Here is an audio capture of a paper I delivered on
Thursday, September 5, 2013 at the Colloquium of the Guelph Jazz Festival,
which took place at the MacDonald Stewart Art Centre at the University of
Guelph. It’s called “Carnets de Routes Improvisées: Transcultural
Encounters in the work of Guy Le Querrec and the Romano-Sclavis-Texier Trio,”
and, like the title says, it connects a number of recorded improvisations by a
European trio around the African photography of Magnum photographer Guy
Le Querrec to certain concepts of decolonization and latter-day
ethnography. I try to suggest, in a limited utopian vein, how viable
transcultural encounters might be realized through improvisation – not only
musical, but visual as well. I also refer to the compelling historical work of
Julie Livingston around biomedical practices in southern Africa, particularly
her book Improvising medicine: An African Oncology Ward in an Emerging
Cancer Epidemic (2012). This paper formed part of a two-person panel on
media and transculturalism; the other presenter was Alan Stanbridge of the
University of Toronto. The moderator for the session, whom you can hear offering an introduction at the beginning of this recording, was Nicholas
Loess.
Here is the abstract for the
paper:
Sponsored by French cultural
institutions, the improvising trio of clarinetist Louis Sclavis, bassist Henri
Texier and drummer Aldo Romano formed in early 1990 to undertake a tour of
central Africa, including performances in Chad, Gabon, Congo, Cameroon and
Guinea. Other tours would follow in 1993 and 1997. Despite both appearance and
funding support, this group wasn’t engaged in officially-sanctioned cultural
promotion, but had been conceived as an artistic and cultural project by Magnum
photographer Guy Le Querrec, who appears to have wanted to chronicle in images
the encounters of European jazz musicians with mostly rural African audiences.
Le Querrec had already taken numerous photographic trips to North Africa—in
1969-71, 1978 and 1984, for example—trips that had produced significant images
in his portfolio concentrating on both the troubling appropriations of
ethnographic image-making and the complex challenges and impediments to
transcultural understanding. His work with the Romano-Sclavis-Texier trio, now
seen in retrospect, constitutes a deliberate post-colonial cultural
intervention, a re-engagement by both aesthetic and documentary tactics in
parts of the world from which colonial France had withdrawn. Le Querrec curates
this particular tour of leading voices in French free jazz—he is listed on the
recordings as a fourth member of the trio, not merely as a courtesy but as an
active if tacit participant in the performances—for two main reasons. First, Le
Querrec is one of the preeminent jazz photographers in Europe, and several of
his collections centre on historic images of canonical jazz musicians. A 1997
show in Paris saw musicians (including Texier and Sclavis) improvising to
projections of Le Querrec’s work; the show’s title, Jazz comme un Image,
suggests how closely Le Querrec links his photography to improvisational
musical (and visual) practices, a connection he further clarifies in an
artist’s statement for the performance:
Être
jazz c’est avant tout une manière de vivre, de se promener sur le fil du hazard
pour aller à la rencontre d’un imaginaire qui contient toujours
l’improvisation, la curiosité, qui oblige à écouter les autres, à les voir, à
être disponible pour mieux les raconter en manifestant sa propre poésie.
This complex sense of
likeness, at play in the overlap between rencontrer and raconter, to encounter
and to give account, traces itself back in the context of French colonialism
and ethnography to the Dakar-Djibouti expedition of 1931-33, and particularly
the poetic-documentary writing of Michel Leiris in L’Afrique fantôme and
L’Âge d’Homme, the latter of which in particular focuses on the
Afrological substrata of jazz. Second, both the trio’s music and Le Querrec’s
photography investigate the give-and-take, the tensions between re-appropriation
and creative misprision inherent in this jazz-based transcultural model. The
music on the three compact discs released by the trio (Carnet de Routes,
1995; Suite Africaine, 1999; African Flashback, 2006; each
accompanied by booklets collating Le Querrec’s photographs from their 1990,
1993 and 1997 tours) does not come from their live performances, which seem
(apart from the photographs) to have gone undocumented, but consists of
recordings in a French studio after the tours were done, improvised reactions
to the photographs as well as compositions that emerged from their African
experiences. The “poetry” of imaginative encounter that Le Querrec describes is
enacted musically (and even visually) in the extemporaneous negotiations of
difference, and the creative troubling of Eurocentrisms, that these
improvisations offer. Rather than reproduce the exoticism and even nostalgia
that shapes late colonial, modernist ethnography, these audio-visual “records”
investigate performatively how a transculturalism of shared differences, a
contingent community of unlikeness, can be brought extemporaneously into being.
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