Cisco Bradley is professor of history at the Pratt Institute. His books include The Williamsburg Avant-Garde: Experimental Music and Sound on the Brooklyn Waterfront (2023) and Universal Tonality: The Life and Music of William Parker (2021). He is also the director of the documentary Take Me to Fendika (2024). Gabriel Jermaine Vanlandingham-Dunn is a music historian, writer, researcher, and DJ who heads cow: Music and is the creative consultant at Astral Spirits Records.
Through meticulous oral histories, archival research, and theoretical insight, Bradley expands the scope and tenor of jazz historiography by revealing how Black familial lineages carried musical values of mobility, collectivity, and experimentation into the heart of northern urban modernity and made jazz a blueprint for the Black radical tradition and its dreams of liberation. -- Benjamin Barson, author of <i>Brassroots Democracy: Maroon Ecologies and the Jazz Commons</i> In I Hear Freedom, Cisco Bradley guides readers through an alternative, ethnographic model of jazz—and thus American music—history. Other jazz scholars posit linear genealogies, with musicians/composers evolving out of past styles and artists; Bradley instead situates black improvising musicians/composers within their familial, community, and professional networks. With extensive and unprecedented archival research, Bradley reveals how migratory movement drove free jazz’s experimentalist praxis, and how encounters made along the journey culminated in art. -- Kwami Coleman, author of <i>Change: The New Thing and Modern Jazz</i>