Franklin Kiermyer
Franklin Kiermyer | |
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Background information | |
Born | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | 21 July 1956
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation | Musician |
Instrument | Drums |
Website | kiermyer |
Franklin Kiermyer (born 21 July 1956) is a jazz drummer, composer, and bandleader.[1]
Biography
[edit]Born and raised in Montreal, Quebec, Kiermyer first gained attention in 1994 with his album Solomon's Daughter, featuring tenor saxophonist and former John Coltrane bandmate Pharoah Sanders. Known mostly for his particularly expansive style of drumming and the passionate spiritual focus of his music, he has performed and recorded with spiritual musicians from other cultures, including Umdze Lodro Samphel, T.V. Gopalakrishnan, Famoro Dioubate, Hassan Hakmoun and Debashish Bhattacharya, as well as many leading figures in Jazz, including Reggie Workman, Joe Lovano, John Abercrombie, Bobo Stenson, Tisziji Muñoz, Dewey Redman, Don Alias, Azar Lawrence, Chris Gekker, John Esposito, Dave Douglas, Juini Booth, Benito Gonzalez, Vernon Reid, Drew Gress, Fima Ephron, Dave Fiuzcynski, Anthony Cox, Bob Mover, John Stubblefield and Billy Robinson. [2]
Mostly self-taught, Kiermyer cites the early influence of drummers Baby Dodds, Sid Catlett, Minor Hall, and Gene Krupa. "All of these drummers had a big beat. It felt loose, spontaneous and sure at the same time and I really responded to that. I’ve always gone for that feeling of power and release in my own playing.” The music of Fats Waller, Kid Ory, Count Basie and Duke Ellington, as well as various orchestral music played in his parents' home magnetized his childhood. Growing up in the 60's and 70's he was also greatly affected by the psychedelic freedom music of Jimi Hendrix and other improvisers of the era and the social-political revolution they espoused. Having reached a turning point in his evolution, Kiermyer spent much of 2001 to 2010 in remote Himalayan regions of Nepal and India on various solitary Buddhist meditation retreats, following the instructions of his teacher Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso Rinpoche. His musical output during this time was minimal. Kiermyer has stated that he felt this period was instrumental in reaching his spiritual and musical goals.[3][4]
Scatter The Atoms That Remain
[edit]Scatter The Atoms That Remain is Kiermyer's present band founded in 2017 as a direct evolution of his music. Pianist Davis Whitfield began working closely with Kiermyer in 2014, when he was 21 years old and assumed the responsibilities of Musical Director for the band in June of 2020. In late 2017, they decided to give the band its own name to differentiate this new music. Davis suggested the name should somehow refer to Franklin's spiritual practice. "The first thing that came to mind was a spontaneous song my teacher had sung to me many years before when he was instructing me to practice Chöd." Kiermyer
“Take this big corpse of the five skandhas and burn it in the realization of selflessness. Scatter the atoms that remain in the space of the Dharmadhatu and in the Dharmadhatu of no attachment ... Ah! Ah! Ha! Ha! Aaaah!” Khenchen Tsutrim Gyamtso Rinpoche
Since its inception, Scatter The Atoms That Remain has featured outstanding musicians rounding out the lineup. Usually performing and/or recording as a quartet or quintet, the band has included at various times: saxophonists Gary Bartz, Billy Harper, Isaiah Collier, Jovan Alexandre, Ben Solomon, George Garzone, Lawrence Clark, Emilio Modeste, Linda Sikhakhane, Abraham Burton, Boris Blanchet and Michael Troy - trumpeters Randy Brecker, Keyon Harrold, Josh Evans, Giveton Gelin and a cameo by Roy Hargrove a few weeks before his untimely passing.[5] - bassists Gene Perla, Geraud Portal, Otto Gardner, Yasushi Nakamura, Evan Flory-barnes and Eric Wheeler. Pianist Aaron Parks, guitarist Eric Schenkman, vocalist and flautist Melanie Charles and vocalist Rita Payes have also been guests on recordings with the band.
"Drummer Franklin Kiermyer offers a sense of shared catharsis through music that is at once majestic, ferocious, and relatable. When music writers are tasked with describing Kiermyer, the words “ecstasy” and “ecstatic” appear almost predictably, but sometimes a word is just right. Kiermyer’s “Scatter The Atoms That Remain” quartet channels the kind of beautiful, disciplined intensity exemplified by late John Coltrane." Jazz At Lincoln Center[6]
Scatter The Atoms' first release, Exultation, was co-produced by Kiermyer and legendary producer Michael Cuscuna, as was Kiermyer's albums Closer to the Sun and Further.[7] Cuscuna has gone on record praising Kiermyer's music: "It's the urgency you feel when you listen ... Franklin got beyond his influences and comes through with him as an original player — his feel, his rhythmic patterns ... He has his own way of playing the drums, his own way of organizing music, his own way of unfolding a performance."[8] Emancipation Suite, released in 2022 only on limited edition LP, was chosen as one of Down Beat Magazine's best albums of the year "Scatter the Atoms That Remain calls for universal freedoms such as it enacts." Howard Mandel[9]
Scatter The Atoms That Remain is currently recording their new album "One Is Love", Co-produced by Kiermyer and Jason Olaine. One Is Love is slated for release in early 2025.
Discography
[edit]- As leader
Year recorded | Title | Label | # | Info/Personnel |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | Emancipation Suite | Mobility Music | MM 211015 |
Scatter The Atoms That Remain Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Emilio Modeste – tenor saxophone, Davis Whitfield – piano, Otto Gardner – bass, produced by: Franklin Kiermyer ... released 02/15/2022 |
2019 | Exultation | Dot Time | DT 9085 |
Scatter The Atoms That Remain Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Jovan Alexandre – tenor saxophone, Davis Whitfield – piano, Otto Gardner – bass, produced by: Franklin Kiermyer & Michael Cuscuna |
2019* | Solomon’s Daughter | Dot Time | DT 7103 |
re-issue of 1994 release with 3 previously unreleased songs Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Pharoah Sanders – tenor saxophone, John Esposito – piano, Drew Gress – bass |
2016 | Closer to the Sun | Mobility Music | MM 11016 |
Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Lawrence Clark – tenor saxophone Davis Whitfield – piano Otto Gardner – bass produced by Franklin Kiermyer & Michael Cuscuna |
2014 | Further | Mobility Music | MM 020131 |
Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Azar Lawrence – tenor saxophone Benito Gonzalez – piano Juini Booth – bass produced by Franklin Kiermyer & Michael Cuscuna |
2000 | Great Drum of the Secret Mirror | SunShip | SSR 099003 | The verses pertaining to the example of the Drum from the chapter called "The Seventh Vajra Point: Activity" of the Ratnagotravibhanga or Mahayanottaratantra-sastra ~ The Greater Vehicle Treatise on the Highest Continuum ~ One of the "Five Dharmas of Maitreya" given by Arya Maitreya to Arya Asanga rediscovered by the great Indian master Maitripa Following the instructions of the Tibetan yogi and scholar, Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso Rinpoche, set to music by Kiermyer and sung in Tibetan and English by many different singers. |
2000 | Sanctification | SunShip | SSR 099002 |
Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Michael Stuart – tenor saxophone John Esposito – piano Fima Ephron – bass |
1999 | Auspicious Blazing Sun | SunShip | SSR 099001 |
Chant + ritual instruments: Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Umdze Lodro Samphel. Dhondup Namgyal Khorko, Karma Dhodul, Chimey Dorje, Sherab Sangpo, Chojor Radha, Tom Schmidt |
1996 | Kairos | Evidence Music | ECD 22144-2 |
Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Michael Stuart – tenor saxophone, Sam Rivers – soprano saxophone, Eric Person – alto saxophone, John Esposito – piano, Dom Richards – bass, Drew Gress – bass |
1994 | Solomon’s Daughter | Evidence Music | ECD 22083-2 |
Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Pharoah Sanders – tenor saxophone, John Esposito – piano, Drew Gress – bass produced by: Franklin Kiermyer & engineered by Roy Cicala |
1993 | In the House of My Fathers | Konnex Records | KCD 5052 | Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader,
Dave Douglas – trumpet, John Stubblefield – saxophone, John Esposito – piano, Anthony Cox – bass, Drew Gress – bass, Tom Chess – guitar, Eric St. Laurent – guitar, Chris Gekker – trumpet, Daniel Grabois – horn, John Rojak – bass trombone, David Braynard – tuba |
1992 | Break down the Walls | Konnex Records | KCD 5044 |
Franklin Kiermyer – Drums, Composer, Band Leader, Peter Madsen - piano, Tony Scherr - bass, Chris Gekker - trumpet, Russ Rizner - horn, John Rojak - trombone, Dave Braynard - tuba |
References
[edit]- ^ Patterson, Ian (3 March 2014). "Franklin Kiermyer: Joy And Consequence". All About Jazz. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
- ^ "53 Drummers Who Made a Difference in the '90s". Drum! Magazine. 28 May 2020.
- ^ "About Franklin Kiermyer". Mobility Music.
- ^ Margolis, Bob. "drummer Franklin Kiermyer Channels Coltrane and the Buddha". MTV / VH1. Archived from the original on 29 January 2022.
- ^ "Smalls - Resolution (J. Coltrane) Scatter the Atoms That Remain w Roy Hargrove Sep 19, 2018". YouTube.
- ^ Center, Jazz at Lincoln (21 December 2017). "Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola February 2018 Lineup Announced". Press Center - Jazz at Lincoln Center. Retrieved 16 July 2024.
- ^ "Franklin Kiermyer: Scatter The Atoms That Remain". Jazz at Lincoln Center. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
- ^ "Michael Cuscuna Talks About Franklin Kiermyer". Mobility Music. Retrieved 15 October 2019.
- ^ "Scatter the Atoms That Remain Emancipation Suite". Down Beat Magazine.