Punk jazz


Punk jazz describes the amalgamation of elements of the jazz tradition with the instrumentation or conceptual heritage of punk rock. John Zorn's band Naked City, James Chance and the Contortions, Lounge Lizards, Universal Congress Of, Laughing Clowns, Midori are notable examples of punk jazz artists.

History

1970s

, who sought out collaboration with Ornette Coleman, and Television, also developed a sinuous, improvisatory strain of punk, indebted to jazz.
In England, jazz musicians who performed with punk acts included the saxophonist Lol Coxhill, who recorded with the Damned. Punk drummers who had played in jazz bands included Jet Black of the Stranglers and Topper Headon of the Clash.
The pioneering Australian punk scene of the mid-1970s was also influenced by jazz. The introduction of swing arrangements and a brass section on the Saints' 1978 album Prehistoric Sounds, were carried over into Ed Kuepper's subsequent band, Laughing Clowns. Kuepper sought to create a free jazz "sheets of sound" aesthetic similar to that of Sun Ra, Pharoah Sanders, and John Coltrane. The early punk projects of Ollie Olsen also drew inspiration from free jazz, including Ornette Coleman. the Boys Next Door, known later as the Birthday Party, were incorporating various elements of jazz during the late 1970s. The efforts of these Australian punk bands has been described as "desert jazz".

1980s

During the 1980s, a relaxation of orthodoxy, concurrent with post-punk, led to a new appreciation for jazz.
In London, the Pop Group began to mix free jazz, along with dub reggae, into their brand of punk rock.
Nick Cave stated that the Pop Group's song "We Are All Prostitutes" was a major influence on the Birthday Party. Their sound on Junkyard was described by one journalist as a mix of "no-wave guitar, free-jazz craziness, and punk-processed Captain Beefheart angularity".
In New York, no wave was inspired by punk and free jazz. Examples of this style include Lydia Lunch's album Queen of Siam, the work of James Chance and the Contortions, who mixed funk with free jazz and punk rock, Gray, and the Lounge Lizards, the first group to call themselves punk jazz. Bill Laswell and his band Material mixed funk, jazz, and punk while his band Massacre added improvisation to rock. He was a member of the American free jazz band Last Exit and Pain Killer.
James Blood Ulmer applied Coleman's harmolodic style to guitar and sought out links to no wave. Bad Brains, widely acknowledged to have established the rudiments of the hardcore style, began by attempting jazz fusion. Guitarist Joe Baiza executed his blend of punk and free jazz with Saccharine Trust and in Universal Congress Of, a group influenced by the work of Albert Ayler. Greg Ginn of Black Flag incorporated elements of free jazz into his guitar playing, most notably on Black Flag's 1985 instrumental EP The Process of Weeding Out. Henry Rollins has praised free jazz, releasing albums by Matthew Shipp on his record label and collaborating with Charles Gayle. The Minutemen were influenced by jazz, folk and funk. Mike Watt of the band has spoken about being inspired by listening to John Coltrane.
Dutch anarcho-punk group the Ex incorporated elements of free jazz and particularly European free improvisation, collaborating with Han Bennink and other members of the Instant Composers Pool.
Greek-American singer Diamanda Galás approached jazz tradition from a thematically and stylistically transgressive perspective. Her album The Singer is a prototypical example of punk jazz applied to vocals and piano performance. Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds bassist Barry Adamson recorded the album Moss Side Story, which also applies a punk and noise rock perspective to the orchestral jazz tradition, with Galás singing on one track.

1990s

Free jazz was an important influence in the American post-hardcore scene of the early 90s. Drive Like Jehu took Black Flag's atonal solos a step further with their dual guitar attack. The Nation of Ulysses had Ian Svenonious alternating between vocals and trumpet, and their complex song structures, odd time signatures, and frenetic live shows were as much hardcore punk as they were free jazz. They even did a brief cover of John Coltrane's A Love Supreme on their Plays Pretty for Baby album, though they titled it "The Sound of Jazz to Come" after Ornette Coleman's classic album The Shape of Jazz to Come. Chicago's Cap'n Jazz also borrowed free jazz's odd time signatures and guitar melodies, marrying them with hardcore screams and amateur tuba playing. The Swedish band Refused was influenced by this scene and recorded an album titled The Shape of Punk to Come, where they alternate between manic hardcore punk numbers and slower, jazzy songs.

2000s–2010s

from Chicago is comparable to Candiria, combining heavy metal with free jazz and psychedelia. Although Italian band Ephel Duath was credited with the inadvertent recreation of jazzcore on their albums The Painter's Palette and Pain Necessary to Know, the band moved away from it to pursue a more esoteric form of progressive rock similar to the music of Frank Zappa.
Other punk jazz acts include Witchkr, 385, the 5th Plateau, Hella, Midori, La Part Maudite, Omar Rodriguez-Lopez, Talibam!, Youngblood Brass Band, Aurora Beam and Zu. Gutbucket, and King Krule.

Jazzcore

Some hardcore punk-influenced punk jazz bands such as Zu, 16-17, Pain Killer, and Ephel Duath have been described as jazzcore.

Swing punk

Swing punk is a genre created by the fusion punk rock, jazz, and swing revival elements. Cherry Poppin' Daddies have been described as incorporating punk and ska elements into swing and jazz music.