Classically trained cellist Tomeka Reid doesn’t mind when she plays octaves that are slightly out of tune. That wasn’t always the case. But nowadays, she plays the cello with a great degree of freedom, and the result might be funk, jazz or chamber music.
Elements of multiple genres are blended into the pieces she composed for her namesake quartet’s self-titled disc on the Thirsty Ear label. The new album—recorded with bassist Jason Roebke, drummer Tomas Fujiwara and guitarist Mary Halvorson—is the product of a recent surge in Reid’s self-confidence.
Reid’s musical discoveries began when she was growing up outside of Washington, D.C. As a late starter in a French immersion elementary school, songwriting provided a safe space where she didn’t have to worry about saying the wrong word in a foreign language.
Reid’s inventive impulses gradually were suppressed when she began playing cello and studying the classical repertoire at the University of Maryland. After she started investigating jazz, Reid met flutist Nicole Mitchell, who convinced her to move to Chicago in 2000. There Reid found a network of supportive musicians. Mitchell and singer Dee Alexander showed her new improvisational possibilities, and drummer Mike Reed encouraged Reid to become a leader. When she joined the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, the organization reignited her imagination.
In addition to composing material for her quartet, Reid writes songs for various combinations of strings in the trio Hear In Now, where her percussive attack complements the work of violinist Mazz Swift and bassist Silvia Bolognesi.
On Aug. 20, Reid conducted the AACM’s Great Black Music Ensemble for the premiere of her 10-song suite In Spite Of, We Thrive at Chicago’s Millennium Park. This ambitious piece, which includes sitar and oud arrangements, reflects her views on unjustified police killings and the Black Lives Matter movement.
Reid took part in a different AACM-affiliated concert when she joined saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell’s quartet for a performance at Chicago’s Constellation on March 27. That set—featuring Mitchell, Reid, bassist Junius Paul and drummer Vincent Davis—is documented on the album Celebrating Fred Anderson (Nessa).
—Aaron Cohen
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