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October 2024, English
12×18 cm, 128 pages, 1 b/w ill., softcover
ISBN 978-1-915609-37-3
Design
Fraser Muggeridge and Manon Veyssière
Status
Available

From music writer Alex Coles, Fusion! From Alice Coltrane to Moor Mother traces the origins and legacy of blended musical genres by focusing on twelve dynamic collaborations. From Alice Coltrane working with Carlos Santana in 1974 to Moor Mother sharing the mic with Wolf Weston in 2022, the collaborations-cum-chapters reveal how musicians pursue fusion as a process.

With sonic fusion always premised on cultural fusion, each of the collaborations find musicians using the mixing of genres to explore fusions of generations, eras, philosophies, sensibilities, idioms, histories, and even continents. When the musicians hail from contrasting musical genres their collaboration leads to a dynamic tension, typified by free jazz trumpeter Don Cherry recording with Lou Reed, Kendrick Lamar cutting tracks with saxophonist Kamasi Washington, Miles Davis playing with electric guitarist John McLaughlin and synth player Danalogue joining Shabaka Hutchings and Max Hallett to form the Comet is Coming.

Fusion! pushes the music of overlooked musicians—such as post-punk singer and saxophone player Lora Logic—to the fore while emphasizing overlooked aspects of the oeuvres of better-known figures such as Herbie Hancock, Joni Mitchell, Neneh Cherry and FourTet. To characterize their unique approach to fusion, each of the examples Coles explores are driven by a dynamic sonic principle coined by the musicians themselves.

 

Alex shows that jazz fusion is not merely a name for a style that emerged in the 1970s but a process that jazz musicians have always engaged in and that continues to be a vital way for them to keep jazz vibrant and alive today.

— Kevin Fellezs, Center for Jazz Studies, Columbia University

The idea of fusion can often be misunderstood, but Alex’s writing is full of depth and understanding. To a music maker like me, it’s brilliant to see how he beautifully explores the concept in relation to many of my heroes.

— Moses Boyd