discography examples
edit- Marc Ribot discography: LOVELY! low-info, but it's fine cuz there are pages for all the albums... hmm...
- Bill Frisell discography: a bit too streamlined, & i do prefer year first
- Lee Konitz discography: by year; leader/co-leader then repeat collabs
- Anthony Braxton discography: by year; leader/co-leader then repeat collabs
- Chet Baker discography: by label
- Miles Davis discography: big boxes; i prefer his "as sideman" listings
partiful
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Partiful is an American event management and ticketing website. |
chuck stern
editchuck stern draft
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Chuck Stern was an American composer, vocalist, and keyboardist known for his work in experimental music.[1][2][3] He was frontman and composer of Time of Orchids,[4] played in Sculptress,[5] and released solo and band works under the name Stern.[6][1] He lived in New York City.[7] Discographyedit
Referencesedit
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corsano cleanup
editcorsano scraaaaaatch
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Chris Corsano is an American drummer, improviser, and composer.[1][2][3]
free-jazz improvisation .[4] He has been called one of the greatest living drummers In 2013, SPIN included him in their "100 Greatest Drummers Of Alternative Music";[5] VICE has praised Corsano[6] as "one of the best drummers working today"[7] and "the best drummer we know"[8] D Magazine called him "one of the best drummers on the planet"[9] CareereditAlongside his solo work,[10] Corsano has performed on over one hundred records[1][3] with artists including Evan Parker,[11] Sunburned Hand of the Man,[12] Six Organs of Admittance,[13] Dredd Foole,[14] Bill Orcutt,[15] Kim Gordon,[15] Björk (on the studio recording and world tour for Volta),[16] Thurston Moore,[17] Jim O'Rourke,[18] Jandek,[19] Matt Valentine,[16] Nels Cline,[20] Vibracathedral Orchestra,[21] Cold Bleak Heat,[22] Michael Flower,[23] C. Spencer Yeh,[24] Mette Rasmussen,[25] John Edwards,[26] Sylvie Courvoisier,[27] Okkyung Lee,[28] and Nate Wooley.[29] Corsano has performed with saxophonist Paul Flaherty for more than twenty years and on more than twenty records in a style they call "The Hated Music."[1][30] He has also recorded several albums each with Rangda (trio with Sir Richard Bishop and Ben Chasny),[31] Chikamorachi (duo with Darin Gray),[32] and Vampire Belt (duo with Bill Nace).[33] Corsano received a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists award in 2017.[1] DiscographyeditSoloedit
As co-leaderedit
album: From Wolves to Whales with Chikamorachi (Corsano & Darin Gray)[18] He's also playing in dimension X with Massimo Pupillo (bass / Zu member) and David Chalmin (guitar) with Orcutt[36]
Co-leader with Paul Flahertyedit
Other Co-leaderedit
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LEYA
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LEYA is xxxx
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Irreversible Entanglements
editcfr sorting
editnate wooley scraaaaaatch
editnate wooley scraaaaaatch
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MISC / SIGNIFICANT WORKS
NOTABLE PERFORMANCES
MISC / INFLUENCES
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Nate Wooley (1974) is an American composer and trumpeter known for his use of vocalizations, amplification and feedback, and extended techniques;[18][19] he is considered to be among "the New York avant-garde’s leading lights"[20] and has been called "one of America’s most exciting and inveterate sonic explorers".[5] He has won critical acclaim for his live performances[21][11] and collaborated and performed with artists including Anthony Braxton, Éliane Radigue,[22] Ken Vandermark,[23] Fred Frith,[24] Evan Parker,[25] Yoshi Wada, Chris Corsano, C. Spencer Yeh, Peter Evans, Mary Halvorson,[26][12] John Zorn, Christian Wolff[27] Annea Lockwood,[19] Wadada Leo Smith, and many more. His album Seven Storey Mountain VI (2020) was included in year-end lists including the NPR Music Jazz Critics Poll,[6] JazzTimes' Top New Jazz Releases,[7] and Bandcamp Daily's Best Contemporary Classical Albums, with critic Peter Margasak calling it "the most powerful work I heard in 2020".[8] Wooley is founder of the For/With Festival[19] and the label Pleasure of the Text; he is also curator of the Database of Recorded American Music and editor-in-chief of the music journal Sound American.[5][18]
Wooley's father was a big band saxophonist, and Wooley began performing with him professionally at the age of 13;[28][29] he also studied piano from 10 to 18.[30] Wooley studied jazz and classical trumpet at the University of Oregon and the Lamont School of Music at the University of Denver, completing his BM in 1997 and his MM in 1999.[18] // He earned a BM in trumpet performance from the University of Oregon, graduating in 1997, and two years later he completed his MM at the Lamont School of Music at the University of Denver.[18] In 2001, he moved to New York City.[18] In 2017, Wooley started the For/With Festival to commission and premiere new works for trumpet; the widely-praised event has featured pieces by Christian Wolff, Michael Pisaro, Ashley Fure, Annea Lockwood, Sarah Hennies, and Eva-Maria Houben.[27][19][31] LITERARY INFLUENCES Literary references and influences can be seen throughout Wooley's work: on Columbia Icefield (2019), one track takes its title from a poem by Jim Harrison and another includes lines from John Berryman's collection The Dream Songs;[26] His ongoing Seven Storey Mountain project takes its title from the American Trappist monk Thomas Merton's 1948 autobiography The Seven Storey Mountain.[10]
Pleasure of the Text + Sound American Wooley is curator of the Database of Recorded American Music (www.dramonline.org), a "streaming-service specializing in 20th century contemporary classical music from America",[5] and is also editor-in-chief of the database's affiliated journal, Sound American. The journal has been described as
AWARDS
Discographyeditdiscography sources
AS LEADER
AS CO-LEADER
As performer / side-person
check for crediting...?
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lapd
edit- Los Angeles Police Department –– separate article for misconduct, per latest in talk
lapd scraaaaaatch [current]
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Over the years, the Los Angeles Police Department has been the subject of a number of scandals, police misconduct and other controversies. According to one study, during the lengthy tenure of William H. Parker as police chief (1950–1966), the LAPD was "outwardly racist",[1] and the tenure of police chief Daryl Gates (1978–1992) was marked by "scandalous racist violence" among the LAPD.[1] Following the Rampart Division CRASH scandal of the late 1990s and early 2000s, the United States Department of Justice entered into a consent decree with the LAPD regarding systemic civil rights violations and lack of accountability that stretched back decades, requiring major reforms.[2][3] The consent decree was lifted in 2013.[2] The executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California stated that the decree "accomplished its purpose by and large" and that the department "has made serious culture changes", but cautioned against backsliding and said there was more work to be done regarding racial disparities and treatment of the homeless.[2]
Louis Oaks, a chief of the LAPD in the early 1920s, was a member of the Ku Klux Klan.[4] James E. Davis served two terms as LAPD police chief, heading the department from 1926 to 1929 and from 1933 to 1938.[5] During his first term as chief, Davis called for violence against criminals while leading a Prohibition vice squad, and the department was known for controversies including accusations of conspiracy, blackmail, and murder.[6] Davis also formed a Red Squad to combat labor unions; headed by Capt. William F. Hynes, the squad arrested hundreds participating in strikes.[7][8] In March 1928, Christine Collins reported her nine-year-old son, Walter, missing. Five months later a boy named Arthur Hutchins came forth claiming to be Walter; when Mrs. Collins told the police that the boy was not her son, she was committed to a mental institution under a Section 12 internment. It was later determined that Walter had fallen victim to a child rapist/murderer in the infamous Wineville Chicken Coop Murders, and Arthur Hutchins admitted that he had lied about his identity in order to meet his favorite actor, Tom Mix. The widely-publicized case was depicted in the 2008 film Changeling. When Frank L. Shaw was elected mayor in 1933, he reappointed Davis as police chief, and the LAPD––already considered "nationally notorious" for police corruption––entered a new phase of widespread criminal activity.[9] In 1936, Davis sent members of the LAPD to California's state borders, along Arizona, Nevada, and Oregon, to institute checkpoints blocking the entry of migrants, or "okies".[10] The police began raids and mass arrests of populations including the homeless and disabled; those taken in by police were given the option of leaving California or serving a 180-day jail term.[10] The so-called "bum blockade" ended after significant negative publicity, including a suit filed by the ACLU in federal court.[11] By 1937, the LAPD was leading a vast intelligence operation wiretapping politicians, judges, and federal agents. Some records of police surveillance were taken under subpoena after Harry Raymond, a former officer investigating corruption in the force, was the victim of a car bomb. During the trial that followed, LAPD captain Earl Kynette was found guilty of Raymond's attempted murder; Davis acknowledged that he had known Raymond was under police surveillance.[12] In the late 1930s, the LAPD engaged in widespread racial profiling of Mexican Americans.[13] The LAPD and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department used the 1942 "Sleepy Lagoon murder" of José Gallardo Díaz to justify a coordinated crackdown: the police identified primarily-Mexican American communities, cordoned them off with blockades, and carried out mass searches and arrests.[13] The police detained hundreds of Mexican Americans before indicting 22 for murder.[13] Twelve of the defendants were charged with murder and incarcerated; all convictions were later overturned.[13] Members of the LAPD were accused of participating in anti-Mexican American violence during the Zoot Suit Riots that followed in 1943; despite the LAPD's insistence that the riots were caused by Mexican American crime, there was broad consensus that the riots were the result of racial discrimination.[14]
Parker, who served as chief of the LAPD from August 9, 1950, until his death on July 16, 1966,[15][16] was frequently criticized for racist remarks, his refusal to acknowledge police brutality, and his demands that the police not be subject to the same laws as citizens;[17] the last of these contributed to ongoing conflicts with the FBI, with the agency refusing to train LAPD officers until after Parker's death.[18] Parker adopted the rhetoric of Los Angeles as the "white spot" of America, first popularized by Los Angeles Times publisher Harry Chandler, and explicitly set it against the "black picture" of the nation.[19][20] The Los Angeles City Council once confronted him with a recording in which he referred to Mexican Americans as not being far from "the wild tribes of Mexico";[21] in the 1960s, he claimed that "by 1970, 45% of the metropolitan area of Los Angeles will be Negro" and that the city should support a strong police force because "if you don't, come 1970, God help you"; he described Black participants in the 1965 Watts riots as acting like "monkeys in a zoo".[20] The Los Angeles Police Department was not integrated until the 1960s.[4] Early in his tenure as police chief, Parker launched an extensive public relations campaign for the LAPD.[20] In the 1950s, he was a credited consultant for police procedural drama Dragnet, even offering the show departmental support in providing case examples and fact-checking;[22] he popularized the term "thin blue line" in both his speeches[23] and in a TV show he conceived and produced for Los Angeles NBC network KNBC;[20] he hired Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry as a speech writer;[24] and he introduced the department's first press office. These efforts were seen as tied to his efforts to curry public favor and extend the reach of officers of the LAPD.[20] Bloody Christmas was the name given to the severe beating of seven civilians under LAPD custody on December 25, 1951. The attacks, which left five hispanic and two white young men with broken bones and ruptured organs, was only properly investigated after lobbying from the Mexican American community. The internal inquiry by chief Parker resulted in eight police officers being indicted for the assaults, 54 being transferred, and 39 suspended.[25] In 1962, the controversial LAPD shooting of seven unarmed members of the Nation of Islam resulted in the death of Ronald Stokes, and led to protests of the LAPD led by Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam.[26]
In the 1970s and into the 1980s "biased policing", also known as racial profiling, was commonplace in the department.[27][28] This policing alienated the department from minority residents and gained the department a reputation of abuse of power and bias against minority residents.[27][28] A major controversy erupted in 1979 over the shooting of Eula Love by two LAPD officers; no legal consequences befell the officers responsible.[29] Early in his tenure as Chief of Police, Daryl Gates re-instituted the use of the chokehold (placing an arm or flashlight over someone's throat) in order to subdue suspects. In 1982, this technique was used and led to the death of James Mincey Jr. Following Mincey's death, the Police Commission barred the use of chokeholds by officers unless in a life-threatening situation.[30] An investigation found that sixteen people had died after being restrained by police chokeholds.[31] In 1986, Officer Stephanie Lazarus killed her ex-boyfriend's new wife. Despite the victim's father's insistence that Lazarus should be a suspect in the homicide, she was not considered by the police and the case went cold. In the 2000s, detectives revisiting cold cases deduced that Stephanie was a suspect. DNA evidence led to her arrest and conviction.[32] Also in 1986, the department purchased a 14-ton armored breaching vehicle, used to smash quickly through the walls of houses of suspects.[33] The ACLU questioned the constitutionality of the vehicle,[34] and the California Appellate Court later ruled the vehicle was unconstitutional, violating lawful search and seizure.[34] In 1988, African-American baseball sportscaster and retired Baseball Hall of Fame player Joe Morgan was detained at Los Angeles International Airport by LAPD and L.A. Airport Police officers after being falsely identified as a drug dealer.[35] He was released when the LAPD realized their mistake. The city cleared the detective of wrongdoing, but Morgan subsequently filed a civil suit against both the LAPD and the city for the unlawful detention; the lawsuit was settled in 1993, and Morgan was awarded $800,000 by the Los Angeles City Council.[35] On August 1, 1988, as part of Chief Gates' Operation Hammer directed against gangs, SWAT teams raided four apartments at 39th Street and Dalton Avenue. According to an investigation by the department's Internal Affairs, the team leader, Captain Thomas Elfmont, directed his men to "hit" the apartments "hard", to "level" them, and to leave them "uninhabitable". The police detained 37 people, making seven arrests. They found six ounces of marijuana and a small amount of cocaine. The seven were beaten by the police and at the police station forced to whistle the theme to the Andy Griffith Show. Those who refused to comply were beaten again. Nobody was charged with a crime. The city paid four million dollars to settle the matter.[36][37] On September 4, 1988, LAPD officers raided the home of Roger Guydon looking for drugs. They found nothing. In 1991, Guydon won a $760,000 lawsuit against the city.[38]
In April 1991, the Christopher Commission was formed in the wake of the Rodney King beating, by then-mayor of Los Angeles Tom Bradley. It was chaired by attorney Warren Christopher and was created to examine the structure and operation of the LAPD. The commission found that there were a significant number of LAPD officers who used excessive force and that the disciplinary structure was weak and ineffective.[39] Fewer than a third of the suggested reforms were put into place.[40] In an effort to reduce drive-by shootings, LAPD initiated Operation Cul-de-Sac in 1991. This consisted of installing barriers on residential streets to block vehicle traffic. As a result, homicides and assaults were greatly reduced. The program ended after two years, with violent crime rates returning to their previous levels.[41] On July 1, 1992, John Daniels Jr., 36, a tow truck driver, was fatally shot by LAPD Officer Douglas Iversen as he was driving away from a service station in South Central. Iversen was charged with second-degree murder, and two separate juries were deadlocked on the charge. The case was dismissed by a judge.[42] Daniels' family received a $1.2 million settlement after filing a lawsuit against the City of Los Angeles.[43] The Los Angeles riots of 1992, also known as the Rodney King uprising or the Rodney King riots, began on April 29, 1992, when a jury acquitted four LAPD police officers accused in the videotaped beating of Rodney King following a high-speed car pursuit on March 3, 1991.[44] After seven days of jury deliberations, the jury acquitted all four officers of assault and acquitted three of the four of using excessive force. The evening after the verdict, thousands of people in the Los Angeles area rioted for over six days following the verdict. Widespread looting, assault, arson, and murder occurred, and property damages totaled one billion dollars. In all, 53 people died during the riots.[45] On October 12, 1996, LAPD Officers Rafael Pérez and Nino Durden entered the apartment of Javier Ovando. They shot Ovando in the back, paralyzing him from the waist down. They then planted a gun on the unarmed Ovando to make it appear he had attacked them. The two officers then perjured themselves. Ovando was sentenced to 23 years in custody based on their testimony. Later, one of the officers admitted his crime. Ovando was released, and in 2000, was paid $15 million for his injuries and imprisonment. The officers' actions led to the exposure of the Rampart scandal.[46] By 2001, the resulting investigations would lead to more than 75 officers being investigated or charged, and over 100 criminal cases being overturned, due to perjury or other forms of misconduct, much based on the plea-bargain testimony of Perez.[46] Following the Rampart scandal, the United States Department of Justice entered into a consent decree with the LAPD regarding systemic civil rights violations and lack of accountability that stretched back decades.[2][3] Many in the LAPD resisted federal oversight and proposed reforms, but entered into a consent decree when the DOJ threatened to sue the city and take complete control over the LAPD.[2] Mayor Richard J. Riordan and the Los Angeles city council agreed to the terms of the decree on November 2, 2000. The federal judge formally entered the decree into law on June 15, 2001. In order to promote civil rights integrity, the legally binding decree placed emphasis on several areas, including management and supervisory measures, revising critical incident procedures, documentation, investigation and review, revising the management of gang units, revising the management of confidential informants, program development for response to persons with mental illness, improving training, increased integrity audits, increasing the operations of the Police Commission and the Inspector General, and increasing community outreach and public information.[47] Other provisions in the decree called for divisions to investigate all use of force (now known as Force Investigative Division) and conduct audits department-wide; the development of a risk management system; the creation of a field data capture system to track the race, ethnicity or national origin of the motorists and pedestrians stopped by the department; the creation of an Ethics Enforcement Section within the Internal Affairs Group; the transfer of investigative authority to Internal Affairs of all serious personnel complaint investigations; a nationwide study by an independent consultant on law enforcement dealing with the mentally ill, to help the department refine its own system; a study by an independent consultant of the department's training programs; and the creation of an informant manual and database.[47] The Consent Decree Bureau was the LAPD bureau charged with overseeing this process. Until 2009, the commanding officer of the Consent Decree Bureau, a civilian appointed by the chief of police, was Police Administrator Gerald L. Chaleff.[47][48] In 2006, the consent decree was extended by six years, as U.S. District Court Judge Gary Feess found that the LAPD had not implemented the reforms that it had committed to.[2] The federal oversight of the LAPD was lifted in 2013.[2] On July 10, 2005, while under the influence of alcohol and cocaine, Jose Pena took his 19-month-old daughter, Suzie, hostage in his home.[49] After police arrived, Pena threatened to kill her and himself after firing at others earlier. SWAT officers were called in.[49] After negotiations to try and release Pena's daughter were unsuccessful, four SWAT officers entered the home and, during a gunfight, both Mr. Pena and his infant daughter were shot and killed by SWAT team members.[50] One officer was shot and wounded by Pena.[49] Suzie Pena's death was the first death of a hostage ever in LAPD SWAT history and the LAPD was criticized for their actions. An independent board of inquiry later cleared the SWAT officers of any wrongdoing.[49] A judge later dismissed a lawsuit by the mother of Suzie Pena on the grounds that the officers acted reasonably in the case and no negligence was involved.[51] On May Day, 2007, immigrant rights groups held rallies in MacArthur Park in support of undocumented immigrants. The rallies were permitted and initially the protesters followed the terms of the permits but some of the protesters began blocking the street. After warnings by the LAPD, the protesters failed to disperse and the rally was declared an unlawful assembly.[52] The LAPD only announced the declaration of the unlawful assembly in English leading to confusion by some in the crowd who only spoke Spanish.[52] Police officers held a line to prevent protesters from entering the street and did not disperse the crowd until rocks, bottles, and other objects began to be thrown at the police.[53] The officers began slowly advancing and fired rubber bullets and used batons to disperse crowd members who refused to comply with police orders to leave the area.[53] Police were heavily criticized for firing rubber bullets at some journalists and hitting some with batons who did not disperse along with the crowds.[53] Seventeen officers and two sergeants of the metropolitan division were recommended for punishment by a department internal review for their actions in the incident.[54] In 2008, Officer Russell Mecano offered to not arrest a woman in exchange for sex, and offered cash to another woman in exchange for sex. He was convicted and sentenced to more than eight years.[55]
On July 22, 2012, Alesia Thomas, an African American woman, died in the back of a police car after being kicked in the upper thigh, groin, and abdomen. Her cause of death was ruled "undetermined" and the autopsy report mentioned cocaine intoxication as a "major" contributing factor, but also indicated that the struggle with officers "could not be excluded" as a contributing factor to her death. It was later revealed that Thomas was also bipolar.[56] Later, LAPD officer Mary O'Callaghan was charged with assault over her actions in the case.[57] As a result of these events, on September 1, 2012, civil rights activists requested an emergency meeting with LAPD Chief Charlie Beck to review arrest and use-of-force policies.[58] On August 18, 2012, Ronald Weekley Jr., a college student, was punched in the face while being arrested after being stopped for riding his skateboard on the wrong side of the street.[59] On August 21, 2012, Michelle Jordan, a registered nurse, was pulled over for holding her cell phone while driving. She was thrown to the ground twice in the course of being arrested after getting out of the car and refusing to comply with an officer's command to get back in the vehicle.[59] On February 7, 2013, the LAPD was involved in what Chief Beck called "a case of mistaken identity" when, during the manhunt for murderer and fired LAPD officer, Christopher Dorner, the LAPD and the Torrance Police Department fired upon pickup trucks at two separate locations, believing them to be Dorner.[60] The first incident took place on the 19500 Block of Redbeam Avenue. LAPD officers fired numerous shots into the back of a blue pickup truck, allegedly without warning, and injured the two women inside. Twenty-five minutes later, the Torrance Police shot into the windshield of another pickup truck, narrowly missing the driver. In both cases the victims were not involved with the Dorner case.[61] The Dorner case involved allegations of impropriety by other LAPD officers, as Dorner alleged that he had been fired for reporting brutality by his training officer. The manhunt was triggered by Dorner's alleged attacks against LAPD and ex-LAPD personnel. In 2013, the city of Los Angeles agreed to pay the two female victims of the first incident $2.1 million each to settle the matter.[62] The city of Torrance agreed to pay the victim of the second incident $1.8 million.[63] In May 2014, after much controversy in their own city, the Seattle Police Department transferred two Draganflyer X6 UAVs to the LAPD.[64] The LAPD stated that the only uses for the drones would be for narrow and prescribed circumstances such as hostage situations, but that they would not be put into use until the Board of Police Commissioners and the City Attorney crafted a policy for their use after the LA City Council ordered the policy creation.[65][66] The decision to use the drones gained significant opposition from community activists including the ACLU and new groups founded after the announcement about drone use including Stop LAPD Spying Coalition and the Drone-Free LAPD, No Drones, LA! activist groups who protested outside of city hall against the use of drones by the LAPD.[67] On August 11, 2014, an African-American man named Ezell Ford was shot by two LAPD gang detectives after they made an investigative stop of Ford on the street. Ford was unarmed and the officers claimed that he got into a physical struggle with one of them and then reached for their gun, forcing them to fire on Ford, while some witnesses who claimed to have seen the incident alleged that there was no struggle.[68] The autopsy report was ordered to be released by Mayor Eric Garcetti before the end of 2014.[69] On September 11, 2014, African-American actress Danièle Watts was temporarily detained by the LAPD when she and her boyfriend were in Studio City.[70] Watts accused the officers who stopped her of racially profiling her because she was African-American and her boyfriend was Caucasian, claiming that they treated her as if she was a "prostitute" and that the officers had been disrespectful to her because she was African-American.[70] LAPD Sergeant Jim Parker who was one of the two officers accused by Watts of misconduct, released a personal audio recording of the entire incident to TMZ.[71] The recording showed that police had received a 911 call about lewd acts in a car and the couple who were described to have committed the lewd acts fit Watts' and her boyfriend's description.[71] It also showed that when officers arrived on the scene, Watts' boyfriend cooperated with police but Watts refused to cooperate and identify herself, accused the officers of racism, and ignored officers requests and walked away from them leading to her being handcuffed and temporarily detained.[71] Following the release of the recording, local civil rights activists called for Watts to apologize to the LAPD for falsely accusing them of racial profiling but Watts refused.[72] The two officers were cleared of any wrongdoing by the department shortly after the release of the audio recordings.[73] In October 2014, the LAPD Office of the Inspector General released a report that members of the department had been using department computers to falsely inflate the number of officers and patrol cars that were on duty at any given time in a method known as "ghost cars".[74] The report found that supervisors of various ranks would check officers into vacant assignments right before the department's computerized patrol software did its head count and then log the officers off when the count was done.[75] The report found that the practice occurred in at least five out of 21 patrol divisions, and the report also highlighted the causes including understaffing in the LAPD.[76] In June 2020, following a campaign by a coalition of community groups including Black Lives Matter, Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti announced LAPD budget cuts of $150 million.[77] Garcetti announced the funds would be redirected to community initiatives.[78] Senator Kamala Harris supported Garcetti's decision to cut the LAPD's budget.[79] In 2020, the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office announced that six LAPD officers had been charged with conspiracy and falsifying information in a false gang labeling scandal,[80][81] with an additional 18 officers under investigation.[82] The discovery of false accusations led to the review of hundreds of cases and the dismissal of a number of felony charges dating back to 2016.[83] On February 13, 2021, the LAPD announced in a series of tweets it was launching an internal investigation into the Harbor Division, after their employees allegedly passed around a Valentine's Day-themed e-card depicting George Floyd with the caption "You take my breath away", which made reference to Floyd's murder. The LAPD said it "will have zero tolerance for this type of behavior".[84] In September 2021, The Guardian reported that LAPD officers had been instructed by Chief Michel Moore to collect social media account information from all citizens they interview, whether or not they have been accused of committing a crime. Further, officers were asked to collect social security numbers and instructed to tell individuals that they "must be provided" under federal law, although it is unclear if this is true. In a response for comment, the LAPD stated that the field interview policy was "being updated".[85]
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mariel roberts scraaaaaatch
edit- scratch → Mariel Roberts draft
- 2017: The New Yorker, "Roberts, the cellist of the Mivos Quartet, just issued an arresting CD, “Cartography,” which displays her formidable technique and zeal for collaboration"[1]
- SCW @ NYT: For Music, a Fall Deluge of Performances Is Beginning[2]
- SCW @ NYT: A Reliably Varied Music Festival Returns to New York (on Time Spans premiere)[3]
- IDCIYL: Joseph C. Phillips Jr.[4]
anna webber scraaaaaatch
edit- scratch → Anna Webber (musician)
- [also mentions MR] Margasak @ Bandcamp Daily: On “Idiom,” Anna Webber Merges Improvisation With Composition[5]
- Margasak @ The Quietus: Complete Communion: Jazz For May Reviewed By Peter Margasak[6]
ptp (fka purple tape pedigree) scraaaaaatch
editscratch → PTP (artist collective)
discography scraaaaaatch
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KVU RELEASE // Amani & King Vision Ultra, An Unknown Infinite
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relative pitch scraaaaaatch
edit- majority scratch → created Relative Pitch Records
relative pitch scraaaaaatch
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RPR discography (list)
editlist-style discography
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george e. lewis scraaaaaatch
editmost now in George E. Lewis → "Discography"; eventual goal = stand-alone "George Lewis complete works" page.
george lewis –– FULL DISCOG as list by year
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LEWIS DISCOGeditAs leader / co-leaderedit
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lewis –– sole leader (TOO MUCH version, wikitable)
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As sole leaderedit
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wikitable scratch
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scratcheditGeorge E. Lewis discography start Listed by Scaruffi:[1]
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braxton: currently cut
editbraxton: currently cut
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note: this is material i've cut from (& not yet confirmed/rewritten for) the Anthony Braxton article that seems to be true &/or potentially relevant; not including false/vague/irrelevant cuts or material that's been rewritten. i'm doing an overhaul & in order to get down template removed anything that was plagiarized & most that lacked sources. // priority for adding refs = TITLES; i've lightly-edited & left the copy in-article for relevance, but it lacks sources & needs fact-checking. [a source[1] (formula titles, code, + 47 for vocational school relevance)]
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anthony braxton scraaaaaatch
editchunk o'scratch → template clearing + majority rewrite of Anthony Braxton article
braxton scraaaaaatch
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TO REVIEW: Magicpiano's "What is a good composer article?" (from my own progress notes on Braxton talk page) // Organization is somewhat improved, but the career section badly needs subheadings for significant works & developments (most notably, I think, his signing to Arista Records); more broadly, the overview of his projects & recordings is mostly just lists of personnel rather than a big-picture overview of how his work, reception, & collaborations changed over time. I'm going roughly by the Wikiproject Musicians article guidelines, which note that "usually significant works are dealt with as a sub-section of the Career/History section, so they remain in chronological order"; this is currently (30 July 2021) a bit muddled, but I do think the compositional systems should probably stay in a separate section (though it needs work).
While signed to Arista Records, he recorded quartet albums with Dave Holland on bass, Barry Altschul or Jerome Cooper on drums, and Kenny Wheeler on trumpet or George E. Lewis on trombone;[2] // New York, Fall 1974, featuring a saxophone quartet with Julius Hemphill, Oliver Lake, and Hamiet Bluiett, a duet with electronic musician Richard Teitelbaum, and a quartet with Kenny Wheeler, Dave Holland, and Jerome Cooper, on one track featuring Leroy Jenkins. // was awarded the 1977 DownBeat Critics' Poll Album of the Year for Creative Orchestra Music 1976
discography sources
3 compositions + for alto Braxton has released hundreds of recordings and compositions since For Alto's recording in 1969 (and subsequent release on Delmark Records in 1971), and he has become even more explicit about the irony of naming his debut as if it comprised works within a singular "jazz": many parts were independently composed by "collage" techniques; the track "titles" are graphics and their formulaic abbreviations (e.g., "N-M488-44M-Z) Walls, Seth Colter (28 March 2016). "Anthony Braxton: 3 Compositions (EEMHM) 2011". Pitchfork. Retrieved 1 March 2021. philosophies of music, language music, notation, &c diverse compositional methods and cross-genre body of work Braxton has repeatedly rejected the dichotomy of American jazz (as marked by improvisation) and European contemporary classical music (as the realm of composition), though his music is often located by those coordinates.[1] He instead identifies as a "trans-idiomatic" composer[4][5]... ...and has developed a philosophy of "world creativity" and African, trans-African, trans-European, and Asian "vibrational dynamics" in his Tri-Axium Writings.[6] ...who works with "notation as practiced in black improvised creativity", where it functions "as both a recall-factor as well as a generating factor".[7]
// "world creativity" // Braxton has also discussed his work through lenses such as Japanese painting // "African/trans-African vibrational dynamics, as well as corresponding to the greater implications of the trans-European and Asian vibrational dynamics" // 9 Compositions + Ghost Dance/Trance Music, indigenous ritual, "The Ghost Dance music, when it was put together, that came about in a time after the American Indian had been decimated, 98 percent of their culture destroyed..." // the relationship of chess to music: "it's the movement of forces in space" (from Forces in Motion) A prolific composer with a vast body of cross-genre work, the MacArthur Fellow[1] and National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master has since released hundreds of recordings and compositions, including music guided by graphic scores and mathematical equations; his many collage works, some including stylistic techniques associated with gospel and country music;[9] the first six of the twelve-opera series he calls the Trillium Opera Complex; Echo Echo Mirror House Music, in which musicians "play" iPods containing the bulk of Braxton's oeuvre;[10] a composition "for 100 Tubas";[11] collaborations with artists working in avant-rock music;[12] and what Rolling Stone calls "a vast and complex multimedia universe that at this point can only really be classified as Braxtonia".[12] 12 types // variable, principle, parameter, prompt, "classification", "relationship", vocabulary, framework, structure
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tyshawn sorey scraaaaaatch
editchunk o'scratch → majority rewrite of Tyshawn Sorey
sorey scraaaaaatch
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2012 All About Jazz Interview: Tyshawn Sorey: Composite Reality
// was a part of the New Jersey Performing Arts Center Jazz for Teens program while attending
2014,[10] 2016,[11] 2017,[12] 2018,[13] 2019[14] // NPR Music Jazz Critics Polls chicago reader / margasak // 2014,[15] 2016,[16] 2017[17]
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tomeka reid scraaaaaatch
edit- scratch → majority rewrite of Tomeka Reid
- priority: organize / complete discography
ava mendoza scraaaaaatch
edit- scratch → created Ava Mendoza
- priority: organize / complete discography
irabagon scraaaaaatch
edit- most scratch → created Jon Irabagon
- 2012: The New Yorker, "Dec. 6-7: Jon Irabagon, a saxophonist of prodigious technique, fronts three different bands, including a trio with the lauded drummer Barry Altschul, to celebrate the release of two new records, “I Don’t Hear Nothin’ But the Blues Volume 2: Appalachian Haze” and “Unhinged,” as well as the launch of his new label, Irabbagast Records."[1]
- Stone Residency // The New Yorker, "Hard charging and, when the mood strikes him, plenty loquacious, the tenor saxophonist Irabagon has been a mainstay of Mostly Other People Do the Killing, the merry pranksters of jazz. Reflecting his eclectic artistic nature, this residency finds Irabagon mixing it up with six very distinct bands, from a blues unit and an organ trio to an interactive combo, with the bassist Mark Helias and the drummer Barry Altschul, and a new-jazz quintet, featuring the trumpeter Tim Hagans, the pianist Uri Caine, and the drummer Tyshawn Sorey."[2]
- Rufus Reid Big Band // The New Yorker[3]
dreamcrusher scraaaaaatch
edit- scratch → created dreamcrusher
- add post-panopticon vinyl coverage
weasel walter scraaaaaatch
edit- chunk o'scratch → majority rewrite of Weasel Walter
walter scraaaaaatch
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features
cellular chaos
luttenbachers
refs/rep
ugEXPLODE label + mastering
releases
performance: tyshawn sorey, lydia lunch, halvorson/evans
Weasel Walter (born Christopher Todd Walter, May 18, 1972) is an American multi-instrumentalist, composer, improviser, producer, and founder of ugEXPLODE Records. Walter's work has been informed by styles, techniques, and traditions of music including no wave, free improvisation, free jazz, extreme metal, punk, noise rock, new music, and the broadly "experimental". Known for being "challenging and unrelenting",[4] Walter was once described as "a splinter lodged beneath the fingernail" of the Chicago music scene.[19] He has performed as leader and sideperson in a number of bands, including Cellular Chaos and Lydia Lunch Retrovirus, and founded The Flying Luttenbachers.[20] Walter has worked with Marshall Allen, John Butcher, Tim Dahl, Peter Evans, Mary Halvorson, Henry Kaiser, Joe Morris, Jim O'Rourke, Evan Parker, Elliott Sharp, Ken Vandermark, and William Winant[21] as well as bands including Sharon Cheslow, Bobby Conn, Cheer-Accident, Cock E.S.P., Curse of the Birthmark, Erase Errata, Harry Pussy, Lair of the Minotaur, Quintron, The Chicago Sound, The Scissor Girls, U.S. Maple, and XBXRX. He has produced albums by AIDS Wolf, Arab on Radar, Glenn Branca, Burmese, Lydia Lunch, Coachwhips, and Total Shutdown, [22] and his label ugEXPLODE has Glenn Branca called Walter "one of the greatest rock composers who ever lived".[23]
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misc scratch links
edit- 2017 Uproxx (RK / feature): Precious Home, ‘Precious Art’: Exploring Rozwell Kid’s West Virginia[1]
- 2018 Uproxx (RK / vid): Premiere: Rozwell Kid’s Bizarre ‘Boomerang’ Video Was Made By Their Fans[2]
- 2017 Pitchfork (RK / PA)[3]
- 2015 Pitchfork (RK / TS)[4]
- 2016 Stereogum (RK / GG)[5]
- References
- ^ Bogosian, Dan (28 March 2017). "Precious Home, 'Precious Art': Exploring Rozwell Kid's West Virginia". Uproxx. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
- ^ Cosores, Philip (29 March 2018). "Premiere: Rozwell Kid's Bizarre 'Boomerang' Video Was Made By Their Fans". Uproxx. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
- ^ Cohen, Ian (27 June 2017). "Rozwell Kid: Precious Art". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
- ^ Cohen, Ian (28 April 2015). "Rozwell Kid: "Kangaroo Pocket"". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
- ^ Deville, Chris (4 May 2016). "Rozwell Kid – "Magic Eye" Video". Stereogum. Retrieved 2 February 2021.