

How Jazz Teaches Faith & Justice / Julian Reid & The JuJu Exchange
Aug 30, 2020
Julian Reid is a Chicago-based jazz pianist and the creative force behind The JuJu Exchange, melding music with deep themes of faith and justice. He discusses how music communicates our emotions and the unique power of jazz and blues in expressing the longing of human exile. The conversation emphasizes improvisation as a profound mode of humility and connection. Reid also explores the intersection of technology and worship, revealing how innovations in music can disrupt traditional religious experiences.
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Music As Tangible Invisible Faith
- Music is invisible yet exerts tangible, bodily effects through vibration and feeling.
- Julian Reid links this sensory faith-like encounter to theological knowing beyond visible creeds.
Roots And Roles Of Black Music
- Blues, gospel, and jazz emerged as Black communicative practices expressing sorrow, hope, and aspiration.
- Reid explains each genre's distinct social function and technological roots in Chicago's Black life.
The Blues' 'Never Home' Harmony
- Blues harmonies intentionally avoid resolution, musically encoding an exilic, never-home feeling.
- Reid connects this persistent harmonic frustration to Black experience and prophetic lament.