Saxophonist/composer
John Ellis is proud to announce the release of Mobro, Ellis' and
librettist/playwright Andy Bragen's seventy-five-minute through-composed piece,
for nine musicians and four singers, which was commissioned and created at one
of NYC finest jazz venues, The Jazz Gallery, in April 2011. Mobro marks Ellis
and Bragen's third collaboration (the others being Dreamscapes and The Ice
Siren, commissioned by the Gallery in 2007 and 2008, respectively).
Mobro was inspired by the intriguing 1987 journey of a garbage barge of the same name
that became a national news headline, sparking intense interest in, and action
on, a multitude of environmental issues. Ellis and Bragen composed,
work-shopped, rehearsed and performed Mobro at the Jazz Gallery in April 2011
(to sold out audiences), making use of the space on a prolonged basis, not only
for the performance, but also as an integral part of their creative process.
The work was commissioned by The Jazz Gallery as part of its 2011 Residency
Commissioning Series, which was supported by grants from the Jerome Foundation
and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. It was developed with
additional support from The Playwrights' Center, Minneapolis, MN in partnership
with the Network for Ensemble Theaters. This epic work enjoyed a second staging
at The Jazz Gallery over four nights in December of 2011.
Ellis
and Bragen's Mobro uses the historical journey of the Mobro 4000 as a thematic
launching point, examining issues of what we consume, what we waste, and what
we reject. However, the environmental issues are primarily secondary; the
historical journey of the Mobro is used as metaphor: this is an epic quest told
through the eyes of the garbage - a story of yearning, of escalating
rejections, of self-knowledge, and ultimately of redemption.
fter
receiving the commission, Ellis and Bragen spent several months researching the
historical journey and drafting a twelve part narrative super-structure that
provided the framework for the piece.
Ellis selected musicians for their gifts at communicating the widest
range of emotion, and then wrote with their individual temperaments in
mind. Conceived of as one continuous
seventy-five minute work, the transitions are of critical importance; events
flow into each other in surprising ways and the widest palate of color and
tension is used to pull the listener into another world. In order to appreciate the vision as
intended, MOBRO should ideally be listened to in one uninterrupted sitting.
More on
Mobro: The Mobro 4000 was carrying the trash no one wanted; refuse from an
overflowing city that sailed the seas for five months and 6,000 miles. Denied
port repeatedly, the barge's contents were viewed as hazardous and infectious.
This "Flying Dutchman" of garbage barges returned home close to
twenty five years ago, but the questions it raises about what we consume, what
we waste, and what we reject are still urgent and relevant. The odyssey of our
trash may also serve as a metaphorical microcosm for western society, with a
particular focus on those that we expel or deny.
Ellis
and Bragen use as a thematic launching point the journey of the infamous New
York garbage barge which hauled over 3,000 tons of trash from Islip, New York
to North Carolina in March 1987, then down to New Orleans, Mexico, Belize and
ultimately back to Brooklyn where the trash was finally incinerated and hauled
back, as ash, to where it started: Islip. This new work is a narrative chamber
piece with song, jazz compositions and jazz improvisation. The musical ensemble
consists of nine musicians and four singers. The piece also features sound
design by Roberto Carlos Lange.
Bragen
explains further: "There is a strong story behind this piece: the journey
of the Mobro 4000. We've taken the real story, and re-imagined it as a kind of
ODYSSEY type voyage, far out into the world, and ultimately back home, to be
burned. We gave the trash a voice, and in a way, the trash stands in for all
that we throw away and reject, all that we look past. The piece has a great
emotional scope, and there's something about a long sea journey that allowed us
to find the epic nature of it all."
Ellis
adds: "I think it has the potential to resonate on a lot of different
levels, including a global warming/consciousness of waste level. It's a pretty intense rejection story, but it
also has some comic relief. It really
does feel like an amazingly satisfying ride."
John
Ellis is widely recognized as one of New York's premiere tenor saxophone
voices. A sideman to artists as diverse as bass icon John Patitucci, organ
legend Dr. Lonnie Smith, and MacArthur Fellow Miguel Zenon, John has performed
extensively around the world for the last 20 years. With more than 100 album
credits as a sideman, John can be heard with artists as wide ranging as Charlie
Hunter, Robert Glasper, Darcy James Argue, Edward Simon, and Sting. John was
the 2nd place winner of the prestigious Thelonious Monk Saxophone Competition
in 2002, was the recipient of three composition grants through The Jazz Gallery
for the creation of new work ("Dreamscapes", "The Ice
Siren", and "MOBRO") and was selected as the 2014 Make Jazz
Fellow by the 18th Street Arts Center in Santa Monica. John has released seven
albums as a leader, two of those featuring his wildly popular New
Orleans-centered band Double-Wide, which has toured extensively and was
featured on the Main Stage of the 2012 Newport Jazz Festival. For more
information: www.johnaxsonellis.com
Andy
Bragen's honors include a Workspace Residency and a Process Space Residency
with the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, the Clubbed Thumb Biennial
Commission, and a Jerome Fellowship. His
play for one actor This is My Office was produced off-Broadway this past autumn
by The Play Company. Other plays and
translations have been seen and heard at numerous theatres, including PS122,
Queens Theatre in the Park, Brown/Trinity Playwrights Rep, and Soho Rep. He has
an MFA from Brown University and is a member of New Dramatists. For more
information: www.andybragen.com