The question
is simple, but the answer is an enigma. “What is Nublu?”
If you can extract a response out of anyone who has anything to
do with the club and label on Avenue C, it’ll be a vague one.
Nublu is a force that exists seemingly without definition. One night
Forro in the Dark is banging out hard-charging Brazilian folk music,
and two nights later I Led Three Lives is entrancing the crowd with
near-psychedelic tech-jazz. The tie that binds it all together is
intangible and unnamable. If there is any promise of an answer,
though, the Nublu Orchestra Conducted by Butch Morris holds the
key to its unlocking.
The Nublu Orchestra is assembled from the multifaceted range of
musicians that call Nublu home. Band-members from Brazilian Girls,
Wax Poetic, Kudu, Forro in the Dark, I Led Three Lives, and Love
Trio and regular Nublu guests Graham Haynes and Eddie Henderson
all sit under the baton of Butch Morris, the inventor of Conduction®.
Conduction is Morris’ vocabulary of ideographic signs and
gestures activated to modify or construct a real-time musical arrangement
or composition. An outstretched hand with an upward facing palm
is a command to sustain. Fast, forward strikes of the baton are
directives to make staccato sounds. In total there are thirty-one
signals in his conductive language, and each one can be used to
instigate or manipulate musicians’ harmonies, melodies, rhythms,
articulations, phrasings or forms that make up the spontaneous compositions.
Morris, who began his career as a free jazz cornet player and composer
of notated music, invented Conduction thirty years ago as a means
to unite musicians regardless of their technical, theoretical, stylistic
or cultural differences. Since its inception, Butch has conducted
over 5,000 musicians in twenty-two different countries. Now, with
the Nublu Orchestra, it’s almost as if a composite of all
those nations and players have come together.
“Conduction is contingent on social and cultural structures
but is not limited to or dependent on style or category,”
Morris says, as he begins to explain his relationship to the Nublu
Orchestra. “Musicians, no matter what their musical background,
under the baton of Conduction play whatever it is that they play
best. They give it to me and I reshape it. Nublu Orchestra is made
up of, but not limited to, musicians from many different camps:
jazz, funk, pop, fusion, Brazilian, R&B, classical… but
the music we make is none of these... If Nublu means anything it
means “inclusive nature” (rather than exclusive). It
means we will find the center of balance and cosmology no matter
whom is in the band… Nublu reflects the music and the music
reflects Nublu. It’s a total encounter in the moment.”
The moment of which Morris speaks sheds light on that simple “What
is Nublu?” question. The Nublu Orchestra’s music is
an amalgamation of sounds from free jazz to techno just as the club
and label’s sound as a whole is the same. When the swirling
sounds of blowing wind and horns give way to an almost punk-funky
bass line on ‘Sketches of NYC’, the common thread of
Nublu begins to show its face; and as a free jazz horn line contorts
around a solid four on the floor beat (complete with a disco high
hat) in ‘We Are The Ones’, it starts to make sense how
a club responsible for releasing an electro-pop record could host
a steel guitar player every Sunday night without batting an eye.
While Butch Morris is the point to which all styles rush in the
midst of the Nublu Orchestra, the club itself is at the heart of
all the Nublu bands. Just as Morris directs and uses the improvisations
of individual musicians, so the club subtly influences the bands’
outputs, developing a common thread in the midst of one of the most
diverse musical communities that has ever been.