One of the most innovative performers in contemporary jazz will play at the Walker Art Center tonight. Clarinetist Don Byron has been described as a genre hopping, highly eclectic composer and musician, who's absorption in jazz history is as strong as his desire to forge new musical paths. Byron's forays into classical, latin, carribean, and klezmer music make him hard to label as an artist. His latest cd, Bug Music, fastidiously transcribes the work of two forgotten swing-era band leaders, Raymond Scott and John Kirby. Tonight at the Walker, Byron will perform his own score of a 1920s-era African American silent film called "Scar of Shame." Byron talked with Minnesota Public Radio's Chris Roberts about his adventurous musical tastes and why some jazz musicians and critics have a problem with them. | D-CART ITEM: 3499 | TIME: 5:49 (music to 6:56)