Mark Whitecage

Summary

Mark Whitecage (June 4, 1937 – March 7, 2021)[1][2] was an American jazz reedist.

Mark Whitecage
In concert with the Nu Band, Club W71, Weikersheim, Germany
In concert with the Nu Band, Club W71, Weikersheim, Germany
Background information
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician
Instrument(s)Saxophone
Years active1980–?
LabelsCIMP
Mark Whitecage, Vision XIII Festival

Career edit

Whitecage played in his father's family ensemble as early as age six. In the 1980s, he played with Gunter Hampel's Galaxy Dream Band, Jeanne Lee, and Saheb Sarbib. After touring solo in Europe in 1986, he put together two bands as a leader, Liquid Time and the Glass House Ensemble. In the 1990s, his first release with Liquid Time was chosen by Cadence Magazine as one of the year's best albums. He worked in the Improvisers Collective from 1994, and began releasing albums on CIMP in 1996. Late in the 1990s he worked with Anthony Braxton, including in performances of Braxton's opera, Trillium R. He also played with William Parker, Perry Robinson, Joe Fonda, Dominic Duval, Joe McPhee, Steve Swell, Richie "Shakin'" Nagan and Sikiru Adepoju.

He was married to clarinetist Rozanne Levine; they performed together with Perry Robinson in a trio called Crystal Clarinets.

Discography edit

As leader edit

  • Mark Whitecage & Liquid Time (Acoustics, 1990)
  • Caged No More (CIMP, 1996)
  • Free for Once (CIMP, 1996)
  • 3 + 4 = 5 (CIMP, 1998)
  • Consensual Tension (CIMP, 1998)
  • Split Personality (GM, 1998)
  • Research On the Edge (CIMP, 1999)
  • Fractured Again (Acoustics, 2000)
  • Fractured Standards & Fairy Tales (Acoustics, 2000)
  • Fragments of a Dream (Acoustics, 2000)
  • Moon Blue Boogie (Acoustics, 2000)
  • Turning Point (Acoustics, 2000)
  • The Paper Trail (Acoustics, 2001)
  • Ducks On Acid (Acoustics, 2003)
  • BushWacked (Acoustics, 2005)

As sideman edit

With Dominic Duval

  • State of the Art (CIMP, 1997)
  • Live in Concert (Cadence, 1999)
  • Cries and Whispers (Cadence, 2001)
  • No Respect (Acoustics, 2002)
  • Rules of Engagement Vol. 1 (Drimala, 2003)

With Joe Fonda & Michael Jefry Stevens

  • The Wish (Music & Arts, 1995)
  • Parallel Lines (Music & Arts, 1997)
  • Live from Brugge (W.E.R.F., 1997)
  • Evolution (Leo, 1998)

With Gunter Hampel

  • Angel (Birth, 1972)
  • Broadway/Folksong (Birth, 1972)
  • I Love Being with You (Birth, 1972)
  • Unity Dance (Birth, 1973)
  • Journey to the Song Within (Birth, 1974)
  • Out from Under (Birth, 1974)
  • Enfant Terrible (Birth, 1975)
  • All Is Real (Birth, 1978)
  • That Came Down On Me (Birth, 1978)
  • All the Things You Could Be If Charles Mingus Was Your Daddy (Birth, 1980)
  • Fresh Heat (Birth, 1985)
  • Celestial Glory (Birth, 1992)

With INTERface

  • INTERface NY (Composers Collective, 1976)
  • Live at Environ (ReEntry, 1977)
  • This Time (ReEntry, 1978)
  • Glimpses (ReEntry, 1979)
  • Environ Days (Konnex, 1991)

With the Nu Band

  • Live at the Bop Shop/Rochester NY (Clean Feed, 2001)
  • Live in Geneva (Not Two, 2017)
  • Live in Paris (NoBusiness, 2010)
  • Live (Konnex, 2005)
  • Lower East Side Blues (Porter, 2008)
  • Relentlessness (Marge, 2011)
  • The Cosmological Constant (Not Two, 2015)
  • The Dope and the Ghost (Not Two, 2007)
  • The Final Concert (NoBusiness, 2016)

With Saheb Sarbib

  • Aisha (Cadence, 1981)
  • Live at the Public Theater (Cadence, 1981)
  • UFO Live On Tour (Cadence, 1981)
  • Seasons (Soul Note, 1982)
  • Jancin' at Jazzmania (Jazzmania, 1985)

With others

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ Mark Whitecage (in German)
  2. ^ Schray, Martin (2021-03-09). "Mark Whitecage (1937-2021)". The Free Jazz Collective. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
General references

External links edit

  • Mark Whitecage discography at Discogs