Jason Moran

2019

Find sound descriptions and transcripts of works with sound in this exhibition.

Transcription: Theaster Gates, Excerpts from Looks of a Lot, 2014

Running Time: 5:52

Jason Moran: For me, the real tense moment is when the students walk by the music stand playing Faith's Fade. So, from seeing the stands, how do we place the stands in a way that gives them enough?

Theaster Gates: And they're on casters.

Jason Moran: Right. Oh, so they move easily? 

Theaster Gates: Yeah.

Jason Moran: The students, could be right here, or they could be like this.

Theaster Gates: Yep.

Jason Moran: I'm saying this as I don't know. 

Theaster Gates: There's nothing about our collaboration that has to scream, "He did this," or, "He did that," or she, right? 

Jason Moran: Yeah, yeah.

Theaster Gates: You know.

Jason Moran: I'm making my things. 

Theaster Gates: [unintelligible]

Jason Moran: This is a real simple part of the melody. The students will play this song too. I'm making a long…like a long...

Theaster Gates: Do you imagine winding this yourself? I'm asking because it's another way of playing music, you know? But the function is different. Your function is different. 

Jason Moran: Yeah. When you showed me the long stands, this is a long sheet of music that goes on it.

Theaster Gates: Yes.

Jason Moran: But that first pass, it's a viewing?

Theaster Gates: Yeah.

Jason Moran: Like a viewing.

Theaster Gates: Yeah, like a burial. Like a—

Jason Moran: Yes. Yeah. 

Theaster Gates: Like a funeral pass. 

Jason Moran: So the next time we pass it, and they read the piece that's on the stand as they walk by. 

Theaster Gates: Come on. Come on.

Jason Moran: Because I'm going to have the kids walk by. [unintelligible] kids want to go see other kids' funeral and shit, you know?

Theaster Gates: Yeah.

Speaker 1: Chicago.

Theaster Gates: And, you know, so much of this, our sense of what a blues is, so much of it has to do with like mourning, redeeming, mourning, redeeming, mourning, redeeming the mourning moment. And if there's a way that redemption is built into the mourning moment, like at the repass, new emotion is being born in that moment. Like, some of the best wailing I've ever heard was at funerals, because it's only death that can get you to a certain place. Stick it between [unintelligible]

Jason Moran: Yeah. Then I've gotten up. Then I walk. 

Theaster Gates: And then you can say some names.

Jason Moran: Yeah. 

Theaster Gates: Yeah.

Jason Moran: [unintelligible] 

Theaster Gates: Sing some names. [singing]

Jason Moran: Yeah.

Theaster Gates: [singing]

Jason Moran: Yeah.

[piano]

Theaster Gates: [singing] [unintelligible] ...over and over again. Then there was Oscar, and Kelly, and [unintelligible] and there was...there was...[unintelligible]...children...[unintelligible]...many, many, many...there was [unintelligible] and [unintelligible] and lil’ John and there was Kiki and Kiki had a smile, it was so Kiki and Kiki was smiling, she was—she could make us [unintelligible]...Kiki...Kiki... 

[Interlude: Running Time: 6:01]

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On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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