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Butch Morris

Butch Morris

Butch Morris has been played on NTS shows including NTS x Montblanc: Freeflow, with Othello B first played on 13 April 2016.

Lawrence D. "Butch" Morris (b. Long Beach, California, February 10, 1947 - Died. January 29, 2013) was an American jazz cornetist, composer and conductor. Morris came to attention with saxophonist David Murray's groups in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Morris's brother, bassist Wilber Morris sometimes performed and recorded with Murray during this period. Morris has gained more notice and acclaim directing various ensembles in what he calls Conduction (a term knowingly borrowed from science): a type of structured improvisation where Morris directs and conducts an improvising ensemble with a series of hand and baton gestures. These conductions have received generally positive reviews, and are often considered quite unique. (Critic Thom Jurek has written, "There are no records like Butch Morris' conduction sides, nor could there be, though he wishes there were." [1]) Ed Hazel writes, "At his best, Morris can shake players out of their old habits, or place a microscope on one aspect of a musician's artistry and build an orchestral fantasia around it."[2] Drummer Charles Moffett conducted improvisations of jazz musicians in the 1970s, and Morris credits Moffett as a major influence. In his travels and many recorded conductions, Morris has worked with a wide variety of musicians. A partial list of such musicians follows, but special note should be made of frequent collaborator J.A. Deane, and his innovative use of live sampling.

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Butch Morris

Butch Morris has been played on NTS shows including NTS x Montblanc: Freeflow, with Othello B first played on 13 April 2016.

Lawrence D. "Butch" Morris (b. Long Beach, California, February 10, 1947 - Died. January 29, 2013) was an American jazz cornetist, composer and conductor. Morris came to attention with saxophonist David Murray's groups in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Morris's brother, bassist Wilber Morris sometimes performed and recorded with Murray during this period. Morris has gained more notice and acclaim directing various ensembles in what he calls Conduction (a term knowingly borrowed from science): a type of structured improvisation where Morris directs and conducts an improvising ensemble with a series of hand and baton gestures. These conductions have received generally positive reviews, and are often considered quite unique. (Critic Thom Jurek has written, "There are no records like Butch Morris' conduction sides, nor could there be, though he wishes there were." [1]) Ed Hazel writes, "At his best, Morris can shake players out of their old habits, or place a microscope on one aspect of a musician's artistry and build an orchestral fantasia around it."[2] Drummer Charles Moffett conducted improvisations of jazz musicians in the 1970s, and Morris credits Moffett as a major influence. In his travels and many recorded conductions, Morris has worked with a wide variety of musicians. A partial list of such musicians follows, but special note should be made of frequent collaborator J.A. Deane, and his innovative use of live sampling.

Original source Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Irin Sun
Butch Morris
Kharma1982
Othello A
Butch Morris
New World Records1991
Conduction #50, E I
Lawrence D. "Butch" Morris
New World Records, CounterCurrents1995
Othello B
Butch Morris
New World Records1991
Long Goodbye
Butch Morris
Sound Aspects Records1989
Ozone - Burning Red
Butch Morris, Lê Quan Ninh, J.A. Deane
FMP1996
The Road To Zamora
Wayne Horvitz, Butch Morris, Robert Previte, Doug Wieselman, Bill Frisell, Robin Holcomb
Sound Aspects Records1988