All posts by Dawoud Kringle

Random Musing

Someone I know rejected a statement I made wherein I mentioned that there is a terrible spiritual crisis in our society. He claimed there was none.

I must, of course, disagree.

Our souls are sick. Our hearts are fighting – or willingly embracing – a disease. Intellect alone cannot solve this. What good is intellect when we have forgotten what it means to be truly human? In such a state, our intellects will only doom us.

The false idols our minds make of things we see, or think we see, are betraying us. Our invented ideologies are betraying us, and forcing us to turn against our brothers and sisters, and wreak unspeakable violence and ruin upon the world while claiming we are making peace.

There is a belief / myth that we only use 10% of our brain’s capacity. How much of our heart’s and spirit’s capacity are we using? Probably a lot less than we think.

As I write this, there are some very disturbing things in the news. More than I can list here (without becoming sick to my stomach). But when I think and meditate on it, I keep coming back again and again to one indisputable fact: there are NO political solutions to any of this. Only spiritual solutions. Listen for the call to cooperation. This is where healing will be found.

The Adventure Continues!

First of all, for those of you who are reading this who are Muslims, Ramadan Mubarak! I pray this Ramadan is a blessed and beautiful experience for you. And for those of you who are not Muslim, I offer the same!

These past two weeks, I’ve been getting acclimated to being a married man (and recovering from the wedding). And concurrently, some interesting things have been coming up.

God’s Unruly Friends is planning some more performances, including a date in November at BAM Cafe in November. We are also in the beginning stages of work on a recording. More details to come.

On Friday, July 3rd, at 6:45, I will offer music for a yoga class taught by Jessica Stickler. The class is at Jivamukti Yoga Center (841 Broadway, 2nd floor, NYC).

After a hiatus, I have returned to offering the Music Meditation Sessions! The next one is at Namaste Bookshop (2 west 14th st. NYC) on Tuesday, July 31st, 8PM. The exchange will be $15.

Looking a bit a head, On Wednesday, August 5th, 6-9pm, I will perform at the Rubin Museum of Art (150 west 14th st. NYC). I will be joined by Jimmy Lopez on percussion. This is a free concert in a family friendly venue.

The 2nd edition of  my novel “A Quantum Hijra,” and the release of my collection of short stories “A Mansion with Many Rooms” is scheduled for Ramadan. I will keep you all informed.

Looking forward to sharing these experiences with you!!

A Personal Announcement.

kosi at cornilia

Normally, I don’t share a lot of personal information online. However, I thought the following merits an exception.

The lovely lady in the photo is Kosi (a.k.a. Akosua Gyebi). Some months back, she consented to be my wife. Today, Sunday, June 14th, 2015, we are to be wed at Masjid Farah in New York City.

She is a most remarkable woman! She’s brought me a great deal of happiness and inspiration. And you will doubtless be interested to know she is an amazing singer. Check her out at kosi-sings.com, or here.

The Prophet Muhammad (sas) said that a woman is the other half of a man. I am complete.

Technicality vs Simplicity: the Ongoing Battle

Many musicians argue about technicality vs simplicity. They work themselves into a lather over one side of this idea or another. And there’s been no resolution one way or another. After 44 years of listening to people yapping about this, I have come to an inescapable conclusion.

If a specific piece of music works, it works. John Coltrane’s solos on A Love Supreme have a lot of notes, and they all create a singular transcendental beauty. On the other hand, I was watching a video of BB King recently. At one point he played one note, just one note, and it stopped me dead in my tracks. Same thing with the first time I saw Ravi Shankar live. He could play a gazzillion notes like anyone, and it all makes a deep and sublime statement; but during an alap that night he played one note that was the most perfectly executed note I ever heard. Jimi Hendrix,,, well, you get the point.

These arguments about technicality vs simplicity are ultimately irrelevant.

I say; by all means, develop technique and your knowledge of music. It’s impossible to do anything without some measure of technical skill. This is not the end, it’s a means to an end. Beyond this,  look first and foremost to the psychoactive properties of music. Look to what music does, and what it means. Start at the end of the process; I.e. start with what you’re hoping to achieve with the music you make. If you need to play a lot of notes or just a few notes to achieve a specific result, there’s your answer. And if you’re just improvising and allowing the music to unfold, don’t concern yourself about any of it. Allow the music to happen as it happens; and make sure your instrument – including the instruments of your body and mind – are up to the task.

Now, pick up your instrument, or open your mouth, and make some music.

You’re Probably Not Going to Like This

The USA is a mostly failed political experiment. It ended in 1947 when Truman signed the National Security Act (and essentially abolished the Constitution). 

It’s failure was twofold. The first which must be addressed here is the obvious: racism. This is a psychological and spiritual cancer which was never addressed and never understood by the overwhelming majority of both the government and the people until it was too late to reverse the damage. There is almost no aspect of the USA that is not contaminated by this.

It may yet be another century before any real healing can be applied. What’s ironic is that the solutions are remarkably simple. The only problem is human unwillingness to apply a simple act of will to adjust a paradigm of thought. The disease is too firmly entrenched,a nod supported not only by sociopathic rhetoric, but by an economic infrastructure (and by default, legislation).

The second is usury. All banking of any possible description is based entirely on usury. All banks can be summed up thus: create worthless money out of nothing, loan it out at interest (and use real wealth as collateral against an essentially unplayable loan), charge fees to hold people’s money, use this money to earn money through usury based investments, and charge people another fee to give them their own money back to them. 

The founding fathers largely saw this coming, and warned us about it. When privately owned banking corporations insinuated themselves into the government, the USA began to die. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 was a crippling blow, and was the beginning of the end, because the economic power of the USA was handed over to a privately owned corporation. The situation got progressively worse over the next century, including the citizens of the USA being used as collateral against loans to the government.

Which brings us to the inevitable question of loss of freedom. It’s indisputable that our constitutional freedoms have been eroded. Executive orders issued almost nonstop from both sides of the bicameral assembly have systematically superseded every article in the bill of rights. And police brutality, augmented by militarization, has exacerbated the problem to the point where the National Safety Council has stated that a US citizen is eight times more likely to be killed by a police officer than by a terrorist attack. The reason for this is actually simple. The leadership of the USA (government and private sector; which are becoming indistinguishable) is enmeshed in an entirely unworkable system that is doomed to failure. The only way to sustain this is through totalitarian methods. In general, the Huxleyan “Brave New World” method (dictatorship supported by drugs, entertainment, sexual deviance, and genetic engineering [still in its infancy; but signs point to its possible institution) is used. When this fails, the Orwellian “1984” method is applied (endless war, privation, unlimited torture and brainwashing, etc.). Honest appraisal of all governments in the world show this to be true to one degree or another.  If we don’t see this, these methods have been successful.

This is something the people of the USA never understood and have been brainwashed to find absolutely incomprehensible: other countries were invaded and bombed. Ours was sold.

The Tragedy of Jazz, and its Reawakening.

“Jazz is not dead, it just smells funny.” Thus spoke Frank Zappa.
 
According to Nielson’s 2014 Year End Report (thejazzline.com/news/2015/03/jazz-least-popular-music-genre/), jazz & classical combined accounts for 1.4% of music consumed in the US. 
 
So, what happened?
 
It’s arguable that when the soulless corporations started promoting (and probably designed) smooth jazz, the final nail in the coffin was poised and ready to be driven in. Personally, I can’t imagine anything more horrible than what that genre did to music (two examples I heard on the radio: some pitiful jerk who twisted “Take Five” into a dreary 4/4 so people’s intellects would not be challenged by a groove in five, and some demented eunuch who’s merciless emasculation of “Round Midnight” doubtless has Monk spinning in his grave fast enough to generate electricity). Once, at some music conference, while Diane Reeves was being discussed, a corporate drone was actually quoted as saying “I think she’s emoting too much, and that could be bad for the music.” 
 
These are the kind of people who seek to control our musical destiny. And we’ve allowed it to happen.
 
Allowing people like this to take control of both the creative and economic aspects of jazz was a fatal mistake. And we must not blame them: these people have no souls and their nature is anti-musical. We shouldn’t have expected any less from them. Yet they took jazz away from us while we watched and did nothing. We practically handed it to them on a silver platter. Combine this with the indisputable dumbing down of America, and we have a recipe for disaster. 
 
Which now begs the question of what can be done. And the answer to this falls squarely upon the musician’s shoulders. 
 
Be honest (and I’m just as guilty as anyone): how many times did we do gigs where we walked away with nothing after playing our hearts out? Or worse, suffered the embarrassment of telling the guys / ladies who busted their asses playing our music in our bands that we couldn’t pay them, or paid them $3.00 or some other insulting amount?
 
This is clearly the result of two factors: 1. An obsolete and unworkable business model, and 2. The dominance of a working business model that cannot function by promoting music of real value. Take power away from music / entertainment corporations, and set up our own independent and autonomous business models. 
 
We should explore alternative venues for our performances. A lot of controversy is being generated by the struggle to get clubs to work in the musician’s favor. Relying on them and expecting justice and fairness is a mistake. They will never work in our favor as long as the possibility to make a greater profit by cheating and exploiting us exists. Legislation is useless, protests are useless. Seizing power is the only answer, and an independent and autonomous business infrastructure is the only means to do so. Controlling our own venues will make our involvement with them unnecessary. 
 
Legally, musicians who perform in clubs are catagorized as independent contractors. Some on the scene feel the way to insure fair pay for fair work is to catagorize musicians as employees. The idea being that employees have legal rights. While this could be a workable model, I’m not sure it’s always the way to go. Musicians need to be equal to the owners and management of venues; not subordinate to them (unless it’s one of those gigs where one agrees to these conditions, such as playing as a sideman with someone else, or playing in a restaurant). These details are negotiable, and changeable depending on the situation. The most important thing is this: if the club / venue wishes to work with us, they will have to treat us as equals, not poor struggling musicians with our hats in our hands, howling for better pay and equal rights. 
 
Nona Hendryx once told me that it’s essential to develop oneself as an artist and businessman, and keep them separate. Yusef Lateef once told me “Always get your price.” No more playing gigs where nobody makes money. The promise of playing free gigs because it’s “good exposure” is a lie. It always has been, and always will be. 
 
The DIY model of recording is a good model. Taking advantage of modern technology to produce, promote, and distribute our recordings places power in our hands. 
 
We need to put more effort into promotion, marketing, and publicity. Find ways to do this not only outside the mainstream, but to use the existing mainstream for our own purposes. Do this in such a way that we don’t need anyone else’s help or approval. Their statistics, polls, etc. will be irrelevant. Every truly successful artist has essentially torn up the rule book, and rewrote it according to their own individual needs. 
 
One of the main reasons jazz’ popularity diminished is that it allowed itself to become frozen in classical forms. It’s not much different than European classical music in that it’s elitist attitude allows no evolution and no creative venturing into new realms. Can you imagine how rock music would have survived if it hadn’t progressed beyond “Johnny B. Goode” or “She Loves You?” It wouldn’t. It would have become a mere novelty that people would take out on occasion, dust off, admire it as a relic of a bygone era, and put it back in its glass case without a second thought. Ask yourself if jazz hasn’t suffered a similar fate. How many times have we attended a jazz performance, only to be confronted by yet another version of “Autumn Leaves,” where, after the singer sings a few choruses, the sax, piano and bass take solos (in that order), the drums trade fours, they do the chorus, and end? Same thing, year after year, decade after decade. And when you’re in these venues, look around you. Who are in the audience (if there is an audience) and what is their reaction? 
 
If jazz does not demonstrate, in theory and practice, that anything is possible, then it’s not jazz, and it’s corpse has become embalmed and put on display in a museum or temple of false idols. We must allow jazz to grow and evolve. Push out the “bebop nazi” mentality that makes jazz an elitist museum music. Take the idea of incorporating elements from non-jazz music, like Yusef Lateef, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, and Miles Davis showed us, into realms it’s never been. Jazz musicians rarely progressed any further than what they did. Miles’ last release was a hip hop album. I can’t think of more than a handful of people to picked up that baton and ran with it. Who says we can’t take something like, say, gamelan or psytrance, and transform it into a new sub genre of Jazz? Why limit instrumentation to the usual horns, bass, piano, drums, and occasional guitar? Put other instruments in the music: Chapman stick, raita, oud, sarangi, laptops with Ableton, er-hu, digiridoo, synthesizers, theremin, etc. Who says they can’t contribute to and expand the voice of jazz? Aren’t we creative enough to achieve this?
 
We could incorporate elements of theatrics. By this, I don’t mean cheap, empty sensationalism. We don’t need twerking or whatever other idiotic shit people sell to the masses. Make the theatrics work as part of the musical statement and spirit. If nothing more, dress well, or at least in an interesting manner, when performing (how many of us look like bums when we take the stage?) and actually speaking to the audience in an engaging and interesting way (how many of us have no skills at public speaking?) It will help. It all worked for Sun Ra and the Art Ensemble of Chicago. 
 
It’s working for that rich and famous trumpet player who works for Lincoln Center. 
 
How about music videos or even short films? Who says jazz videos have to be nothing more than just pointing a camera at whoever is soloing, or slapping some quasi-documentary interviews in there as an afterthought? Is our creativity so limited we can’t apply jazz concepts to what people see? What about other art forms; including ones yet to be invented? And why shouldn’t we be the ones who invent them, or collaborate with those who do?

Permit me to put out another idea. One that threatens to shatter almost everything I wrote here; and which brings about an idea we may be uncomfortable to face, but may be inevitable.
 
In the book “The Tao of Jeet Kune Do,” Bruce Lee said “Jeet Kune Do is just a name. If it dies, let it die. Don’t make a fuss over it.”
 
I wonder,,, is “jazz” just a name? Was it always nothing more than a name? Or perhaps the thing that made it special and gave it its spirit and unique qualities cannot be frozen in a name or genre. Maybe we’re looking at this the wrong way. I always tell people I am not concerned with styles and genres, but only with the psychoactive properties of music. Is “jazz” a genre that is destined to die, as all things must? Perhaps it’s the inner essence of music itself we should be primarily concerned with.
 
I was watching a documentary on Netflix about concert promoter Arthur Fogel. One of the people in the documentary, Lady Gaga, whose “music” is, granted, unfit for human ears, nonetheless said something spot on. She said that as far as promotion, what works today won’t work three years from now. We need freedom, but we also need the means to support and protect that freedom. We need to be ahead of the curve, in control of our own affairs, and to lead the way. Nothing else is acceptable.
 
This article had focused on the negative. Sometimes this is necessary to shock us out of our complacency. But the situation is not hopeless. There are many who are emerging from the shadows whose work is propelling the music to new heights and new realms of creativity and even spirituality. You, who are reading these words, may very well be among the new vanguard. It is inevitable: our spirit cannot be destroyed. It will come back again, renewed. 
 
The Phoenix is waiting to rise from the ashes.

A Thought

“If I told you what it takes to reach the highest high,
You’d laugh and say nothing’s that simple.
But you’ve been told many times before, when Messiah pointed to the door,
No one had the guts to leave the temple.”
– Excerpt from “I’m Free” by Pete Townsend (from “Tommy”)

The real battle begins when one leaves the dojo.

The real worship begins when we roll up our prayer rugs, and walk out of the mosque.

More writing for doobeedoobeedoo!

I have a confession.

When I go out to hear live music, I almost always end up writing a review for doobeedoobeedoo.info. I’m one of the magazine’s main writer / contributors. PLease check out the magazine, and support our efforts.

My latest:

http://www.doobeedoobeedoo.info/2015/05/05/concert-review-subtle-realms-trio-lives-up-to-its-name/

This is what you’ll find if you search my name:

http://www.doobeedoobeedoo.info/?s=dawoud+kringle

Legalization.

I have something to say regarding drug laws.

Cocaine and opium (and opium derivatives) have obvious side effects, and this contributed to it’s legislation. But there is another factor that must be examined. A program by a man named Harry J. Anslinger whose outrages against cannabis were overtly and openly racist, was financed by the Herst Corporation. Cannabis and hemp products derived from it threatened the paper industry; so the public opinion was “altered” via racist and sensationalist propaganda, and later made into law via the “Marihuana Tax Act of 1937.”

Any undesirable side effects from cannabis use are, in light of this, rendered irrelevant when considering the real reasoning behind prohibition. Anti-cannabis laws have generated billions and billions in profits for corporations and law enforcement (the line between them having become indistinct). The only real reason why the legalization process is moving ahead is due to the potential of greater profits. Within the government / corporate world, different groups are fighting over the potential profits and losses from cannabis laws or their repeal: public health concerns are a mere pretext. The prison industrial complex stands to loose money, and the fledgling cannabis industries stand to make billions.

It’s as simple as that. We the People are barely on their radar as anything except potential customer base or livestock for corporate owned prisons.

It is a terrible mistake to assume that the laws against these drugs were enacted only for concern for public health. One must always assume two motives: racism and profit. The USA suffers from a racist mindset that spilled over from Europe, and became epidemic. We have not recovered from it; it still contaminates our thinking, and only an idiot would fail to see this.

The other is profit. An even greater stupidity would be required to believe that there is no concern on the part of law makers for profit and / or acquisition of political power. There is no depths to which most humans would refuse to sink if it promised an increase of power and wealth; and no government or corporate entity is truly trustworthy.

As far as the legislation itself, I offer food for thought. ALL this legislation, without a single exception, makes a serious error. NOT ONE of these laws actually does anything to address the urge within humans to get high. What makes a person wish to smoke a blunt, sniff cocaine, allow him / herself to become addicted to opiates, pickle their brains and livers with alcohol, and smoke industrial grade tobacco? What fuels this motive toward self ruin? And how is it possible to redirect that urge toward something socially and spiritually beneficial to humanity? The lawmakers have NO answer for this: and they NEVER will.

This, for no reason other than that the most spiritually and psychologically base and perverse people on the planet have laid their hands on the instruments of political, economic, industrial, and military power.

Put that in your bong and smoke it.