NewsTrumpet

Longineu Parsons Releases ‘Work Song – 25th Anniversary Edition’

 

Dr. Longineu Parsons’ newest album, “Work Song – 25th Anniversary Edition,” is co-produced by Nat Adderley and features performances by Adderley and the legendary Sam Rivers on Tribal Disorder Records. – RELEASE DATE 5/3/19

The career of Longineu Parsons, with its many musical pieces and parts, serves as a metaphor for what he calls “the disorder of the human tribe.” The whole of Longineu Parsons is greater than the sum of his parts, and he has made it his mission – and the mission of his own Tribal Disorder Records – to use music as “a force against disorder in the human tribe.”

In his own life and career, this “disorder” has come in the form of widely diverse musical passions and pursuits. Growing up in Jacksonville, Florida, Parsons instinctively plays the blues as a native language. After cutting his teeth playing hometown gigs starting in junior high, he toured on the Chitlin Circuit for a few years before attending Florida A&M University for his undergraduate degree. There, two pivotal experiences would help set his course. The first was that he heard the John Coltrane album “Expression” – it opened his ears and changed his life. Though he was already into Miles Davis and “Bitches Brew,” something was different about this. To this day, if Longineu is said to play like anyone, “it’s Trane.” Secondly, he met the famous trumpeter (and FAMU alum) Nat Adderley. Nat took Longineu under his wing and over time, mentor and protégé became lifelong friends. Longineu is honored to play Nat’s cornet as his main horn.

A stint as the trumpet player in the hit Broadway musical “Bubbling Brown Sugar” led to a US tour with the show followed by six months in Paris. Having vowed to stay in Europe if he ever got a gig there, Longineu made good on this promise and stayed for four years, during which time he joined Sun Ra’s band and toured with a number of other artists. He returned to New York in the early 1980s as part of the “out” crowd – and this membership only provided motivation to stay rooted in tradition and to be able to “out-bop the beboppers.” Leveraging the technique developed through his classical training, the traditional jazz experience of his youth, and the feel developed through his days on the Chitlin Circuit, Parsons presents a comprehensive arsenal of jazz not often heard. He has performed and recorded with an impressive list of music greats including Nat Adderley, Cab Calloway, Frank Foster, Billy Harper, Philly Joe Jones, Herbie Mann, David Murray, Sam Rivers, Cecil Taylor, Joe Williams, Nancy Wilson, and others. His advanced degrees in classical trumpet performance and composition may suggest a middle-aged turn away from jazz, but that’s not at all the case. Parsons views music holistically – he doesn’t see different things and may have a jazz influence in a classical piece or vice versa. New music includes that which came before it, but also the other things on planet Earth that are happening in music and sound. He sees no conflict between music – just problem-solving by putting different genres together.

Dr. Longineu Parsons is Professor of Music at Florida A&M University and is President of Tribal Disorder Records. His newest album, “Work Song – 25th Anniversary Edition,” is co-produced by Nat Adderley and features performances by Adderley and the legendary Sam Rivers.

For more information go to www.longineu.com and www.tribaldisorder.com

Jeremy Smith

Jeremy E. Smith is the Founder and Editor of Last Row Music. He received music degrees from Grace College, Carnegie Mellon University, and The Ohio State University. Currently, Jeremy is the bass trombonist of the Mansfield Symphony Orchestra, the Huntington Symphony Orchestra, and performs throughout Ohio, where he lives with his wife and two sons. Smith is a member of the International Trombone Association and the Jazz Journalists Association.