African Flowers is a big, bold, inspired suite of
original music by saxophonist/composer
Geof Bradfield that draws on his experiences traveling and performing in Africa in early 2008. During the course of a month-long
tour of Rwanda, Congo, Uganda,
and Zimbabwe
as a member of pianist Ryan Cohan's quartet, Bradfield absorbed, reflected, and
synthesized. The powerful fruits of his creative journey may be heard on
African
Flowers, his second CD for the Origin label and third overall as a
leader. Origin will release the disc on September 21.
The tour in
question was arranged under the auspices of The Rhythm Road: American Music Abroad,
a program co-sponsored by the U.S. State Department and Jazz at Lincoln Center. Even before he'd left Chicago,
Bradfield had in mind to compose and perform "an extended work for sextet
blending African melodies and rhythms with elements of modern jazz."
Ryan Cohan is on hand for the recording, along
with guitarist
Jeff Parker, bassist
Clark Sommers, drummer
George Fludas, and percussionist (and
trumpeter)
Victor Garcia.

"We spent
our time in Africa together checking out a lot of music," Bradfield says of
Cohan, his longtime friend and musical partner. "We have similar interests in
that vein. He has a deep rhythmic conception."
The suite
consists of nine main songs with interludes by the ensemble and solo piano,
drums, and bass. "All the pieces use motifs from other pieces," Bradfield says.
"There's no piece that stands alone, that isn't in some way connected to
another."
Portions of
the suite were inspired by Baganda xylophone music of Uganda, taarab of Kenya
and Tanzania (a genre-bending music blending stylistic elements of Africa, the
Middle East, and Europe), and Congolese rumba. The opening track "
Butare" is based on a Rwandan praise
song. But there's nothing academic about
African Flowers, a work of great
passion, vision, and virtuosity by
Geof
Bradfield and his collaborators.
Bradfield,
who critic Neil Tesser says has "in the last few years quietly established
himself among Chicago's truly elite saxophonists," was born (in 1970) and
raised in Houston, where he attended the prestigious High School for the
Performing and Visual Arts. He earned his undergraduate degree at DePaul
University in Chicago and his master's at California Institute of the Arts in
L.A. There his instructors included Charlie Haden, Albert "Tootie" Heath, Joe
La Barbera, Roscoe Mitchell, and Leo Smith. From Haden he learned "that your
music should reflect whatever your beliefs and life experiences are" and that
"anything goes."

From 1994
to 1997 Bradfield lived in Brooklyn, working with many other forward-looking
jazz players on the New York scene. He returned to Chicago and freelanced for
several years with bands including the Mighty Blue Kings, Ted Sirota's Rebel
Souls, the Ryan Cohan Quartet, and his own trio. Bradfield taught at Washington
State University in Pullman from 2000 to 2003, and relocated to Chicago once
again in late 2003, taking a faculty position at Columbia College.
That year
Bradfield released his well-received debut,
Rule of Three (Liberated
Zone), with bassist Noel Kupersmith and drummer Ted Sirota.
Urban
Nomad (Origin), which followed in 2008, was a quartet date with pianist
Ron Perrillo as well as longtime colleagues Clark Sommers and George Fludas,
whose affiliation with the saxophonist dates back to his days at DePaul.
Geof Bradfield is
looking forward to bringing the music of
African Flowers to the stage. He
debuted the material at several Chicago concerts in October 2009, and will
perform three CD release events in the Chicago area with his sextet this fall: at the
Jazz Showcase
10/13, at Room 43
(Hyde Park Jazz Society)
10/17, and at S.P.A.C.E. in Evanston
11/10. "With
African Flowers," says Bradfield, "I hope to communicate to the listener the expansive spirit and deep soulfulness I experienced as a traveler in Africa."
Geof Bradfield Web Site:www.geofbradfield.com