MPR’s Chris Roberts reports on Minneapolis-based composer and multi-instrumentalist Douglas Ewart, who places his focus on the creation of sustainable music. Roberts interviews Ewart and others about the sounds and designs behind Ewart’s instruments and performances.
Segment includes music clips.
Transcripts
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CHRIS ROBERTS: To Douglas Ewart, a wooden crutch is more than just a tool to support your body. It can also be a musical instrument. Ewart has turned crutches into drums, what he describes as stamping sticks, even chimes.
DOUGLAS EWART: I'm into using orthopedic crutches because they're well fabricated, very strong, and they're often just used once and then discarded.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Douglas Ewart takes what some people might call a holistic approach to life. In Ewart's view, the usefulness of things never ceases, and waste is an unaffordable indulgence. It's a mode of living that was instilled in him as a child in his native Kingston, Jamaica. In Ewart's neighborhood money was scarce.
DOUGLAS EWART: As a result, people became ingenious at fixing things, extending the life of things.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Ewart has experimented with designing and building things since childhood when he created many of his own toys. That spirit of invention and self-reliance was reinforced when he became a Rastafarian and lived in a Kingston encampment for a year. Ewart emigrated to the US in 1963 to study tailoring. But that eventually gave way to a desire to be a musician. He says almost immediately, he began to develop instruments to manufacture the sounds he heard in his head but couldn't duplicate. According to Ewart, the process didn't end there.
DOUGLAS EWART: Because once you build the instrument, now you have to learn how to play it and to coax those sounds out of the instrument.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Ewart's living room serves as a warehouse for some of the hundreds of instruments he's made over the years. Brilliantly colored didgeridoos, totem flutes, rain sticks, and assorted percussive instruments stand upright or lean against the walls, a few almost as tall as the ceiling. Some are made from clay or plastic, others from wood or bamboo. Ewart reaches for a bamboo tube about 2 and 1/2 long and 5 inches in diameter hand-painted and decorated with beads. It's wrapped so tightly in plastic, he has to loosen the knot with his teeth.
DOUGLAS EWART: I call it a bamboo peace chime. And my goal is to make about 100 of them, and I want to do a concert.
[INSTRUMENTS CHIME]
CHRIS ROBERTS: Ewart has made instruments out of skis and oars. His cycle drum consists of an old bicycle tire rim with a goat skin stretched across and fastened to the spokes.
[DRUMMING]
There's also the Ewartophone, a tubular bamboo instrument with a saxophone mouthpiece that Ewart riffs on Ornette Coleman style.
[INSTRUMENT PLAYING]
With the exception of Ewart's screeching bamboo sax solo, many of his instruments emit sounds that give the listener a feeling of lightness, almost of being suspended. Ewart says that's intentional.
DOUGLAS EWART: You know, we can levitate mentally, if not physically. And so for me, music should help us do that, you know? Music should make us-- help us float.
[ETHEREAL MUSIC]
CHRIS ROBERTS: Philip Bither, the Walker Art Center's curator of performing arts describes Ewart's work as a global musical village.
PHILIP BITHER: He really draws on influences from his native country of Jamaica, from Africa, and certainly from the whole history of jazz in America. And so he weaves those influences together to really take you on a musical journey.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
CHRIS ROBERTS: Ewart says improvisation is at the heart of his music, but he and the musicians in his band, The Inventions, refrain from referring to it as jazz.
DOUGLAS EWART: We call it creative music or we call it great Black music, but never jazz. And jazz, for me, is a limiting term. I try to distance myself from it. The problem is that people are always trying to pigeonhole you.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Ewart's outlook on jazz was strongly influenced by his involvement with the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, or AACM. The AACM is a Chicago organization formed in the 1960s that took on the mainstream jazz establishment for ignoring more experimental jazz musicians. Over the decades, Ewart has traveled frequently from Minneapolis to Chicago to teach or conduct workshops. According to the Walker's Philip Bither, he functions kind of like a Midwest musical ambassador.
PHILIP BITHER: Not only is Douglas one of our finest musicians and most important innovators, but he also serves, in who he is and how he is constructed his life, as a link between Chicago and Minneapolis.
CHRIS ROBERTS: For Ewart, all these things, his AACM experiences in Chicago, his Rastafarian worldview, his Jamaican upbringing have shaped the set of values he espouses as an artist and human being.
DOUGLAS EWART: Self-determination, self-development, looking to oneself for the answers, knowing that you're capable of solving your problems.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
CHRIS ROBERTS: Tomorrow night's concert at the Walker is a celebration of the 40th anniversary of the AACM. Douglas Ewart will be joined by several musicians from Chicago who make up his band The Inventions. They include such well-known reed players as Ed Wilkerson and Mwata Bowden. They don't play as an ensemble very often, so it's an event when they get together on stage. I'm Chris Roberts, Minnesota Public Radio News.
[CHANTING]