In the Material World: Eric Dolphy's Handwritten Notes on Physics, Psychoacoustics and Other Real Modalities of Free Jazz

By Ian Holubiak i.holubiak@classicalite.com | Jul 07, 2014 01:57 PM EDT

The enigmatic quality of Eric Dolphy supersedes the strange circumstances surrounding his death. A major proponent of non-Western thinking, particularly regarding America's reception to non-linear jazz forms, the actuality of sound dominated Dolphy's thinking as a student.

But something I just stumbled upon yielded an interest that I'm not normally accustomed to follow with musicians who had such a brief career.

Perhaps I've been engaged with Dolphy's papers he did for a physics class for too long today, but there's something very telling by the notes that he scribbled onto loose-leaf here. (And thanks to my father's penmanship, I am well-versed in discerning words from chicken scratch.)

Thanks to Joe Con, indeed, for putting this up from his archives.

I advise you to go through Dolphy's notes twice. It's clear music dominated his thoughts on, well, everything.

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