THEME Lecture: John-Carlos Perea, University of Washington

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John-Carlos Perea, University of Washington

John-Carlos Perea, Associate Professor in Ethnomusicology at the University of Washington, presents “Traditioning Witchi Tai To: Jim Pepper, Don Cherry, and American Indian Ways of Improvising,” in the School of Music's 2023 THEME lecture series.


Abstract

Jim Pepper’s “Witchi Tai To,” first recorded in 1969, sounds the audible entanglements (Guilbault 2005) between Native American Church and jazz, rock, folk, and country musics. Revisiting my previous research on the historical acoustemology of Witchi Tai To (Perea 2009), this presentation will listen again to the early years of Witchi Tai To’s recorded history between 1969 and 1974 focusing on Don Cherry’s performance of Witchi Tai To in 1972 at Festival de Jazz de Chateauvallon, recently re-released by Blank Forms Editions in 2021. Cherry’s recording is of particular interest as it makes audible Witchi Tai To’s circulations and soundings in Europe following Pepper’s recording of the song in 1971 (Embryo) and before the Garbarek-Stenson quartet recording in 1974 (ECM). Through these circuits, the presentation listens to Witchi Tai To in order to understand American Indian ways of doing jazz not only as unexpected (Deloria 2004) but as part of an Indigelogics (Bissett Perea 2021) of improvisation. 


Series Background

THEME, an annual colloquium of UW faculty and students of Theory, History, Ethnomusicology, and Music Education, is held on select Friday afternoons during Autumn Quarter.  All talks are at 4:30 p.m in the School of Music Fishbowl unless otherwise noted. Admission is free. 


Biography