Artist

Ethnic Heritage Ensemble

Genre: Jazz ,Post-Bop ,Modal Music ,Modern Jazz ,Modern Creative ,Spiritual Jazz
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Ethnic Heritage Ensemble originated in 1973 when percussionist Kahil El'Zabar, freshly graduated from the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians school, assembled the group alongside tenor saxophonist Edward Wilkerson, Jr. Their approach fused contemporary African-American idioms such as jazz, blues, R&B, funk, and gospel with African folk rhythms and instrumentation. Early configurations often operated as trios, drawing on AACM reed players Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre and “Light” Henry Huff. Extensive European touring established their reputation for polyrhythmic intensity long before widespread American recognition.

The initial trio featuring Huff documented Three Gentlemen from Chikago on Moers Music in 1981, followed by the two-part improvisation Impressions for Italy’s Red label the next year. McIntyre substituted for Huff on the 1984 Leo album Welcome, produced with Edward Vesala. Trombonist Joseph Bowie, already directing Defunkt, entered the lineup in time for the 1988 live recording Ancestral Song: Live from Stockholm and stayed until 2005. Their first domestic release arrived via Elektra’s Chameleon imprint with 1993’s Dance with the Ancestors, earning broad critical approval across continents.

Further sessions appeared on CIMP and Silkheart, while Delmark issued The Continuum in 1997, Freedom Jazz Dance in 1999, and the concert set Hot ’N’ Heavy: Live at the Ascension Loft in 2007. Wilkerson departed after those Delmark and Silkheart dates; Ernest “Khabeer” Dawkins assumed the reed chair, appearing on Papa’s Bounce and Freedom Jazz Dance alongside guitarist Fareed Haque. Corey Wilkes later replaced Bowie on trumpet. Katalyst Entertainment, tied to the AACM, released the 35th-anniversary Mama’s House Live in 2009 and the 40th-anniversary Black Is Back in 2014.

In 2018 the ensemble aligned with London’s Spiritmuse Records. Subsequent quartet sessions with baritone saxophonist Alex Harding and cellist Ian Maksin yielded 2019’s Be Known: Ancient/Future/Music. Spirit Gatherer: Tribute to Don Cherry followed in 2023, featuring vocalist Dwight Trible and pianist David Ornette Cherry. March 2024 brought Open Me, A Higher Consciousness of Sound and Spirit, marking the 50th anniversary; cellist Ishmael Ali and violinist James Sanders joined El’Zabar, Wilkes, and Harding for eight originals interspersed with interpretations of Miles Davis, Gene McDaniels, and McCoy Tyner material. This release constituted the group’s sixth Spiritmuse project within five years.