Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre
Kalaparush Maurice McIntyre is a multiple
reed specialist who has appeared throughout the world in festivals and clubs, at
colleges and universities, and on television and radio. His musical associations
have included performers such as Sam Rivers, Roscoe Mitchell, Howard Johnson,
Warren Smith, Muhal Richard Abrams, Jack DeJohnette, Edward Wilkerson, Jr.,
Anthony Braxton, LeRoy Jenkins, Dave Holland, Kahil El'Zabar and Leo Smith among
many others.
At the age of six months, or at least as old as his memory serves, Kalaparush
has been listening to music. Actually, it was during this time that his parents
took him from their Clarkville, Arkansas home to the southside of Chicago, where
they moved into an apartment above Mr. Smith, a music teacher and musical
instrument repairman. It was here that young Maurice first heard and later met
the likes of Johnny Griffin and Sonny Stitt playing the music that was to become
his life.
His parents, both professional people, insisted Kalaparush play an instrument.
So, at seven years of age he chose drums. An early teacher squelched his
ambition by telling him his wrists were too stiff for the "mommy/daddy" roll so
important for the rudiments.
There was a two year hiatus before the keen fo resight of Kalaparush's parents
insisted upon another instrument; this time the saxophone. Kalaparush explains
what happened, "Every youngster was told he first had to learn on clarinet
before sax. So, Mr. Smith gave me a steel clarinet, explaining that mastering
the clarinet was paramount in achieving saxophone mastery.
Buying a sax on his own, Kalaparush played in school shows. In grammar school
his athletically inclined father introduced him to football. "It became my major
interest for the next sev en years", Kalaparush states. "It wasn't until I
realized I wasn't getting any bigger than 160 pounds that I decided to dust off
the sax". And the dust has never fallen on the horn since. From the age of 18
until today, the instrument and the music which emanates from it have been his
entire being.
In 1963 he began playing a new kind of music; a music which was finding no real
place in Chicago mainstream music. The people he playing with were anxious to
get it heard. They formed what was to become one of the leading forces in
contemporary music both in the U.S. and elsewhere. The creative music movement
in Chicago was later to be best known by its initials, AACM (Association for the
Advancement of Creative Music).
Kalaparush first became interested in the music through playing it with his then
roommates, Malachi Favors, and Roscoe Mitchell . Of this experience, Kalaparush
states, "When you are woodsheddin' with your peers things begin to happen inside
you. You realize you are different because you are a different individual and
not because you strive to be different".
In 1966 members of the AACM recorded its first album for Delmark records
entitled "Sound". Under the direction of reedist Mitchell, it featured
Kalaparush, Lester Bowie (trumpet), Malachi Favors (bass), Lester Lashley
(trombone), and drummer Alvin Fielder. Delmark was a pioneer in recording new
music. Kalaparush also doubled working as a stock clerk so he could "be around
to drop the cases and pick up my horn for a session", he reme mbers. One such
session was a date with guitarist George Freeman of the famed Chicago Freeman
clan: Von, Bruzz, and Chico. The album, released in 1967, was called "Birth
Sign".
Kalaparush learned how to annotate his music while he attended Chicago Music
College where he studied harmony, theory, and added to his comprehension of his
horn. " Bebop was the thing to play," Kalaparush says. "But I wanted something
different". By the time he got on the scene he was just another of scores of
beboppers. "I pl ayed rhythm and blues to get myself together, all the time I
was thinking that I wanted to start something, not follow the trend".
After a brief tenure with a group called the Jazz Merchants, Kalaparush played
with Muhal Richard Abrams Experimental Band . It was there he realized there was
something different to grab hold of. "At first I had no idea what I was playing
while I was playing it, but I knew it would come to me. The course had been
charted".
"Humility in the Light of the Creator" (1966) was Kalaparush's first album as a
leader. It featured Leo Smith (trumpet), John Stubblefield (woodwinds), Malachi
Favors, and Amina Claudine Meyers (piano). He began to play Europe's stages at
the Berliner Jazztage in 1973 with a group led by Abrams. As a result of this
concert, and having gained acclaim with the AACM in Chicago, he was invited back
to Berlin for the 1976 Jazztage, this time as a l eader.
An important period in Kalaparush's life was spent in Karl Berger's Creative
Music Studio in Woodstock, N.Y.. He spent much time composing and teaching. Trio
Records (Japan) recorded him there in the company of Berger, J ack DeJohnette,
and Ing Rid.
Kalaparush believes music is the sound of a person. "If used properly, from an
inner point, music could be the healing force of the universe". Kalaparush
presently resides in Brooklyn, N.Y., from which base he travels throughout the
U.S. and the world. He spends what little time he has at home, and writing for
his band. He keeps himself readily available for new ventures