Joe Gallivan
Los Angeles, California, United States | INDIE | AFM
Music
Press
THE WIRE, September 1999
What interests Gallivan today is the very much active Powerfield, the volcanic trio made up of himself on synthesizer and electronic percussion, Pat Thomas on live electronics and Gary Smith on electric stereo guitar. The trio’s first release, Electronic/Electric/Electronic, is a full-on electronically manipulated fusion of progressive rock and free jazz, distinguished by a level of rhythmic interplay that is almost extra-sensory
- The Wire
THE WIRE, September 1999
What interests Gallivan today is the very much active Powerfield, the volcanic trio made up of himself on synthesizer and electronic percussion, Pat Thomas on live electronics and Gary Smith on electric stereo guitar. The trio’s first release, Electronic/Electric/Electronic, is a full-on electronically manipulated fusion of progressive rock and free jazz, distinguished by a level of rhythmic interplay that is almost extra-sensory
- The Wire
Offhand I can't think of any valid reasons why Joe Gallivan is not more celebrated. He worked with well heavy geezers like Eric Dolphy, Gil Evans and Wilson Pickett, participated in a longstanding duo with Charles Austin, and ran admirable outfits like Neon Lighthouse and the Soldiers Of The Road, in whose ranks warriors like Evan Parker, Steve Williams Paul Dunmall and Guy Barker served. Gallivan helped Robert Moog develop the drum synthesizer. With Love Cry Want, an innovative group led by the legendary monomonickered Nicholas, he played drums, steel guitar and synth alongside percussionist Jimmy Molneiri and organist Larry young. In June 1972, when LCW gigged in Lafayette Park, across from the White House, Nicholas was test-driving a prototype guitar synthesizer. Neighbour Richard Nixon, alarmed by the strange sounds, tried to get the concert stopped. Where Presidential pressure failed, records industry timidity succeeded; the tapes were suppressed until now. Nixon would have liked to know how that was done.
- The Wire
Offhand I can't think of any valid reasons why Joe Gallivan is not more celebrated. He worked with well heavy geezers like Eric Dolphy, Gil Evans and Wilson Pickett, participated in a longstanding duo with Charles Austin, and ran admirable outfits like Neon Lighthouse and the Soldiers Of The Road, in whose ranks warriors like Evan Parker, Steve Williams Paul Dunmall and Guy Barker served. Gallivan helped Robert Moog develop the drum synthesizer. With Love Cry Want, an innovative group led by the legendary monomonickered Nicholas, he played drums, steel guitar and synth alongside percussionist Jimmy Molneiri and organist Larry young. In June 1972, when LCW gigged in Lafayette Park, across from the White House, Nicholas was test-driving a prototype guitar synthesizer. Neighbour Richard Nixon, alarmed by the strange sounds, tried to get the concert stopped. Where Presidential pressure failed, records industry timidity succeeded; the tapes were suppressed until now. Nixon would have liked to know how that was done.
- The Wire
Larry Young was a member of not one, not of two, but of three legendary bands at the end of the 1960’s and early 70’s. Having helped to create the new Miles Davis sound on Bitches Brew, he co-founded Lifetime with John McLaughlin and Tony Williams, and following that was a member of one of the legendary jazz-fusion groups, Love Cry Want, who carried the sound of both a step further, and perhaps a step too far for the critics for either critics or public. LCW were even banned from the environs of the White House on the grounds that they might interfere in some obscure electronic way with Richard Nixon’s head. A whole era of American history falls into place in an instant.
The group sound was not quite so heavily dependent on Young as Lifetime had been, largely because guitarist Nicholas (no other name) had at his disposal a prototype guitar synthesizer which greatly increased his range of sound. Drummer Gallivan, who remains one of the unsung heroes of this music, was also to go on and pioneer a drum synth. At this stage, though he has a Moog, he is mainly working acoustically, in the light, fast but curiously threatening sound one knows from his own records. It is usually possible to distinguish what he is doing from the more straightforward style of Jimmy Molneiri. The music consists of big intense washes, driving motoric rhythms and occasional moments of unexpected grace.
Recording quality is far from wonderful, but the session has an amazingly atmospheric period-quality, and audio buffs will have fun working out who is playing what. A remarkable document of a largely forgotten but seminal group.
- Penguin Guide To Jazz
Joe Gallivan—who does not merit an entry in the Grove Dictionary of Jazz—is one of the forgotten pioneers of the music. Now based in Hawaii, he was a member of the fabled Love Cry Want, successors to Lifetime and the Miles Davis group in the search for a viable fusion of jazz and rock, and he later went on to invent a viable drum synthesizer. For much of his playing career, like Tony Oxley, he has moved eclectically inside and outside a countable beat, and he has used both acoustic and amplified percussion.
Innocence is cast in cycles of form, freedom and surrender and is concerned thematiclly with the innocence of creative music-making in an essentially pragmatic culture. Though the basic structures are scored and typically sophisticated, they are open-ended enough to allow the soloists to explore their own natures and their own stance on the basic dilemmas of accommodation or resistance.
If it all sounds grandiose, it works. Gallivan has assembled a band of old friends from his years in London, with the addition of younger players like Barker, Deppa and Presencer (where else could three players of this quality be found?) and a last-minute recruit, flautist Neil Metcalfe, who brings an air of thoughtful simplicity to the opening ‘Materialism’. On ‘Voices of Ancient Children’, Evan Parker combines darkly with Elton Dean, establishing a sonority that will dominate the session, very British, but here heard in an unexpected framework. It’s to Gallivan’s credit that he has stamped so much of his own personal authority on players as experienced as these, without turning this into an exercise in auteurism.
- Penguin Guide to Jazz
Larry Young was a member of not one, not of two, but of three legendary bands at the end of the 1960’s and early 70’s. Having helped to create the new Miles Davis sound on Bitches Brew, he co-founded Lifetime with John McLaughlin and Tony Williams, and following that was a member of one of the legendary jazz-fusion groups, Love Cry Want, who carried the sound of both a step further, and perhaps a step too far for the critics for either critics or public. LCW were even banned from the environs of the White House on the grounds that they might interfere in some obscure electronic way with Richard Nixon’s head. A whole era of American history falls into place in an instant.
The group sound was not quite so heavily dependent on Young as Lifetime had been, largely because guitarist Nicholas (no other name) had at his disposal a prototype guitar synthesizer which greatly increased his range of sound. Drummer Gallivan, who remains one of the unsung heroes of this music, was also to go on and pioneer a drum synth. At this stage, though he has a Moog, he is mainly working acoustically, in the light, fast but curiously threatening sound one knows from his own records. It is usually possible to distinguish what he is doing from the more straightforward style of Jimmy Molneiri. The music consists of big intense washes, driving motoric rhythms and occasional moments of unexpected grace.
Recording quality is far from wonderful, but the session has an amazingly atmospheric period-quality, and audio buffs will have fun working out who is playing what. A remarkable document of a largely forgotten but seminal group.
- Penguin Guide To Jazz
All of the compositions on the album are by Joe Gallivan and the arrangements are both challenging and unusual. Each piece is introduced by one or two soloists and the ensemble takes over only to cushion to these organic cadenzas...Gallivan seems to record far too little, but once again, he has scored with a release that is musically a thousand miles from Duke, but has matched the Ellington knack for showcasing improvising sidemen.
- Jazz Journal
Those interested in free music played in a forceful, heartfelt way might find this live-to-DAT recording from Hawaii a real pleasure. Gallivan, a former member of the Gil Evans Big Band and Larry Young's band, and sideman with the likes of Pepper Adams, Ira Sullivan, and Kenny Wheeler, plays with a trusting abandon, right in sync with his partner's inner clock. He's equally aggressive and dynamic on sticks or brushes, swelling to meet the musical situation head on, always playing with as much melody and shape as rhythmic drive. The duo creates a wonderful tension on "Magic Mirror," and Gallivan is charting a course alongside the pianist, though somehow completely free of his expressive playing. On "Intensity", Cuomo lays groundwork, but leaves the space for Gallivan, who unleashes a frantic assault. Again, on "Internal Directions", Cuomo's part is almost a vamp over which the drummer hurls a magnificent phase-altering skins-and-cymbals barrage. Gallivan offers a free jazz cadence on "Evolution" between cymbals and bongos. Gallivan builds up Cuomo with cymbal wash and enticing brushwork on "Round Midnight", tastefully mixing in hand drums in flourishes. "I've Got It Bad" is played straight and very slow, but as Cuomo offers a fine-fingered reading of "In a Sentimental Mood," Gallivan colors and shades the edges with soft humor and grace. Joe Gallivan has obviously accumulated a wealth of experience; thankfully, he's developed an avant-bop style that's quite a kick to listen to.
- Modern Drummer
All of the compositions on the album are by Joe Gallivan and the arrangements are both challenging and unusual. Each piece is introduced by one or two soloists and the ensemble takes over only to cushion to these organic cadenzas...Gallivan seems to record far too little, but once again, he has scored with a release that is musically a thousand miles from Duke, but has matched the Ellington knack for showcasing improvising sidemen.
- Jazz Journal
Drummer Joe Gallivan is a road warrior who's had significant tenures in New York, London and Europe. Though now comfortably ensconced in Maui, the music is anything but mango breezy. Indeed, it's bracing. Collaborating with pianist Brian Cuomo and altoist Elton Dean, Gallivan plunges into the deep waters of open-ended improvisation. It's a risky proposition that nonetheless pays big dividends. Indeed, one hears echoes of the kind of soundscapes once spun so effectively by Charles Lloyd. This is spontaneous composition made accessible by the musicians' maturity, their shared vision, and paradoxically, their discipline (tracks average about five minutes a piece, thus setting up constantly shifting moods and atmospheres). It's a piece of haunting beauty.
- Jazz Times
The series “Jazz of the Twenty-first Century” closed with a performance by a multi-cultural and multi-ethnic group. Among the many possibilities offered by jazz, some players are conducting encounters with music of folk origins. This is the case with Marti Perramon, Joe Gallivan, and the Ektal Ensemble. Heading the group are the Catalan percussionist Perramon and the American drummer Joe Gallivan. In Madrid they presented their CD “Des Del Silenci”, which documents the collaboration of the Ektal Ensemble exploring a dialogue with Gnawan musicians, and includes trumpeter Benet Palet, bassist Chris Merryman, and modern dancer Antonia Herrada. Although it seems an extravagant conglomeration, the common aesthetic that resulted was very coherent.
An obvious precedent for this project was in the investigations of diverse folk traditions by the late Don Cherry. Of Joe Gallivan, one must say that he has ample experience in the field of jazz; he formed a band with Donald Bird and was the drummer in the Gil Evans Orchestra. Music of ambiance and trance, the repertoire of “Des Del Silenci” places on the point of its aesthetic lance the Moroccan expression of the Gnawan culture. The singing of Abdeljalil and the mandolin playing of Moulay had previously been a substantial part of the group Nass Marrakech. This is not a false grafting, but a visible understanding among the musicians; it sounds like a band with its own journey of sound. The experience of the concert was, like that of the CD, one of the most interesting to have surfaced in the Spanish panorama.
- Diario 16
Drummer Joe Gallivan is a road warrior who's had significant tenures in New York, London and Europe. Though now comfortably ensconced in Maui, the music is anything but mango breezy. Indeed, it's bracing. Collaborating with pianist Brian Cuomo and altoist Elton Dean, Gallivan plunges into the deep waters of open-ended improvisation. It's a risky proposition that nonetheless pays big dividends. Indeed, one hears echoes of the kind of soundscapes once spun so effectively by Charles Lloyd. This is spontaneous composition made accessible by the musicians' maturity, their shared vision, and paradoxically, their discipline (tracks average about five minutes a piece, thus setting up constantly shifting moods and atmospheres). It's a piece of haunting beauty.
- Jazz Times
Discography
Discography of Joe Gallivan
Modern Jazz Orchestra featuring Kenny Drew (Addess) (re-issued on CD in 2001 by V.S.O.P. Records)
At Last (Man Made) Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan (released as CD in 2000)
Mindscapes (Spitball) Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan (released as CD in 2000)
Expressions to the Winds (Spitball) Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan (also CD in 2000)
Cruel but Fair (Compendium) with Hugh Hopper, Elton Dean, Keith Tippet, Joe
Gallivan (reissued on CD by One Way)
Peace On Earth (Compendium) with Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan, John
McMinn, Carmen Lundy, David Deluca, Al Richardson, Marvis Martin
London(Compendium) Intercontinental Express with Joe Gallivan, Charles
Austin, Kenny Wheeler, Nick Evans, Jeff Green, Elton Dean, Ronnie Scott, Ian
Hamer, Roy Babbington, Toni Cook, Stephen Wick.
The Cheque is in the Mail (Ogun) Kenny Wheeler, Elton Dean, Joe Gallivan
Home from Home (Ogun) Charles Austin, Roy Babbington, Joe Gallivan
Mercy Dash (Atmospheres) Hugh Hopper, Elton Dean, Keith Tippet, Joe
Gallivan (reissued on CD by Culture Press)
There Comes A Time (RCA) Gil Evans and his Orchestra
The Gil Evans Orchestra Plays the Music of Jimi Hendrix (RCA)
And Around (Colin) Jean Schwarz, Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan
Surroundings (Celia) Jean Schwarz, Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan
Miami (Atmosphere) Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan
The New Orchestra (Hannibal) Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan, Ryo Kawasaki,
Clive Stevens, Peter Ponzol, George Bishop, Gene Golden, Sabu Morales,
Wendell Hayes, Tadashi Yasunaga
Voices (Hannibal) Joe Gallivan, Charles Austin, John McMinn, Earl Lloyd
Supply and Demand (Rykodisc) Dagmar Krause, Richard Thompson, John Harle,
Danny Thompson, Joe Gallivan
Mysterious Planet (Hannibal) Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan, John McMinn,
Nelson Padron, Earl Lloyd
Prism (Vinyl) Peter Ponzol, Abbey Rader, Joe Gallivan
Innocence (Cadence) Joe Gallivan with Guy Barker, Elton Dean, Claude Deppa,
Jim Dvorak, Marcio Mattos, Neil Metcalf, Evan Parker, Gerard Presencer,
Paul Rutherford, Ashley Slater
Night Vision (newjazz.com) Brian Cuomo, Joe Gallivan
The Origin of Man (newjazz.com) Elton Dean, Brian Cuomo, Joe Gallivan
Surrender (newjazz.com) Jackie Ryan, Brian Cuomo, Joe Gallivan
Love Cry Want (newjazz.com) Larry Young, Joe Gallivan, Nicholas
Orchestral Meditations ( newjazz.com) Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan, John
McMinn
Timeless (newjazz.com) Charles Austin, Joe Gallivan, John McMinn, Gene
Argel, Brian Cuomo, Hector Serrano
Guitars on Mars (Virgin) Larry Young, Nicholas, Joe Gallivan
Wiretapper (November 1998), Powerfield
Wiretapper (August 1999) Powerfield
Des Del Silenci (Afro-Blue Records) Ektal Ensemble
Electronic/Electric/Electronic (Paratactile) Powerfield
Joe Gallivan/Gary Smith (Paratactile) Joe Gallivan, Gary Smith
Live At Ronnie Scott's (Ronnie Scott's) Joe Gallivan, Jackie Ryan, Brian Cuomo
Powerfield ( 2006) Powerfield
Vienna(2007)Rainforest Initiative
LA (2009) duo w/Benn Clatworthy
neonlighthouse84(2010) duo w/P Y Caplin 40 lifetimes later(2011) LOVE CRY WANT Recorded and Live Radio Broadcasts
1977 Radio France: Two sessions with Elton Dean, Keith Tippet and Hugh
Hopper
1977 Danish Radio: Live at Club Montmartre (the most famous jazz club in
Copenhagen)
1977 Radio Bremen: Live at Stadt Theatre in Bremen
1977 Radio France: Recorded broadcast with Charles Austin
1977 Chateau Vallon Festival in Toulon, France: Intercontinental Express Big
Band
1978 Espace Cardin: Live broadcast with Charles Austin and big band from a
theatre in Paris
1980 Radio France: two broadcasts with French composer Jean Schwarz and
Charles Austin
1981 France Musique: Live broadcast
1982 France Musique: Live broadcast with Peter Ponzol
1983 Hessicher Rundfunk Jazz Ensemble broadcast
1985 BBC Radio 3: with Elton Dean
1985 Hessicher Rundfunk Jazz Ensemble broadcast
1986 Hessicher Rundfunk Jazz Ensemble broadcast with John Schroeder
1986 BBC Radio 3: Soldiers of the Road Big Band
1986 BBC Radio 3: with John Corbett
1987 BBC Radio 3: duo with Evan Parker
1987 Public TV, Miami, Florida: One hour show with Charles Austin
1987 France Musique with Nicholas
1992 BBC Radio 1: Soldiers of the Road Big Band at the London Jazz Festival
1992 BBC Radio 1: Quartet with Paul Rutherford, Jim Dvorak, Marcio Mattos.
2000 BBC Radio 3: Powerfield (Joe Gallivan, Gary Smith, Pat Thomas)
2000 to present Black Entertainment Network is broadcasting the Rainforest Initiative taped at the Bell Atlantic Jazz Festival in New York City
2001 ORF radio (Vienna): Ektal Ensemble at Festival Schnittpunkte
2003 ORF television (Vienna) Joe Gallivan and DJ Orgasmus
2004
Photos
Bio
Joe Gallivan
This year, I will be offering "URBAN GREEN" the London based electric big-band and the follow up to the acoustic " Soldiers of the Road" with many of the same players, LOVE CRY WANT" with Michelle Webb, Tom McNalley and myself and the "RAINFOREST INITIATIVE" with Anupriya and Paul Rogers and me. Michelle and Tom are the best young musicians I've found in years. Both have a distinctive voice and are mature players having had many diverse experiences in relatively short careers. this trio can play anywhere anytime with great energy and fire----------The first "LOVE CRY WANT" featured the great LARRY YOUNG and had one self titled CD. I gave up looking for another organist like him and turned to two fantastic musicians who played guitar and bass guitar with a similar energy and creativity and we have just recorded the 2nd "LOVE CRY WANT" CD .
, The "RAINFOREST INITIATIVE "was first a nine piece that included Evan Parker, Elton Dean ,Marcio Matto,the great Brazilian bassist and three hawaiian women chanters and healers. Unfortunately Elton and Mahalanie Poi Poi have left us and what was "Rainforest21" has become the "RAINFOREST INITIATIVE'" with Anupriya and Paul Rogers. I would like to be able to share with you the experiences of audiences in Europe where the people become hypnotized by the music and share what for us is a mystical experience.
Joe's Bio:
Born in Rochester, New York, Joe Gallivan began his professional career in Miami at
age 15 working in television and with a series of local bands including the Latin band of Eduardo Chavez
and the big bands of Art Mooney and Charley Spivak, and, later, with trios
accompanying well known singers and musicians including Dizzy Gillespie and Dakota
Staton, as well as comedians including Lennie Bruce, Lord Buckley and Harry the Hipster. He studied music at University of Miami and with various private teachers
including Bower Murphy.
Joe's recording career began in Boston with Bob Freedman, Bill Berry and
Don Vincent; the following year he recorded a single featuring Sonny Criss, and the
year after with the Modern Jazz Orchestra with Kenny Drew on piano. This Miami
recording was released in England and France and was re-released on CD in 2001.
In 1961, Joe moved to New York and co-lead with Donald Byrd an ensemble which
included, at various times, Eric Dolphy, Don Ellis, John Coles, Eddie Bert, Jimmy
Knepper, Pepper Adams, Herbie Hancock and Elvin Jones.
In 1962, Joe returned to Miami and worked as conductor of the television show
"Music USA". At this time he also began a collaboration with multi-reed player
Charles Austin which has resulted in many albums, tours and festival apearances over
three decades. Their music was praised by Igor Stravinsky, who wrote a letter of
recommendation to CBS on their behalf. At the 1968 Miami Pop
Festival, they played after Jimi Hendrix and before the Mothers of Invention. Here's a YouTube of one of Joe and Charles' albums: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xb2zk50yrCU
In 1968, Joe also worked with N.R.B.Q. (the New Rhythm and Blues Quartet) and
organized A Train of Thought, the first all-electronic big band, for which Joe and Stan
Goldstein builtmuch of the equipment . The band was composed of legendary
players that included Charles Austin, Ira Sullivan and Paul Cohen. At a second Miami
Pop Festival, the band backed Chuck Berry and Marvin Gaye.
In 1969, Joe moved back to New York City, where, after eighteen months of
freelancing, including creating five improvisational film scores for Warner Brothers, he
was invited to join Larry Young's ensemble, with whom he worked for nearly three
years. Gil Evans heard Joe play at the Newport Jazz Festival with Elvin Jones and
invited him to join his orchestra; Joe continued working in his band for over two
years.
In 1976, Joe moved to Europe, where he toured and recorded in the ensemble Hopper,
Dean, Tippet and Gallivan. In 1978 he recorded with Elton Dean and Kenny Wheeler
and toured Japan with John Scofield, Miraslov Vitous and Kenny Kirkland.
From 1979 to 1983 Joe traveled a lot, working with Charles Austin in Europe, with
Nicholas in Hawaii, with Butch Morris in Paris, appearing in numerous contemporary
and electronic music concerts in France and in New York City.
In 1983, in Frankfurt, Joe began a series of recordings for Hessicher Rundfunk that
included Albert Mangelsdorf, Heinz Sauer and Christoph Lauer. He also worked in a
duo with guitarist John Schroeder.
In 1984, Joe settled in London and organized the avant-garde big band Soldiers of the
Road, featuring Elton Dean, Evan Parker, Marcio Mattos, and, later, Ashley Slater,
Paul Rutherford, Jim Dvorak, Claude Deppa, and Guy Barker. This ensemble
recorded eight pieces for the BBC, performed often in London including at the London
Jazz Festival, and, in 1992, made
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