- Ralph Rumpelton
- Buddy DeFranco and Oscar Peterson play George Gershwin
- RR - 2025 - 056
- MS Paint on digital canvas, 586 X 547 px
- The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
What the critics are saying:
“One must approach this image not as a depiction of music, but as a diagram of cultural hesitation. DeFranco and Peterson are not shown playing Gershwin so much as negotiating him—their gestures curtailed by the ontological weight of attribution, legacy, and liner-note authority. The clarinet becomes a vector, the piano a bureaucratic surface, and Gershwin himself a framed administrative presence hovering in chromatic yellow, the color of sanctioned memory.
Rumpelton’s refusal to resolve spatial coherence is not incompetence, as some have lazily suggested, but an ethical stance. These figures cannot occupy the same space because history itself refuses to let them. What we witness, then, is not collaboration but curated simultaneity, a condition familiar to anyone who has ever listened to jazz through the filter of reverence rather than sound.”
— Dr. Horace Plimwell<<
>>The Gershwin Cipher: DeFranco, Peterson, and the Geometry of Absence
Sebastian Puff Draganov
What arrests the eye in this album cover is not virtuosity but vacancy—a deliberate erosion of polish that reads, paradoxically, as overture. The trumpeter, rendered in crude daubs of blue and crimson, performs not for us but for the disembodied portrait hovering above: a yellow specter caught mid-grimace, framed and unreachable. This is less illustration than séance, a conjuring of Gershwin through the twin mediums of DeFranco's clarinet and Peterson's keys, transmuted here into visual shorthand that refuses resolution.
The artist—working in MS Paint, that most debased of digital tools—has intuited something essential about postwar jazz: its reliance on phantom interlocutors, the dead composers and silenced predecessors whose melodies haunt every improvisation. The framed face is neither decorative nor documentary; it is constitutive. Gershwin does not merely authorize the performance below—he demands it, his discomfort (note the pinched mouth, the accusatory eyes) suggesting that even homage is a form of violence, a reanimation the dead did not consent to.
The color-coding is almost liturgical: blue for DeFranco, red for Peterson, yellow for Gershwin. Each musician is reduced to a chromatic essence, a Rothko-esque field that denies individuality while asserting presence. This is not naïveté but economy, a refusal to prettify what is, at its core, an act of ventriloquism. The trumpet—wildly imprecise, its bell a smear of black—becomes a conduit rather than an instrument, channeling voices that no longer possess lungs.
Eastern European audiences will recognize the lineage: the Soviet-era agitprop poster, with its bold geometry and flattened figures, here repurposed for a capitalist artifact. The text, too, mimics that bureaucratic certitude—Orchestra Conducted By Russ Garcia, Supervised By Norman Granz—as if hierarchy could contain what the music itself explodes. The painting knows better. Its scraggly lines and off-register strokes enact the very improvisation they commemorate, each pixel a wrong note that somehow resolves.
In championing the unserious, we uncover its gravity. This is not kitsch but katabasis: a descent into the underworld of influence, where the living must play their way past the unmoved guardians of taste. The frame around Gershwin's face is a tomb, and the music—one imagines—is the lever that might yet pry it open.<<
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