British
Invasion and Psychedelic Rock unwound itself in a tizzy as The Beatles
began to break up. Hendrix and others died and Syd Barrett evaporated
quickly. Local inspirations MC-5, SRC, and other promising bands were
also coming to an end. Rock as ‘new music’ became progressive at best,
leaving little left but Classic Rock to soon melt into the coming dread
of Disco. The tail end of Don Van Vliet was still percolating, but most
of our attention now turned towards Bitches Brew, Out to Lunch,
Escalator Over the Hill, Erik Satie, Charles Ives, Waiting For Godot,
Henry Cow, Sun Ra, Ayler, Ornette, and various expressions of aleatory
music.
MARSH CRABBITTS and his CLAPFOLD
PLATUNE was a horn-based band Laurence formed in late summer 1972 with
a focus on clarinets and saxophones. Its cock-eyed marching band
sensibilities took hold rapidly. Homemade compositions were drawn up
with hallucinogenic free-form notation applied. The two were 18 at the
time with no training as to how one should go about composing. Although
some were schooled in music, none were particularly proficient on their
instruments. They were known to exclude ‘learned’ musicians, choosing
to play with best friends instead. They may not have had the
‘chops’ but were clearly willing to openly explore.
Good friend David Swain had formed his own free form jazz collective
‘The Cruzonics’ earlier that year which amazingly managed to make the
2nd round at Saline Battle of the Bands. Though David’s entourage and
The Clapfold did intermingle from time to time, The Cruzonics as a
separate entity was loose and always had a rhythm section, where as The
Clapfold Platune focused solely on original compositions written out on
staff paper with pockets of ‘illustrated’ free-form areas.
The Clapfold Platune managed a few gigs at Earthworks Pioneer II Free
School and a couple random outdoor performances on Ann Arbor’s Diag.
They were also part of a pack that lead Ann Arbor’s 1st Ozone Parade
with David Swain with their photograph making the front page on The
Michigan Daily. Best of all was a triple bill show at Ann Arbor’s The
People’s Ballroom (along with The Cruzonics) and finally Ann Arbor
Community Television’s first ever video production ever, converging
with The Cruzonics renamed for the occasion as The Psychic Research
Jazz Ensemble - ESP through Drugs – in August of 1973.
Laurence & Ben then moved to Boston (with David Swain) where the
two attended The School of Contemporary Music in the fall of 1973. They
continued composing, rehearsing with open-eared musical friends they
met, soon discovering the school experience was not what they had hoped
it would be. Contemporary? Nope.
THE CRUZONIC MUSIC ENSEMBLE slowly formed and in February 1974
performed at Berklee College of Music. Disbanding shortly thereafter,
Laurence and Ben formed THE NOVA MOB with Donnie Davis and Johnny Ellis
– yet another group named after one of William S. Burroughs’
novels.
"I was a student at the Berklee College of Music 1972-74. While
learning a lot there I found myself gravitating towards some
extracurricular, off-campus musical activities which led me to find the
Miller brothers. (perhaps at the encouragement of David Swain?) This
homegrown music hit the sweet spot for me. I loved Laurence’s and Ben’s
unique writing / playing style within their naturally derived musical
system. We spent many hours working on these wonderful melodies and
outlines, hence “The NOVA MOB”. Also, we listened to many recordings of
past and forward sounding jazz styles along with modern
classical/electronic music. This inspired me to later move to Woodstock
NY to study at the Creative Music Studio and then NYC to keep
discovering new sounds and eventually be a part of the Microscopic
Septet playing alto sax. Happy to be included here on a couple tunes
that we covered back then and now NOW. Note: Michael Hashim has been
with the Microscopic Septet for many years, and was in fact involved
jamming with us some back then!”
- Donnie Davis – 2023
THE NOVA MOB’s drummer – the late Johnny Ellis – later performed,
recorded, and arranged for THE WIDESPREAD DEPRESSION ORCHESTRA. He also
formed his own band PLANET JAZZ;
“...The debut recording by the New York City based sextet PLANET JAZZ
was formed by the late drummer Johnny Ellis who wrote much of the
band's music, including 5 of the 8 tracks on their CD IN ORBIT. Ellis'
tunes, while reflective of his dark humor, combine true originality
with plenty of swing and provide a rich harmonic underpinning for the
band's tremendous soloists to stretch out...”
- Tower Records – 2006
THE NOVA MOB did manage one bar gig. The group walked down to the bar
wearing funny clothes all set to perform. The club owner took one look
at us and shook his head. We were not allowed to play. Such were the
times.
We did manage to record a fair amount of casual sessions over the
summer, which may find the light of day, someday. Note: Some of the
compositions in this Cuneiform collection were composed at that
time.
Moving back to Michigan in fall 1974, we attended Thomas Jefferson
College; a part of the Grand Valley State Colleges in the Grand Rapids
area. There we formed the short-lived FOURTH WORLD QUARTET with brother
Roger in 1975. Compositions began to take on a more sophisticated tone.
Roger soon left and was replaced by composition teacher Denman
Maroney.
“Fresh from getting an MFA at Cal. Inst. of the Arts, I spent the
academic year 1974-75 teaching at Thomas Jefferson College in Allendale
MI. Among my students were Roger, Ben, and Laurence Miller. We made a
lot of music together, especially after Roger quit the Fourth World
Quartet, and I took his place. We even went to New York together for a
week to see the New York Philharmonic under Pierre Boulez celebrate
Charles Ives' hundredth birthday. Cushion concerts, they were called,
because the first twenty or so rows of seats had been replaced with
cushions in an effort to attract young people to classical music
concerts. I haven't seen Laurence since then, but have worked with Ben
several times in New York, most notably on our duo album Exophilia –
available on both our Bandcamp sites.”
- Denman Maroney – 2023
CD collections from both incarnations of THE FOURTH WORLD QUARTET were
released nearly five decades later on Cuneiform Records in 2021/22
respectively, meeting rave reviews.
Laurence continued school on his own in the fall of 1975 with hopes of
forming yet another creative music band but nothing substantial came of
it. By early 1976 Laurence threw in the towel and moved back home to
Ann Arbor. There he hooked up with his two brothers again, this time on
a creative journey with musical friends forming the dada-noise-rock of
EMPOOL. This mad concoction dissolved spring 1977 into Cary &
Niagara’s DESTROY ALL MONSTERS and the rest is history.
Always pushing the envelope, the music of our youth veered far from the
mainstream. The last echoing cries of the '60's Revolution had long
since died, and what little counter culture was left had now became
nothing short of a disturbing fashion. The Bee Gees soon took center
stage, now as the Kings of Disco, and even Hillbillies were smoking pot
and dropping acid.
We Miller brothers wrote, recorded, and performed original music,
regardless of what the future may hold. No one put a gun to our head
nor were these class projects or commissioned works. The priority was
to document and catalog on analogue tape, with fingers always hovering
just above the record button begging to be pushed. “Is it on....?" was
our catch phrase of the 70's.
Many of these compositions were written out and can still be performed
today. Others are comprised simply of ‘heads’, short bits of angular
melody with areas of improvisation illustrated only with hallucinogenic
pictographs to help the player along in their interpretation.
This year Laurence and Ben have both formed new groups. THE 11th HOUR
QUARTET and SENSORIUM SAXOPHONE ORCHESTRA with Ben at the helm for
both, and Laurence’s TINN PARROW and his CLAPFOLD PLATUNE sporting many
of his compositions on this collection.
Early Compositions 1973 - 1976 press release