Jazz legend and 10-time GRAMMY winner Wayne Shorter is set
for the August 24 release of his long-awaited project Emanon, his first release
since 2013’s Without A Net, which marked Shorter’s momentous return to Blue
Note Records where he began his heralded recording career in Art Blakey’s Jazz
Messengers in 1959. Emanon is an extraordinary musical and visual experience
that presents a triple album of original music by Shorter performed by The
Wayne Shorter Quartet—featuring Shorter on soprano and tenor saxophone with
Danilo Perez on piano, John Patitucci on bass, and Brian Blade on drums—with
and without the 34-piece Orpheus Chamber Orchestra. The music is accompanied by
a graphic novel penned by Shorter with Monica Sly and illustrated by Randy
DuBurke. Emanon is a physical-only release that will be available in two
versions; a Standard Edition that packages 3x CDs with the graphic novel, and a
Deluxe Edition that packages 3x 180g vinyl LPs and 3x CDs with the graphic
novel enclosed in a beautiful hardcover slipcase.
DISC 1
The Wayne Shorter Quartet With Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
1. Pegasus
2. Prometheus Unbound
3. Lotus
4. The Three Marias
DISC 2
The Wayne Shorter Quartet Live In London
1. The Three Marias
2. Lost And Orbits Medley
DISC 3
The Wayne Shorter Quartet Live In London
1. Lotus
2. She Moves Through The Fair
3. Adventures Aboard The Golden Mean
4. Prometheus Unbound
In February 2013 upon the release of Without A Net, The
Wayne Shorter Quartet performed four of Shorter’s compositions with the Orpheus
Chamber Orchestra at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Shorter immediately
brought the quartet and orchestra into the studio to record those same four
pieces: “Pegasus,” “Prometheus Unbound,” “Lotus,” and “The Three Marias.”
“Just before Miles [Davis] passed,” Shorter remembers, “He
said, ‘Wayne, I want you to write something for me with strings and an
orchestra, but make sure you put a window in so I can get out of there.’ He
definitely did not say, ‘Make the strings swing.’ Working with an orchestra is
like crossing the street and talking to a neighbor you haven't talked to for 10
years. It's the thing the world needs now: joining forces.”
The title of this four-composition orchestral suite is also
Shorter’s title character for the graphic novel: Emanon, or “no name” spelled
backward. “When Dizzy Gillespie had a piece of music in the late 40s called
‘Emanon,’ it hit me way back then as a teenager: ‘No name’ means a whole lot.
The connection with Emanon and artists and other heroes is the quest to find
originality, which is probably the closest thing you can get to creation,”
Shorter says. “Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man and some comic heroes, they lose
their power or identity and become something called human, so that a human
being has to do the same thing that Superman and all of them do.”
Later, Blue Note president Don Was introduced Shorter, who
is an avid comic book aficionado, to DuBurke’s illustrations, and the
saxophonist became enamored with the Brooklyn-raised, Switzerland-based
artist’s work in graphic novels on Malcolm X and Deadwood Dick. “I could sort
of project myself into Randy’s general state of mind from childhood,” Shorter
says. “I could see it in his drawings. He has those ‘I wish’ lines in his work;
he’s aiming for how he wants the world to be.”
After DuBurke enthusiastically joined the project and had a
long talk with Shorter about the composition titles, quantum mechanics, and
much else, he got to work using those four pieces as inspiration. “I’d put the
Emanon cuts on,” DuBurke says. “Or I’d watch Cosmos videos with Neil de Grasse
Tyson. Whatever came into my head as I sat at the drawing board, I sketched in
black and white or in color. Wayne said, ‘Nobody’s gonna edit you, just go with
it.’ So I felt entirely free creatively, and delivered some first story
sketches to Wayne.”
With DuBurke’s panels in hand, Sly, a screenwriter who
helped Shorter and Herbie Hancock write their viral 2016 “Open Letter to the
Next Generation of Artists,” worked with Shorter to develop and structure the
graphic novel. Central to the story was the multiverse theory, or the idea that
the universe we inhabit is one of an infinite number that all exist in parallel
realities. Listening to each of four orchestral tracks, Sly and Shorter “came
up with a fear that matched the vibe of the track,” Sly says. “That ‘fear’ then
defined the world Emanon would be inhabiting in that specific universe of the
story. And each of the four universes exists simultaneously—from what I know,
that’s very in line with the improvisational, everything-exists-in-the-moment
aspect of jazz.”
“Emanon is like so many characters in that role of trying to
find a way in the world, and also make the world around him a better place,”
DuBurke says. Longtime fans of Shorter may read something of the musician
himself into the character. “Wayne is fearless in the face of adversity,” Sly
says. “Excited by the prospect of the unknown. Brave enough to stand up for
justice and stand out in a crowd, yet sensitive and aware of the value of each
life around him.”
“Wayne is the great American composer,” Patitucci says.
“It’s always been a matter of him having the chance to display all that he can
do in large musical forms, and also in his other areas of brilliance and
imagination like art and storytelling, too. So Emanon is a fulfillment of a
lifetime vision.”
With Emanon, Wayne Shorter shares his artistic multiverse.
Everyone will create his or her own experience with the novel and music—but be
prepared for that experience to involve the unknown. “After reading and
listening to Emanon, you might begin to notice alternative realities glimmering
beneath the everyday world around you,” Esperanza Spalding writes in her
introduction to the novel.
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