Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Song For

12K streams

11,972

Inheritance

11.1K streams

11,054

Jarman, Joseph: Connecting Spirits

8.3K streams

8,281

Out of the Mist

3.3K streams

3,325

As If It Were the Seasons

1K streams

1,011

Jarman, Joseph: Pachinko Dream Track 1...

The Magic Triangle

Nod

Earth Passage - Density

Vision in Time

Biography

Joseph Jarman was not as accomplished a saxophonist as his reed-playing partner in the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Roscoe Mitchell, but his sense of color was fine, his blunt-edged improvisations projected an emotional immediacy of their own, and his interest in poetry and theater informed the band's live performances. While attending high school in Chicago in the early '50s, Jarman took up the drums under the tutelage of the famous music teacher Walter Dyett. He switched to saxophone and clarinet while in the army. Upon his discharge in 1958, he returned to Chicago. There, he joined pianist Muhal Richard Abrams' Experimental Band (formed in 1961), alongside his future Art Ensemble compatriots Malachi Favors and Mitchell. Jarman played in a hard bop sextet with Mitchell, and in 1965, he became one of the first members of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. Starting around 1967, Jarman was one of the first saxophonists to perform solo, a tactic also embraced by other members of the AACM, notably Anthony Braxton. Jarman led his own group from 1966-1968, which included bassist Charles Clark, drummer Thurman Barker, and pianist Christopher Gaddy, among others. Separate editions of that band recorded a pair of albums for Delmark: Song For... (1966) and As if It Were the Seasons (1968). In 1967, Lester Bowie recorded Numbers 1 & 2 for Nessa; on "2," the four musicians who would become the Art Ensemble (Bowie, Mitchell, Favors, and Jarman) recorded together for the first time. In 1969, that band would become Jarman's primary creative outlet. By then, the untimely deaths of Gaddy and Clark had compelled Jarman to disband his own group, and he would continue with the Art Ensemble until 1993. In that time, he also recorded under his own name for the Black Saint, AECO, and India Navigation labels. Upon leaving the Art Ensemble, Jarman virtually retired from music in order to devote himself more completely to spiritual matters. As the '90s progressed, however, he did continue to perform and record, often as a guest with such musicians as Marilyn Crispell, guitarist/composer Scott Fields, bassist Reggie Workman, and drummer Lou Grassi. Joseph Jarman died on January 8, 2019 as a result of cardiac arrest due to respiratory failure. ~ Chris Kelsey, Rovi