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Poet's Stutter Sparks Innovative Musical Exploration

Summary

  • Grenadian-Jamaican-American artist uses stutter as musical instrument
  • Crafts ambient, jazz, spoken word, and reimagined gospel
  • Explores themes of listening, identity, and freedom
Poet's Stutter Sparks Innovative Musical Exploration

In the past few years, Grenadian-Jamaican-American artist and former Yale lecturer JJJJJerome Ellis has been captivating audiences with their innovative musical compositions. Centered around their own stutter, Ellis' work explores themes of listening, identity, and freedom through a unique blend of ambient, jazz, spoken word, and reimagined gospel.

Ellis works with granular synthesis, a process that uses tiny snippets of sound to craft intricate sonic landscapes. This technique allows them to highlight the musical potential of their stutter, which they describe as "a guiding light" in their creative process. The resulting album, Vesper Sparrow, is a gentle yet powerful exploration of the political and sonic reverberations of "dysfluency" within Black musical traditions.

Across the album's four-part "Evensong" suite and a sparse rendition of the hymn "His Eye Is on the Sparrow," Ellis weaves together a tapestry of hammered dulcimer, flute, piano, and voices, creating a meditative and exhilarating listening experience. Their work invites the audience to engage in deeply attuned listening, encouraging them to hear the new sounds that "already live in the one sound."

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JJJJJerome Ellis' musical style blends ambient, jazz, spoken word, and reimagined gospel, with a focus on using their stutter as a musical instrument.
Ellis' album Vesper Sparrow explores themes of identity and freedom through a unique approach to listening, using granular synthesis to highlight the musical potential of their stutter within Black musical traditions.
The elongated, sparse version of the hymn "His Eye Is on the Sparrow" that appears on Vesper Sparrow reflects Ellis' interest in religious cadences and emphases, and their connection to their own stutter.

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