Catalog #18: Free Jazz New York Jazz

Boo-Hooray is pleased to present our 18th catalog, dedicated to the New Black Music of the 1960s, more widely known as “free jazz.”
Usually defined by its improvisatory mode or amelodic form, the New Black Music actually troubles the opposition between improvisation and composition, taking, instead, improvisation as the rigorous deconstruction of composition and melody, as traditionally understood. During the late-1950s, and throughout the 1960s, the transformations in (free) jazz reflected Black life and politics: musicians and writers such as Milford Graves and Amiri Baraka posited jazz as a distinctly African art form, bringing into opposition the dominant Western musical stricture, its key terms and orientations (i.e. tone, melody, tempo), finding through and beyond them energy, movement, thought, timbre, texture, rhythms, overtones and microtones, multiphonics, tone clusters—the musicians’ sound released into a new limitation.
Download PDF of Catalog #18: Free Jazz New York JazzTheatre des Nations: U.S.A. The Living Theatre
Price: $250.00
Eje Thelin at Gyllene Cirkeln
Price: $250.00
The Connection at The Living Theatre
Price: $300.00
Photograph of Akunda Brian Hollis
Price: $100.00
The October Revolution in Jazz
Price: $75.00
[Original Artwork] Onyx Collective Live At Ghengis Cohen
Price: $3,000.00
Lou Donaldson Quartet at Gyllene Cirkeln
Price: $350.00
Lucky Thompson at Gyllene Cirkeln
Price: $450.00
Miles Davis and B.B. King at Constitution Hall
Price: $750.00
The Night of the Purple Moon [original proof sheet]
Price: $1,250.00
The Immeasurable Equation by Sun Ra
Price: $700.00
Sun Ra Promotional Photograph
Price: $150.00