves [Universe]
  7. Charlie Parker – Kim [BDMUSIC]
  8. Sun Ra – Saturn [Strut]
  9. Robert Wyatt – Strange Fruit [Domino Records]
  10. Miles Davis – Concierto de Aranjuez [Columbia / Legacy]
  11. Nala Sinephro – Continuum 6 [Warp]
  12. Archie Shepp – Blasé [Charly Records]
  13. Cecil Taylor – Abyss [Black Sun Music]
  14. Steve Lacy – Troubles [Black Saint]
  15. Anthony Braxton Creative Orchestra – 22-M (Opus 58) [Arista / Legacy]
  16. Ornette Coleman – Happy Hour [Legacy]
  17. Eric Dolphy – Better Git Hit In Your Soul // On Green Dolphin Street [Not Now Music]

Mixtape #142

Acclaimed and genre-bending cellist and composer Lori Goldston acquired international renown in the 90’s as the touring cellist for Nirvana and appearance on their MTV Unplugged session. For more than 25 years, she has honed a sound that transcends all styles of music, establishing a legacy as a composer, cellist, improviser, producer, writer and teacher, with credits on records and bands like Earth, David Byrne, Black Cat Ensemble, Mirah, Terry Riley, Laura Viers, Tara Jane O’Neil and The Wedding Present amongst many others, as well as score work for operas, films, theatre, and dance productions. Last month she released a riveting new album, High and Low, tapping into influences ranging from baroque music to Americana and experimental music. We asked Lori to put together a mix of some of the artists and bands that inspire her and we're thrilled to start November with this superb selection of tracks.

Audio Player
  1. Natalia Beylis – Roslyn’s Stickhut in the Woods [Eiderdown Records]
  2. Milford Graves – Nothing 11-10 [ESP Disk]
  3. Ô Paon – Grand Sec / Alunissage [Ô Paon Records]
  4. Laura Cannell – The Girl Who Became an Owl [Brawl Records]
  5. SPECSWIZARD – Magic [Sauco]
  6. Ornette Coleman – Skies Of America [Columbia / Legacy]
  7. UAY – Para Entrar en la Sierra
  8. La Sonora Clandestina – el viento me lleva [Obscure & Terrible]
  9. Shirley Collins – The Unquiet Grave [Folkways Records / Smithsonian Folkways]
  10. Rhodri Davies – Pengribyn [Amgen]
  11. Ami Dang – Satnam Waheguru [Leaving Records]
  12. Louis Killen – All Things Are Quite Silent [Topic Records]
  13. Judith Hamann – Humming Suite V – Étude for multiphonics and humming, one cello, one voice, and one shadow voice [Blank Forms Editions]
  14. Jessika Kenney & Eyvind Kang – Kidung [Ideologic Organ]