When it comes to jazz, "the dominant narratives about the style focus on New Orleans as the style's birthplace," says drummer Jaimeo Brown.
"So being around music and musicians and performances, that's just something that I've experienced my whole life, and so I've always felt at home in that atmosphere and environment."
He's referring to the Bay Area and New York where he grew up, both of which "solidified the place of both music and spirituality within his understanding of the genre," he tells the San Francisco Chronicle.
Now he's working on a project called Transcendence that aims to "re-center Black life and spirituality within today's jazz," he says.
His first album, released in 2013, "was really dedicated to the Gee's Bend community and those spirituals in general," he says.
His second, released last year, "was more about the ideas of work songs in general.
And so I ended up going to the Library of Congress and Sony and the Black History Museum and started to use some of that material that I would find on reel to convert into digital and use as sampling material," Brown says.
"There's a certain quality of sound within the human voice that is so distinct
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