"Québécité Is Opera for the Modern Masses"
For an opera, Québécité has got a lot going for it: it’s sung in a language most of us speak; it’s about an issue that will touch many of us at some point in our lives; and its score is based in the vernacular music of our time. This may dismay purists who think that mounting, say, Benjamin Britten’s Peter Grimes is a daring act, but composer D. D. Jackson and librettist George Elliott Clarke have done the rest of us a great favour.

It’s not that they’ve departed all that far from operatic orthodoxy: after all, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart used the dance rhythms of his time in his operas, as well as the weird world-beat sounds then emanating from Istanbul and beyond. So when Jackson and Clarke give an aria a funk backbeat or use the techniques of North Indian ghazal singing, they’re just returning the operatic form to its artistic roots while crafting an evening of musical theatre the average listener might actually want to hear.

“There are elements in Québécité that are more experimental, but on the whole I would say it tends to be fairly accessible,” says the Ottawa-born Jackson, on the line from Brooklyn, where he has lived for most of the past decade. “It’s fairly tune-oriented, fairly romantic, and fairly groove-oriented; in many cases, almost poppy.

“One of the things I did in preparation was to do a lot of research on the history of opera,” he adds, “and I found that the more atonal forms of contemporary opera just didn’t appeal to my sensibilities, which tend towards the melodic and the romantic. And also given that I was going to be working with pop singers, Indian singers, avant-garde and blues singers, I wanted those elements to be reflected in what I was doing.”

For Québécité, which makes its local debut at the Vancouver East Cultural Centre on Friday and Sat­urday (October 17 and 18), Jackson has assembled a remarkably gifted—and remarkably polyglot— array of singers. There’s Haydain Neale, the charismatic leader of the Toronto-based funk group Jacksoul; Kiran Ahiuwalia, whose self-composed ghazals and cross-cultural band have successfully transplanted an Indian tradition into North America; Dean Bowman, of Brooklyn avant-rock ensemble the Screaming Headless Torsos; and Korean-Canadian experimental jazz vocalist Yoon Sun Choi. The band is equally eclectic: fronted by Jackson’s piano, it includes local sensations Brad Turner and Peggy Lee on trumpet and cello, respectively; Toronto’s Jean Martin on drums; and New York bassist Mark Dresser. Together the cast is representative of 21st-century creativity at its best, and properly reflective of Québécité’s theme: the difficulty of maintaining an interracial relationship in a world that has not yet given up its old tribal fears.

Jackson, who is of Chinese and African-American descent, and Clarke, whose forebears were slaves brought to Nova Scotia with the United Empire Loyalists, have reason to feel strongly about the topic.

“There were certain scenes that were lifted directly from my own parents’ experiences,” the pianist explains. “Act 2, Scene 7, is pretty much an exact duplication of my mother’s experience with her family. Basically, when she decided that she was definitely going to marry my father, her entire Immediate family—her brothers and sisters, her parents—grilled her all night long and tried to get her not to do it. Her own mother took out a knife and said if she married a black person it would be the end of everything and that she’d have to kill herself, and her father basically told her that she would be disowned. A lot of that makes it into the scene. It’s a very, very dramatic ending to the first half of the opera.

“And although George is African-Canadian, from Nova Scotia, he’s married to an Indian woman and he wanted to explore that connec­tion as well. So we ended up making this broader statement about multiculturalism and interracial relationships in Canada.”

Québécite’s two pairs of lovers
Alexander Varty, the Georgia Straight
archives
7/16/2009 - Milford Graves Quartet at VisionFest
2/15/2009 - Jazz-opera 'Québécité' grew from an interracial love story
12/19/2007 - www.jazzweek.com review of "Serenity Song"
11/28/2007 - Young Stars of Jazz at Yoshi's
11/7/2007 - D.D. Jackson interview for Edmonton Journal
9/25/2007 - Chinese fest at Pier 21 a cultural cornucopia
8/1/2007 - NEWS RELEASE: D.D. Jackson at MEC/Jazzy Jazz Festival in Rare Organ Appearance
7/23/2007 - NEWS RELEASE: A Family Focus for Upcoming D.D. Jackson Trio MOMA Performance
6/14/2007 - "Making Trudeau Sing!"
5/30/2007 - RADIO: interview I did with CBC about my new Trudeau opera
12/4/2006 - Harbourfront Centre’s inaugural New World Stage International Performance
11/28/2006 - Jazz Fan Ends Up on Star's Website
11/28/2006 - Jazzreview.com review of "Serenity Song"
11/4/2006 - The Voice 88.7 fm review of "Serenity Song"
10/19/2006 - Coda magazine review of "Serenity Song"
10/9/2006 - Downbeat magazine [four star] review of Serenity Song
9/18/2006 - All Music Guide review of Serenity Song
9/18/2006 - Pittsburg Tribune-Review review of Serenity Song
9/7/2006 - Finding Serenity In Queens: The D.D. Jackson Interview
8/3/2006 - Buffalo News review of Serenity Song
7/18/2006 - Opera about Pierre Elliott Trudeau to have comedy, drama, sorrow
7/11/2006 - Trudeau perfect subject for new opera, Clarke says
3/1/2006 - Montreal Gazette review of Suite for New York
3/1/2004 - Jazz Journalists International review of Suite for New York
11/17/2003 - Coda Magazine review of Suite for New York
10/15/2003 - "Québécité Is Opera for the Modern Masses"
10/15/2003 - "Quebecite"
10/2/2003 - Jazz Times review of Suite for New York
10/2/2003 - DownBeat review of Suite for New York
9/30/2003 - "Love and Cross-Cultural Struggles in Quebecite"
9/30/2003 - "One World Vibe: Can a Canadian pianist, European bassist, and Cuban drummer play America's music?"
8/31/2003 - "Definitely Not Your Parent's Opera"
8/29/2003 - "Québécité celebrates festival's 10th year", Kitchener Waterloo Record
6/12/2003 - Buffalo News review of Suite for New York
6/11/2003 - Toronto Globe and Mail review of Suite for New York
5/31/2003 - All About Jazz review (#2) of Suite for New York
5/31/2003 - Toronto Star review of Suite for New York
4/2/2003 - All About Jazz review (#1) of Suite for New York
3/4/2003 - Barnes & Noble online review of Suite for New York
3/3/2003 - Jazzreviews.com review of Suite for New York
2/2/2003 - "Jackson Breaks Free to Follow Jazz Whim"
12/10/2002 - "Restless Talent Alights Here"
10/31/2002 - "Improvisational Pianist Among World's Best"
10/31/2002 - Jazz Journal International review of Sigame
6/23/2002 - "Jackson in Action: New York based pianist protects his sound by going with a small label"
3/31/2002 - "Crossing Borders: Reflections on the 30th Annual IAJE Conference"
2/28/2002 - "Traditions: A Settling Storm"
9/1/2001 - CDNOW review of Sigame
Quotes
"D.D. Jackson is, at his best, the most inventive pianist under 50, dashing across the keyboard with preternatural speed yet never losing his classical grace and precision or his left-hand bluesy roots...."

-- - Fred Kaplan, The Absolute Sound
Suite for New York:
An impressive montage of controlled chaos, exciting solo work and promise of things to come: a febrile fusion of futuristic jazz, contemporary classical, streetwise funk and Afro-Cuban sensuality.

-- - Jazz Times Magazine
Quebecite:
"The score is a powerful, identifiably Jacksonesque effort full of energy, rhythm, and flourish..."

-- - Mark Miller, the Globe and Mail
Sigame:
"Swinging, immediate and risk-taking, Sigame is everything a great jazz album should be."

-- - Pulse magazine
"They should have called it "Stand Back, Here Comes D.D. Jackson." This passionate young Canadian pianist sounds like a state-of-the-art player piano exceeding the limits of human performance. "......So Far" is clearly a contender for jazz record of the year. Don't miss it."

-- Steve Guttenberg, Audio magazine