FROM NELSCLINE.COM:
"I am sitting here in Sydney, Australia. April 20th would have been my father's 92nd birthday, were he still alive. And Andrew Hill has died.
As most of you know, I love his music. I recorded some of his pieces on my CD, released last year, called New Monastery: A View Into the Music of Andrew Hill (Cryptogramophone). I recorded it as a tribute to a LIVING MASTER and inspiration. I didn't know it when I came up with the idea to do the project, but Andrew Hill was gravely ill. Now he is released from suffering. His years-long struggle with lung cancer is over. I write this to send my love and condolences to his family and friends, and to send all possible love to the spirit of Andrew Hill.
In a strange twist of fate, my sextet that plays his music was asked to open for Mr. Hill's group at the San Francisco Jazz Festival last October. It was nerve-wracking for me, but also exciting, and Andrew was generous, telling me, after I expressed a sheepishness about playing his music in front of him, that what was important was that I was doing MY interpretation - that that's what it's all about. He also said, more than once, in a voice that was becoming increasingly tiny from his fight to live, "And I really like what you are doing with the accordion", referring to Andrea Parkins' contribution.
Accordion was Andrew Hill's first instrument, which he apparently played on the streets of Chicago as a lad.... This sextet of mine also played last month in New York, the same week that Mr. Hill played what was probably his last concert. It was a free afternoon event at The Trinity Church. I was way uptown at Colunbia University shilling for my band's gigs on the radio, and had no idea until it was too late that he was going to play this concert of what he was calling "ecclesiastical music" with his trio. I learned that Andrew's health had become even worse, that he could barely speak.
I missed the concert, but I think it may still be streaming as a film document on the Internet. I suggest you seek it out. I suggest that you seek out all of Andrew Hill's music. It is visionary, unpredictable, wide-ranging in approach, loose-limbed yet articulate, and as I have said before, much like the man: beautiful and free. Love to you, Andrew Hill. Love to your family. The music you made lives on. In loving memory." --Nels
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