A master of the
French horn, Mr. Northern was adept at both classical music and jazz. As
a bandleader, he was devoted to what he called “sound awareness.”
Robert
Northern, a masterly French horn player who hopscotched between the
worlds of jazz and classical music before embarking on a solo career in
which he made music that defied categorization, died on May 31 in
Washington. He was 86.
His wife, Ayana Watkins-Northern, said the cause was a respiratory illness that he had been battling for about a year.
In
his 20s and 30s, Mr. Northern played on some of the most storied
orchestral recordings in jazz history, including “The Thelonious Monk
Orchestra at Town Hall,” John Coltrane’s “Africa/Brass” and Charlie
Haden’s “Liberation Music Orchestra.”
He
spent a decade in Sun Ra’s Arkestra, an experimental group that
espoused a spiritualist ethos. He carried a similar approach into his
own career as a bandleader.
In
that role, he went by the name Brother Ah, an artfully universalist
moniker that bespoke his devotion to what he called “sound awareness.”
By that, he meant the practice of treating all sound with the kind of
close attention and respect that one would give to a great work of
music.
“I learned that every entity on Earth is communicating through sound,” Mr. Northern told The Washington Post in 2017 . “Every animal, every bird, every insect. And if we hear it, we can be a part of it.”
For
the last two decades of his life, Mr. Northern presided over a weekly
radio show, “The Jazz Collectors,” on WPFW, a community FM station in
Washington, his adopted hometown. Playing a mix of jazz and spiritual
music from across the globe, he became a pillar of the local airwaves,
as well as an ambassador of jazz’s midcentury heyday.
Robert
Anthony Northern was born on May 21, 1934, at his grandmother’s house
in Kinston, a small town in North Carolina. His parents were both from
the South but at that point were living in New York; soon after his
birth, Mr. Northern’s father, Ralph, was assaulted by a Klansman. He
fought back and won, then headed straight to the train station and returned to New York, knowing that he would not be safe remaining in Kinston. The rest of the family soon followed.
Ralph
Northern was a singer who performed at New York nightclubs and toured
the East Coast; he also worked for the city’s gas and electricity
company, Consolidated Edison. Robert Northern’s mother, Nadie (Bell)
Northern, had dreams of show business, too, but once in New York she
took up sewing professionally. She later worked in retail.
The
future Brother Ah began playing the bugle in elementary school, then
graduated to the trumpet. As a boy growing up in the Bronx, he would sit
on the fire escape and play along to the sounds around him: street
vendors’ cries, horses’ hooves clopping, crickets chirping. Much as the
alto saxophonist Eric Dolphy famously developed his craft by playing along to the songs of birds, the city’s soundscape became Mr. Northern’s teacher.
“The
hawkers used to come through the neighborhood, selling watermelons and
vegetables from horses and wagons, and I would have my bugle and I would
imitate all the calls,” he told the website Open Sky Jazz in 2018. “I
began to imitate the barking of dogs in the street. Anything I heard.”
He
took up the French horn as a teenager, filling a vacancy in his high
school symphony. His first public performance, in which he took a deft
horn solo on Dvorak’s “New World Symphony,” immediately led to a scholarship offer from the Manhattan School of Music. Image
His
education was interrupted when he received a draft notice in 1953 and
joined the Air Force. After military service, he briefly returned to the
conservatory, then traveled to Austria to study with Gottfried von
Freiberg, the solo hornist at the Vienna Philharmonic.
He
played in philharmonic orchestras in Austria and Germany while
performing on the side as a blues singer. He returned to New York in
1958, after his father fell fatally ill, to help tend to his family.
Soon
after, he joined the symphony at the Metropolitan Opera, where, he
later recalled, as the only African-American member he was often
subjected to racist abuse — reminiscent of what he had endured from
white officers in the military.
He
was sometimes turned away from auditions he had been invited to after
his racial identity became known. Still, he continued to work in
orchestras, even while establishing himself as one of the few
professional French hornists able to play jazz, alongside Julius Watkins
and David Amram.
He joined a small
group called the Society of Black Composers, while also working
regularly in the bands of singers like Peggy Lee and Johnny Mathis. He
taught music at a high school in the Bronx. He sometimes headed straight
to his day job after performing or rehearsing all night.
After
attending his first Sun Ra performance, at Slugs’ Saloon in the East
Village in the mid-1960s, Mr. Northern felt an immediate kinship. “It
wasn’t like a jazz band, this was like an orchestra,” he said. “And I
went wild.”
He quickly joined the Arkestra and spent the next decade as a member. During this period, Sun Ra was pushing into abstract sonic terrain , blending free improvisation, space-age music and influences from across the globe with his background in big-band jazz.
In
1970, through the trumpeter Don Cherry, Mr. Northern took a teaching
position at Dartmouth College; it was there that students began calling
him Brother Ah. He resisted the name until some students told him
about the spiritual properties of the word “Ah” in other languages. In
ancient Egypt, he was told, Ra had been the god of the sun, while Ah was
the deity of the moon .
Mr. Northern also began traveling regularly to Ghana and elsewhere in Africa, studying the music of his ancestors.
In 1972, the Strata-East label released his first album as a leader, “Sound Awareness,”
a spiritual-jazz collection featuring the drummer Max Roach on guest
vocals and Mr. Northern on a wide range of instruments. Comprising two
lengthy tracks, the recording blended his love for natural sounds, the
stylistic palette of Sun Ra and the lessons he had gleaned from his
studies in Africa.
He self-released
two more albums: “Move Ever Onward” (1975) and “Key to Nowhere” (1983).
In 2016, Manufactured Recordings put out a boxed set, “Divine Music,” containing three previously unreleased albums he had made in the ’70s and ’80s.
He
eventually settled with Ms. Watkins-Northern in Washington, where they
raised their daughter, Dara. Both survive him, as do two sons from a
previous marriage, Alex and Bushcka, and a brother, Gilbert.
Mr. Northern continued to teach in schools and youth programs until shortly before he died.
Correction: June 7, 2020 An
earlier version of this obituary referred incorrectly to the drummer
Max Roach's participation in Mr. Northern's album "Sound Awareness." He
was a guest vocalist; he did not play drums on the album.
from www.nytimes.com
Edited by snobb - 08 Jun 2020 at 4:11am