Darcy James Argue
Gig Seeker Pro

Darcy James Argue

| SELF | AFM

| SELF | AFM
Band Jazz

Calendar

This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

Press


""For a wholly original take on big band's past, present and future, look to Darcy James Argue""

In high-school jazz bands there's always a group of players who yawn at the song list. Even when the music isn't that old, it sounds that way to them. Once rehearsals are over, though, the kids pop in headphones to get their fix of their kind of music: maybe Charles Mingus, but more likely hip-hop, punk or dance. It's not hard to see why, since there hasn't been a common language between big band and the large swath of modern pop forms for a long time. Though big band has produced many (mostly unheard) innovators since the days of Count Basie and the Duke—think Sun Ra or Carla Bley—a lot of that music has belonged to the free-jazz fringe. By contrast, the gentler innovators who snuggle up close to classical music might seem a tad tame to listeners who need their jazz to cook. This isn't the fault of the free-jazzers or the classically minded composers. It's just that jazz has needed writers and players to reconnect the tradition to more modern forms, without falling victim to pastiche.

Each generation tries its hand at grafting new styles onto jazz, with varying results—note Gil Evans's not-always successful use of Jimi Hendrix's music—but lately there have been some hip moves in this direction. On the small-ensemble front, Jason Moran has turned the hip-hop anthem "Planet Rock" inside out on piano, while the Bad Plus have proved they can work up a fever interpreting, by turns, the music of Nirvana and Stravinsky. But often as not, the thrills given off by these mash-ups are those of reinvention, as opposed to sui generis invention itself.

For a wholly original take on big band's past, present and future, look to Darcy James Argue, a 33-year-old Brooklynite who has composed a batch of manifestoes that draws on past legacies, and adds a little postpunk energy to boot. A onetime student of big-band visionary Bob Brookmeyer, Argue himself seems a natural product of an era in which genres can be shuffled with ease on iPod playlists. Talking with him, you go from discussing obscure Italian serialist composers to indie bands like TV on the Radio. The composer calls his music "steampunk big band," a reference to the niche art movement that fantasizes about modern tech innovations existing in the steam-powered era. That range is reflected—and, more important, is made frictionless—on Argue's debut record, "Infernal Machines." Argue's tunes can command your attention anywhere—no small feat in our media-saturated world. He and his 18-piece Secret Society band pull off the trick by pairing electro-influenced rhythms with fuzzed-out guitars, fearsome horns and chamber-music voicings in the woodwinds. For all this panstylistic erudition, though, Argue's music still swings hard whenever it wants. "Transit" explodes with an elaborate fire that recalls Mingus's "Let My Children Hear Music." The song "Jacobin Club," named after Robespierre's merry band, slinks with the sly wit of "Such Sweet Thunder"–era Ellington, proving Argue is no enemy of history. Listen on headphones, and you can hear a lot of rocklike production layering. Two thirds through "Habeas Corpus (for Maher Arar)"— a civil-rights ode that's timely in light of the Obama administration's release of Bush-era "torture memos"—the production supports its trombones, stabbing like sirens, with a guitar that chugs ominously low in the mix.


Argue is one of a handful of musical free-thinkers who have found a home on New Amsterdam Records, an upstart label that has been releasing one quality disc after another since its founding. Built around old traditions (mostly classical, and now jazz), each New Amsterdam record also reaches out to the beat-focused worlds of other contemporary music. This is not a condescension to the market, but a reflection of the artists' own desire to knock down genre boundaries. These are albums, says Judd Greenstein, one of the label's cofounders, specifically produced to sound good on an MP3 player during your commute.

Just as Argue brings non-jazz elements to bear in his music, "Now," from Greenstein's NOW Ensemble, imports a catchy inflection to classical forms. One Greenstein composition on that release is titled "Sing Along"—a command that doesn't apply all that frequently to contemporary chamber music. On the whole, New Amsterdam is making a nice little tradition out of breaking tradition. The real question is whether its music will find its way into the hands of hungry young performers in ensembles outside the metropolises. Perhaps local high-school music directors should strike a deal with their charges. Yes, you still have to wear the big-band uniforms or those god-awful tuxes, but with those outfits comes a copy of "Infernal Machines" or "Now." Striking a balance between the old and the new has rarely sounded this good. - Newsweek


""A big, broad musical vocabulary came together easily""

"The music was full of large-scale, intricate designs, at times almost manically so. It built on some of the best lessons of Charles Mingus and Bob Brookmeyer, not only in harmony and structure but also in momentum, in moving a piece forward.

"But a few other of Mr. Argue’s pieces, including 'Induction Effect' and 'Habeas Corpus,' established something else about him: he wants his music to make contemporary sense. Thursday’s set established a through line among Mr. Brookmeyer’s adventurous big-band compositions of the ’60s, Steve Reich’s pulse patterns and Tortoise’s new instrumental rock with jazz harmony. There were drones, backbeats, short cyclical figures, clouds of guitar distortion, all of it written into the music and elegantly claiming its place. And so a big, broad musical vocabulary came together easily, without jump-cutting or wrenching shifts of style. Mr. Argue made all these elements belong together naturally." - New York Times (Ben Ratliff)


""A fresh jolt of discovery""

"[A] fresh jolt of discovery [...] a potent debut [...] the weight of its achievement feels properly definitive." - New York Times (Nate Chinen)


""Inspiring.""

"Inspiring." - Ethan Iverson (The Bad Plus)


""Ambitious and compelling""

"Clearly some of the most ambitious and compelling sounds I’ve ever encountered in the past 40 years." - Montreal Gazette, Juan Rodriguez


""impressive complexity and immense entertainment value""

"It's maximalist music of impressive complexity and immense entertainment value, in your face and then in your head." - Village Voice (Richard Gehr)


"***** (5 stars)"

"[A] seven-track marvel of imagination." - Time Out New York (David Adler)


""Floating, shifting, dodging music""

"It was like hearing Duke Ellington and minimalism and Tortoise and Funkadelic and Elliott Carter and much else besides melding into one floating, shifting, dodging music." - Carl Wilson (Zoilus)


""rugged let-it-rip aesthetic""

"Like a rock band, the Secret Society delights in big, assertive ideas. Yet this rugged let-it-rip aesthetic is beefed up by a rich harmonic palette [...]. This is fresh and non-derivative work, and justifies the intense buzz surrounding this bandleader's debut release." - Jazz.com (Ted Gioia)


""music with heart, wit and sophistication""

"This is music with heart, wit and sophistication, the beginning of what could and should be a brilliant artistic career for Argue." - Hour (Mike Chamberlain)


Discography

Infernal Machines (New Amsterdam Records) - released May 12, 2009

https://www.newamsterdamrecords.com/#Album/Infernal_Machines

Photos

Bio

Known as “a masterful tunesmith” (Troy Collins, AllAboutJazz.com) with “a fresh take on what a jazz big band can do” (Peter Hum, Ottawa Citizen), Darcy James Argue is one of the most visible young composers in jazz. Critics have credited him with developing “a nearly perfect creative synthesis between tradition and innovation” (John Eyles, BBC.com), calling his compositions “ambitious, sprawling, mesmerizing” (Juan Rodriguez, Montreal Gazette) and noting his “big, broad musical vocabulary” (Ben Ratliff, New York Times). Time Out New York’s Hank Shteamer adds, “Argue draws on the full spectrum of modern rock, jazz and classical music” in a way that “handily transcends pastiche.”

A native of Vancouver, and former member of the Montreal jazz scene, Argue moved to New York in 2003 after studying with legendary composer Bob Brookmeyer. Since 2005, he has led his own 18-piece big band, Secret Society, in regular performances around the city at a diverse range of venues, including Le Poisson Rouge, the Jazz Gallery, and the Bowery Poetry Club. Secret Society evokes an alternate musical history in which the dance orchestras that ruled the Swing Era never went extinct, but remained a popular and vital part of the evolving musical landscape. Adopting a steampunk-inspired attitude towards the traditional big band, Argue refashions this well-worn instrumentation into a cutting-edge ensemble.

The band’s debut recording, Infernal Machines (New Amsterdam Records), which takes its name from a John Philip Sousa quote about the dangers of music technology, was released in May 2009 to widespread acclaim. Newsweek’s Seth Colter Walls praised it as “a wholly original take on big band’s past, present and future” and Time Out New York’s David R. Adler awarded it five stars and proclaimed it “a seven-track marvel of imagination.” In his feature article on Argue for the Village Voice, Richard Gehr called it “maximalist music of impressive complexity and immense entertainment value, in your face and then in your head.”

Following the release of Infernal Machines, Secret Society embarked on its first European tour, which included an appearance at the famed Moers Festival in Germany — a performance hailed by the Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger’s Martin Woltersdorf as “one of the highlights of the 38th annual festival.” Their June 2009 concert at Philadelphia’s International House will be featured in an upcoming episode of WHYY-TV’s On Canvas, and in September the band will headline the opening night of the fifth annual New Languages Festival in New York.

When not leading his own band, Argue has collaborated with European ensembles such as the Frankfurt Radio Big Band and the Cologne Contemporary Jazz Orchestra, and is a founding member of Pulse, a federation of six New York-based composers that has collaborated with singer Joy Askew, guitarist John Abercrombie, and trumpeter John McNeil. He is also an alumnus of the Brooklyn Philharmonic’s Composer Mentorship Program and his chamber music has been performed by percussionist Svet Stoyanov. His work as an arranger includes the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s concerts with alt-country artist Shelby Lynne, the Klezmer Conservatory Band, and jazz-soul songstress Lizz Wright.

A native of Vancouver, and former member of the Montreal jazz scene, Argue moved to New York in 2003 after studying with legendary composer Bob Brookmeyer. He has also studied with Lee Hyla, Randall Woolf, Maria Schneider, and John Hollenbeck. Recently nominated in the “Up & Coming Artist” category at the Jazz Journalists Association Awards, Argue was the 2009 recipient of the SOCAN/CAJE Phil Nimmons Emerging Composer Award. Argue was among the composers selected for the Jazz Gallery’s 2008-2009 Large Ensemble Commissioning Series, and was the 2004 recipient of the BMI Jazz Composers’ Workshop Charlie Parker Composition Prize. He has received grants from the American Music Center, Meet The Composer, the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, and the Canada Council for the Arts.

Learn more at secretsociety.typepad.com.