11:32 am
Topics:
Featured
History
Movies
Music
Race
They hate us for our freedom
Video
Tags:
jazz
Sun Ra
civil rights
black power
black music
Ed Bland
black nationalism
The Cry of Jazz
black cinema

Alex the musician breaks it down for the bohos in The Cry of Jazz
Thanks to Mixmaster Morris for the heads-up on this…
With the supposed “national conversation on race” now devolved into a debate about who’s allowed to use the N-word, it’s instructive to have a look at Chicago musician and historian Ed Bland’s 1959 film polemic The Cry of Jazz.
Co-written by Bland alongside urban planner Nelam Hill, novelist Mark Kennedy, and mathematician Eugene Titus, the half-hour-long Cry… is fashioned as an impromptu lecture by jazz musician Alex (backed by two fellow male African-American friends) to two male and two female white bohemians lingering after a jazz appreciation salon. Cut in to the lecture is footage of both Chicago inner-city life at the time, and early performances by Sun Ra and his Arkestra. As you’ll see below, the conversation—though generally civil and high-minded—gets frank and heated in a way that few would imagine it did back in the day.
Watch the rest of The Cry of Jazz and read more after the jump…




