Newton is a thoroughly contemporary artist, making elegant, sometimes eccentric, always high-minded albums that reflect a wide variety of jazz and classical influences without giving a fig about what happens to be popular at a given time. Besides producing a lovely tone quality, his flute work is highly resourceful, making use of flutter-tonguing, birdlike effects and simultaneous vocal/flute lines, trying to push the envelope of his instrument. As a composer,
Newton finds wellsprings of inspiration in
John Coltrane,
Charles Mingus and
Duke Ellington -- the latter whose music he transformed completely on the adventurous
The African Flower album -- and he writes charts for all kinds of combinations of instruments.
Newton's first musical experiences were on the electric bass as part of a Motown cover band in San Pedro, which he quit to form a
Jimi Hendrix-style trio. However, he also picked up alto and tenor saxophones while in high school, not discovering the flute until he was 16. Heavily influenced by
Eric Dolphy -- to whom he has been compared -- and
Roland Kirk,
Newton began to lean toward the avant-garde in jazz while studying classical music at Cal State Los Angeles. Soon after moving to Pomona, he joined a local band, Black Music Infinity, that was led by then-free-jazz drummer
Stanley Crouch, with
Arthur Blythe and
David Murray as co-conspirators. Feeling the competitive heat on saxes,
Newton decided to concentrate totally on the flute at age 22. A year after graduation (1978), he made a move to New York with
Murray, where he hooked up with
Anthony Davis on three LPs, played in
Cecil Taylor's big band, and started recording as a leader on several small and large labels. He moved back to San Pedro in 1982 and started teaching jazz history, composition and jazz ensemble at the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia. Over the years,
Newton has also written several classical commissions for various-sized ensembles, and in 1990, he published a book, Improvising Flute. Alas, not enough of his recordings are currently available to give one a decent idea of his wide-ranging tastes. ~ Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide