By Lee Rice Epstein
    There may be nothing Matthew Shipp writes about in
    
        Black  Mystery School Pianists and Other Writings
    
    that he hasn’t expressed or  somehow meditated upon through his music. Yet,
    reading his words are clarifying  and rejuvenating in exactly the
    complementary way you’d want a set of essays to  lift up, not exactly
    unveiling, the author’s music. If this seems abstruse, in  practice it is,
    like Shipp’s music when you spend real time with it, the  opposite.
    Right now, I’m listening to Shipp’s circa 2000 String Trio album,
    
        Expansion, Power, Release,
    
    with William Parker and Mat Maneri.Where Parker was born in 1952
    (just after David S. Ware, born 1949), Maneri was born  in late 1969, the
    cusp of a new decade. Shipp (and, for what it’s worth, his  perennial
    collaborator Ivo Perelman) were born just between the two in 1960  (and
    1961, respectively). Situating Shipp in time-space, for me at least, helps
    anchor how he emerged, a young man moving to New York City in the 1980s, and
    how he has been shaped by and continues to shape the practice of playing
    jazz  piano. But then, what’s in a year, or an age, of any human’s lived
    experience?  Shipp writes about himself being a spiritual being, channeling
    and expressing  something deep and universal. This is something one gets
    from opening up to the  music he’s recorded: the probing of time, his expert
    explorations of sound  signifying space, physical manifested as aural and
    sonic structures. In the  essays that fill
    
        Black Mystery School Pianists and Other Writings
    
    , he  reflects on boxing, on New York City, on poetry, and David S. Ware and
    Sun Ra  and, yes of course, un piano.
    The opening essay, something of a centerpiece despite its  placement up
    front, titled “Black Mystery School Pianists” lays out a lineage  of piano
    players that somewhat echoes one I myself explored wading into last  year’s
    stream of piano trio recordings, which for me started with Shipp’s trio  and
    ended with variations on the concept. It’s worth naming the players here,
    Ran Blake, Andrew Hill, Hasaan Ibn Ali, Herbie Nichols, Sun Ra, Horace
    Tapscott, Cecil Taylor, Mal Waldron, Randy Weston, and sometimes Dave
    Burrell—neither  Thelonious Monk nor Duke Ellington, directly, but they
    influence and cast a  long shadow over the Black Mystery School. Once the
    thesis is laid out, echoes  throughout the book. Sun Ra reappears later in a
    brief, moving tribute, and  whether by name or not, Monk’s variations seem
    to inspire Shipp revisiting  moments and themes, inviting recurrences in
    page after page should draw readers  back time and again.
    I’d highly recommend this book for two kinds of readers, without
    hesitation: first, fans of Shipp’s vast universe of recordings will find
    much  of the same here, thoughtful rumination, sly humor, and numerous
    references to  influences and mentors; the second kind of reader would be
    anyone, regardless  of familiarity with Shipp specifically, who is
    interested in the history of  jazz and its contemporary players.


 
                                    