Luke Stewart
Born Ocean Springs, Mississippi [ 1] Genres experimental , free jazz , avant-garde jazz , free improvisation , post-rock , noise , art punk Occupation(s) composer , improviser , bassist , multi-instrumentalistInstrument(s) Double bass , bass guitar , alto saxophone Labels Astral Spirits , International Anthem , Atlantic RhythmsMember of Website thelukestewart .com
Musical artist
Luke Stewart is a composer-improviser, bassist, multi-instrumentalist, and organizer[ 1] known for his work as a soloist;[ 8] leader of his Exposure Quintet, with Edward Wilkerson, Jr. , Ken Vandermark , Jim Baker, and Avreeayl Ra;[ 4] and member of groups including Blacks' Myths,[ 3] Heart of the Ghost,[ 5] Six Six,[ 6] Irreversible Entanglements ,[ 2] and Heroes Are Gang Leaders,[ 7] a literary free jazz ensemble that was awarded the 2018 American Book Award for Oral Literature.[ 9]
Stewart has co-run DC jazz advocacy nonprofit CapitalBop since 2010, curating the organization's longstanding "Loft Jazz" concert series and writing music criticism for its website.[ 10] In 2020, he was included among DownBeat's "25 for the Future"[ 11] as an artist who "shapes the artistic landscape".[ 12]
He has performed or recorded with artists including Camae Ayewa ,[ 13] Keir Neuringer, Aquiles Navarro, Tcheser Holmes, Archie Shepp ,[ 14] Warren "Trae" Crudup, III,[ 3] Miriam Parker,[ 15] Daniel Carter , Fay Victor ,[ 16] Hamiet Bluiett ,[ 17] Wadada Leo Smith ,[ 18] Jarrett Gilgore,[ 5] Ian McColm, Anthony Pirog, Jaimie Branch , Thurston Moore ,[ 19] Leila Bordreuil, and Priests .[ 20]
Early life and career
Stewart grew up in Ocean Springs, Mississippi , where he studied saxophone, violin, and guitar before he began playing electric bass in high school.[ 1] [ 21] Stewart began his undergraduate degree as an international studies major at the University of Mississippi .[ 1] In 2005, as he prepared to begin an internship at the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty in Washington, D.C., Hurricane Katrina hit the Mississippi Gulf Coast.[ 1] Stewart decided to stay in D.C. and transferred to American University , where his studies expanded to include audio engineering.[ 10] In addition to his bachelor's from American, Stewart completed a master's in Arts Management and Entrepreneurship at The New School in 2019.[ 22]
After moving to D.C., Stewart began frequently attending and performing at avant-garde jazz and rock gigs. He also interned at "Jazz and Justice" radio station WPFW , eventually hosting his own weekly jazz radio show and working as a production coordinator.[ 10]
In 2010, Stewart met Giovanni Russonello, who had recently founded jazz advocacy organization and website CapitalBop.[ 23] Stewart began writing for and then co-running the organization,[ 10] which was awarded a $100,000 grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation in 2019.[ 24]
Stewart met Camae Ayewa (also known as Moor Mother ) while playing with Laughing Man, an art-punk band that shared bills with Ayewa's group the Mighty Paradocs.[ 2] One year after the 2014 "People Issue" of the Washington City Paper called Stewart a "jazz revolutionary",[ 25] he joined Ayewa, Keir Neuringer, Aquiles Navarro, and Tcheser Holmes in forming the "liberation-oriented free-jazz collective" Irreversible Entanglements .[ 26] The group performed in the inaugural season of the Kennedy Center's "Direct Current" contemporary culture showcase,[ 27] and their releases have been included in best-of lists in Magnet ,[ 28] NPR Music ,[ 29] The Quietus ,[ 30] and Stereogum's "20 Best Jazz Albums Of The 2010s".[ 31]
Stewart has said he wants his collaborative work to "highlight the non-hierarchical nature of free improvisational music" and to challenge "the concept of the capital-C composer and how it affects our perceptions of music".[ 21]
In 2021, he was a Resident Composer at Pioneer Works in Brooklyn.[ 32]
Discography
As leader / co-leader
Release year
Artist
Title
Label
Personnel
2013
Trio OOO
Live for Trayvon
Aaron Martin, Sam Lohman, Stewart
2015
Trio OOO
Days To Be Told [ 33]
New Atlantis
Martin, Lohman, Stewart
2017
Irreversible Entanglements
Irreversible Entanglements [ 2]
International Anthem / Don Giovanni
Camae Ayewa , Keir Neuringer, Aquiles Navarro, Stewart, Tcheser Holmes
2018
Blacks' Myths
Blacks' Myths [ 34]
Atlantic Rhythms
Stewart, Warren "Trae" Crudup, III
2018
Heart Of The Ghost
Heart Of The Ghost [ 35] [ 5]
Pidgeon
Jarrett Gilgore, Stewart, Ian McColm
2018
Luke Stewart
Works for Upright Bass and Amplifier [ 8]
Astral Spirits
Stewart
2019
Blacks' Myths
Blacks' Myths II [ 36]
Atlantic Rhythms
Stewart, Crudup, Dr. Thomas "Bushmeat" Stanley, Cedar and Lu
2019
Heart of the Ghost
Heart of the Ghost II [ 37]
Dagoretti
Gilgore, Stewart, McColm
2019
Heart of the Ghost
Live In Chicago
Catalytic Sound
Gilgore, Stewart, McColm
2020
Irreversible Entanglements
Who Sent You? [ 13]
International Anthem / Don Giovanni
Ayewa, Neuringer, Navarro, Stewart, Holmes
2020
Luke Stewart, Brian Settles, Warren "Trae" Crudup, III
No Treaspassing [ 38]
Stewart, Settles, Crudup
2020
Six Six
Six Six
Atlantic Rhythms
Anthony Pirog, Stewart
2020
Irreversible Entanglements
Live in Italy [ 39]
Ayewa, Neuringer, Navarro, Stewart, Holmes
2020
Heart of the Ghost
Live in Detroit
Dagoretti
Gilgore, Stewart, McColm
2020
Irreversible Entanglements
Live in Berlin [ 40]
Ayewa, Neuringer, Navarro, Stewart, Holmes
2020
Heart of the Ghost with Dave Ballou
Live at Rhizome
Dagoretti / Bulb
Gilgore, Stewart, McColm, Ballou
2020
Luke Stewart & Tashi Dorji
Phases [ 41]
Stewart, Tashi Dorji
2020
Luke Stewart
Gaps
Stewart
2020
Luke Stewart Exposure Quintet
Luke Stewart Exposure Quintet [ 4]
Astral Spirits
Stewart, Edward Wilkerson, Jr. , Ken Vandermark , Jim Baker, Avreeayl Ra
2021
Luke Stewart / Patrick Shiroishi
Luke Stewart / Patrick Shiroishi [ 42]
Profane Illuminations
Stewart, Shiroishi
2021
!MOFAYA!
Like One Long Dream [ 43]
Trost Records
jaimie branch, John Dikeman, Stewart, Aleksandar Škorić
2021
Irreversible Entanglements
Open the Gates
International Anthem / Don Giovanni
Ayewa, Neuringer, Navarro, Stewart, Holmes
2022
Luke Stewart's Silt Trio
The Bottom
Cuneiform Records
L Stewart, B Settles, C Taylor
2024
Luke Stewart Silt Trio
Unknown Rivers
Pi Recordings
Luke Stewart, Brian Settles, Trae Crudup, Chad Taylor
As sideperson
References
^ a b c d e Murph, John (17 July 2018). "The Reinvention of Bassist Luke Stewart" . DownBeat . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ a b c d Camp, Zoe (2 April 2020). "The Revolutionary Free Jazz of Irreversible Entanglements" . Bandcamp Daily . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ a b c Richards, Chris (5 September 2019). "In the heart of an 'empire in decline,' Blacks' Myths try to spark another big bang" . The Washington Post . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ a b c Meyer, Bill (10 November 2020). "Essential New Music: Luke Stewart's "Luke Stewart Exposure Quintet" " . Magnet . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ a b c d Burris, Tom (25 June 2019). "Heart of the Ghost – s/t cassette (Pidgeon, 2018) ****" . The Free Jazz Collective . Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ a b Duguay, Rob (March 2021). "Luke Stewart Calls Two Places Home" . The Brooklyn Rail . Retrieved 22 August 2021 .
^ a b West, Michael J. (16 May 2018). "Jazz meets poetry with Heroes Are Gang Leaders at Blues Alley" . The Washington Post . Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ a b Elizabeth, Jordannah (February 2021). "Artist Feature: Luke Stewart" (PDF) . The New York City Jazz Record . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "For Immediate Release: The Before Columbus Foundation announces the Winners of the Thirty-Ninth Annual American Book Awards" (PDF) . The Before Columbus Foundation . 13 August 2018. Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ a b c d Richards, Chris (30 May 2012). "D.C.'s jazz scene gets an online boost from CapitalBop's young advocates" . The Washington Post . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "These 25 Performers Could Shape Jazz For Decades" . DownBeat . 27 November 2020. Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ West, Michael J. (17 November 2020). "Luke Stewart Shapes The Artistic Landscape" . DownBeat . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ a b Harry, Todd (20 March 2020). "Irreversible Entanglements Invoke the Revolution on Who Sent You?" . Paste Magazine . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ a b Weiner, Natalie (22 May 2020). "How jazz legend Archie Shepp, his nephew Raw Poetic and a cast of D.C. musicians teamed up for an experimental improvised album" . The Washington Post . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "NY Art Book Fair 2019" . Printed Matter, Inc . Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ "Fay Victor's Mutations For Justice" . WBGO . Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ "Jazz Listings for Oct. 28-Nov. 3" . The New York Times . 27 October 2016. Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ West, Michael J. (16 February 2017). "Wadada Leo Smith's jazz is demanding, but emotionally cathartic" . The Washington Post . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "The Stone at The New School Presents Thurston Moore, Luke Stewart and Leila Bordreuil" . The New School . 2018. Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Gotrich, Lars (19 January 2017). "Review: Priests, 'Nothing Feels Natural' " . NPR . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ a b Freeman, Philip (28 October 2020). "Bassist Luke Stewart Approaches Jazz With a "Punk Rock" Mindset" . Bandcamp Daily . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "MA in Arts Management and Entrepreneurship at the New School's College of Performing Arts graduates first cohort" . The New School . 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Richards, Chris (3 February 2017). "The District's jazz scene is all over the place. Is Luke Stewart holding it together?" . The Washington Post . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ West, Michael J. (15 March 2019). "How a flagging nonprofit D.C. jazz advocacy group picked up its tempo" . The Washington Post . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Cauterucci, Christina (21 November 2014). "The People Issue" . Washington City Paper . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Ng, Ivana (May 2020). "Irreversible Entanglements: Who Sent You?" . DownBeat . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "Irreversible Entanglements - DIRECT CURRENT: Millennium Stage (March 13, 2018)" . The Kennedy Center . 2018. Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Meyer, Bill (15 December 2020). "Best of 2020: Jazz/Improv" . Magnet Magazine . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "The 100 Best Songs Of 2017" . NPR . 13 December 2017. Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Smith, Stewart (13 December 2017). "Complete Communion: The Best Jazz Of 2017" . The Quietus . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Freeman, Phil (9 January 2020). "The 20 Best Jazz Albums Of The 2010s" . Stereogum . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "Luke Stewart: Music Residency" . Pioneer Works . 2021. Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Russonello, Giovanni (5 January 2016). "Trio OOO's 'Days to Be Told:' The long-awaited debut of a powerhouse avant-garde trio" . CapitalBop . Retrieved 23 August 2021 .
^ Galil, Leor (20 March 2020). "D.C. progressive jazz duo Blacks' Myths find the light in harsh noise" . The Chicago Reader . Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ Cohen, Matt (21 March 2018). "Listen: Heart of the Ghost's Angular Free Jazz Is a Language of Its Own" . Washington City Paper . Retrieved 23 August 2021 .
^ Orlov, Piotr (16 September 2019). "Blacks' Myths: Blacks' Myths II" . Pitchfork . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "Reckless Records 2019 Employee Best of Lists" . Reckless Records . 29 December 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2021 .
^ "Best D.C. Jazz Albums of 2020" . CapitalBop . 22 December 2020. Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ "AMN Reviews: Irreversible Entanglements – Live in Berlin (2020; Bandcamp); Live in Italy (2020; Bandcamp)" . Avant Music News . 21 June 2020. Retrieved 22 August 2021 .
^ Scherstuhl, Alan (24 June 2020). "Jazz Is Built for Protests. Jon Batiste Is Taking It to the Streets" . The New York Times . Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ Rose, Brad (29 January 2021). "Luke Stewart & Tashi Dorji s/t" . Foxy Digitalis . Retrieved 22 August 2021 .
^ Rose, Brad (8 April 2021). "Patrick Shiroishi/Luke Stewart split" . Foxy Digitalis . Retrieved 31 July 2021 .
^ Hareuveni, Eyal (12 August 2021). "MO'FAYA! "Like One Long Dream" " . salt peanuts* . Retrieved 23 August 2021 .
^ Cohen, Matt (29 September 2014). "Listen: Laughing Man, 'Body Cop' " . DCist . Archived from the original on August 23, 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2021 .
^ Acquaro, Paul (7 December 2015). "Ross Hammond - Mean Crow (Prescott Records, 2015) ****" . Free Jazz Blog . Retrieved 23 August 2021 .
^ Turner, Mark F. (11 January 2017). "James Brandon Lewis Trio: No Filter" . All About Jazz . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Mashurova, Nina (27 January 2017). "Review: Priests' Nothing Feels Natural Is Vital Post-Punk for Trump's America" . SPIN . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ "Pillars... At the Portal" . AllMusic.com . Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ Shteamer, Hank (6 February 2019). "Song You Need to Know: James Brandon Lewis, 'Sir Real Denard' " . Rolling Stone . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Krakow, Steve (8 November 2019). "Health & Beauty and J.R. Bohannon push their music forward while staying rooted in tradition" . The Chicago Reader . Retrieved 23 August 2021 .
^ Orlov, Piotr (20 March 2020). "The World According to Heroes Are Gang Leaders" . AFROPUNK . Retrieved 1 February 2021 .
^ Hagen, Thomas (27 June 2019). "Moor Mother's Camae Ayewa imagines the future of liberation in Circuit City" . WXPN . Retrieved 22 February 2021 .
^ Aguzzi, Andrea (20 January 2021). "Terry Riley's In C by Sonic Mass Records" . Neuguitars . Retrieved 23 August 2021 .
^ "Bob Bellerue: Radioactive Desire" . Roulette . Retrieved 23 August 2021 .