BOP ARTS presents
THE RESPECT SEXTET
FRIDAY MAY 1ST 8:30PM
$10 Donation
BOP SHOP ATRIUM
274 N GOODMAN ST. IN THE VILLAGE GATE
Formed in 2001, The Respect Sextet is a powerhouse ensemble dedicated to performing a wide variety of improvisational musics. Relying on their explosive energy, rare telepathy, outstanding musicianship, and a deep friendship, Respect pieces together free improvisations, original compositions, free jazz classics, television commercial jingles, text pieces, jazz standards, game pieces and more into “a whirling collage,” shouts Exclaim! Magazine, “that ransacks and reshapes the entire jazz tradition, from New Orleans march to Misha Mengelberg, Sun Ra to Charlie Parker.”
The group comprises Josh Rutner (reeds, radio, toys), Eli Asher (trumpet, toys), James Hirschfeld (trombone, toys), Malcolm Kirby (bass), Red Wierenga (piano, keyboard, accordion) and Ted Poor (drums). After releasing three limited-edition live CDs, (respect.), (respectacle.), and mini-CD (respookt.), Respect introduced The Full Respect, a studio mélange in which “all those outlandish musical gestures and experiments,” as critic Chad Oliveiri wrote, “are distilled into a frighteningly efficient package.” The Full Respect was named #3 Jazz CD of the Year by Jazz 90.1fm, and music from the album was featured in the short film Who's Your Daddy?, an official selection at the Sundance Film Festival, 2004.
In January, 2005, Respect released Respect In You, a free-wheeling live recording featuring guest bassist Matt Clohesy. The album received rave reviews from jazz magazines including Cadence, Paris Transatlantic, Exclaim! and Coda, and was listed in several as one of 2005’s 10 best records.
“Forget about the wan, self-conscious eclecticism that’s the bane of the current jazz scene,” wrote Nate Dorward, “this is the real deal, burning hard and bright.”
The Respect Sextet, through its eclecticism, its devotion to improvisation, its predilection towards swing, and its use of toys and “little instruments,” has drawn comparisons both to New Dutch Swing and the AACM. Many dialectics are at work (or play) in Respect's music, in which the serious, heady, and intellectual mingle with the light, comic, and absurd, where compositions alternate with improvisations, and where tight ensemble work coexists with loose, empathic interplay.