Originally posted by RichardB
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Busting myths in jazz history
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OK, I've read the article in the OP now. TBH, I'm not sure I agree with it. I think if letting a 'novice' listener know about the heroin addiction of jazz greats skews their opinion on the music, it says more about the social status of drugs than it does about music. But I guess it's taboo and tricky stuff to deal with unless you go into detail - but for Coltrane's development, for example, it's inseparable - it's a 'despite of/because of' situation with the recordings of Miles before he kicked the habit. While I don't think such biographical details are musically inconsequential at the same time I wouldn't overstate their importance. A good way of dealing with it would be to get quotes from musicians about it. The author of the article makes the point that bebop is the most virtuosic, fastest etc. form of jazz as if we didn't already know - this, despite the fact that some of its primary figureheads were on heroin! Anyway, in conclusion I think jazz is big and great enough to withstand letting people know about the habits of its main movers and shakers. I think perhaps the article is more concerned with how drugs are viewed in polite society than with anything strictly musical.
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I think it's relevant how Bill Evans' trio performances invariably speeded up at the end of his life as the tune progressed, the cocaine, as opposed to his trio heroin peak. And how Ray Charles' Atlantic dates (heroin) were hard & needle sharp (not a pun), unlike his often anaemic 60s ABC output post 1965 when his drug of choice was all day gin in a Harvard mug. Each era had/has it's predominant drug, sometimes it's that's observable.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
Nothing much to disagree with here. I don't see how a jazz rhythm section is like the performer of a notated score, since a jazz rhythm section is still improvising, even if its role is to accompany Trane or someone else. (As a side note to this it got me thinking how much of my favourite jazz subverted the soloist-accompanist kind of texture in favour of ones with greater equality like the Bill Evans Trio with Paul Motian and Scott LaFaro or the 'everyone solos-no one solos' textures of early fusion Miles and Weather Report). So I guess the difference between a jazz or other improvising musician would be that their legacy is recordings while for a composer working with notation it would be scores, which then requires the performers (what I termed 'middle men') to realise the music in some way. And then there are some people who do both I guess though that I wasn't attaching a value judgement when I said about the unmediatedness of jazz or other improv musics by comparison to notated music - it's just a quality of the music that could be a negative if done in an incompetent way (as I know only too well) or sublime if done well.
Tentatively I'm going to risk a charge of idealism by arguing that for how trustworthy such means of judgement might be the yardstick should be how much in touch the listener is with his/her intuition. This may be an enormous claim to make - it is clearly one that is unverifiable, for starters, and therefore not a good basis for establishing criteria other than ones that could be critically dismissed as purely subjective. There a counter-argument might be that those with an interest in establishing criteria have ideological/class interests vested in fixing normative criteria. And it could equally (?) be argued that subjectivity always applies in any case.
One of the charges directed at jazz and its following back in the 1960s became that of elitism: jazz in its avant-garde period had become divorced from its once wider public following was the oft-repeated charge - not just from populist newspapers and critics pedalling a new Capitalist Realist line, often older musicians who themselves had once been tagged rebels. This was one of the factors often cited behind the switch from venues hosting jazz to rock, and many jazz musicians themselves turning to rock to continue making a living. Often members of this very forum have rightly argued that far from generic factors it has been the concomitant aesthetics of commercialisation that have played the largest role in isolating quality musical education and those advocating for it by labelling their concerns as "elitist". But this has for several decades become a divided culture in self-destruct mode: distrustful of intuition while overlooking the degree of mediation involved in ideological/commercial inculcation, and the tropes and signifiers used to secure popular compliance.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI think perhaps the article is more concerned with how drugs are viewed in polite society than with anything strictly musical.
BTW I didn't mean to imply that a rhythm section is "like" a notated score except in so far as it consists of "middle men" who (in this case) influence what the soloist does, although of course in a completely unquantifiable way.
S-A: "how much in touch the listener is with his/her intuition"... well, there are a few slippery words in that formulation! Of course the degree of spontaneity in a musical performance is something we can learn to assess with let's say 95% reliability. But personally I find myself irresistibly attracted to the remaining 5%, and this too is the result of intuition first and foremost. I've just been writing liner notes for an upcoming release by the German reedman and composer Frank Gratkowski which really confronts the listener with the necessity to let go of identifying some elements as improvised and others not. I will flag this up when it comes out.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View PostI think it's relevant how Bill Evans' trio performances invariably speeded up at the end of his life as the tune progressed, the cocaine, as opposed to his trio heroin peak. And how Ray Charles' Atlantic dates (heroin) were hard & needle sharp (not a pun), unlike his often anaemic 60s ABC output post 1965 when his drug of choice was all day gin in a Harvard mug. Each era had/has it's predominant drug, sometimes it's that's observable.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View PostI think it's relevant how Bill Evans' trio performances invariably speeded up at the end of his life as the tune progressed, the cocaine, as opposed to his trio heroin peak.
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Originally posted by RichardB View Post
S-A: "how much in touch the listener is with his/her intuition"... well, there are a few slippery words in that formulation!
Of course the degree of spontaneity in a musical performance is something we can learn to assess with let's say 95% reliability. But personally I find myself irresistibly attracted to the remaining 5%, and this too is the result of intuition first and foremost. I've just been writing liner notes for an upcoming release by the German reedman and composer Frank Gratkowski which really confronts the listener with the necessity to let go of identifying some elements as improvised and others not. I will flag this up when it comes out.
Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 11-08-23, 14:34. Reason: *I originally typed "improving" - Freudian slip, or what??!!!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Postimprovising* groups such as Alterations, which Steve Beresford told me he thought was one of the most significant improv groups he'd been involved in to emerge from the period of abstraction.
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostInstilling mistrust in the makings of the human spirit/psyche appears basic to the Judaeo-Christian tradition - a problem handed on from the disciples to provide a leading function for religion in insuring ensuing class societies against political change.
I remember Alan Watts's book on Zen Buddhism which again was deeply formative, but I never got around to his other writings. I really ought to put that right some time.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View PostI think it's relevant how Bill Evans' trio performances invariably speeded up at the end of his life as the tune progressed, the cocaine, as opposed to his trio heroin peak. And how Ray Charles' Atlantic dates (heroin) were hard & needle sharp (not a pun), unlike his often anaemic 60s ABC output post 1965 when his drug of choice was all day gin in a Harvard mug. Each era had/has it's predominant drug, sometimes it's that's observable.
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Gary Bartz on drugs:
I think by drugs he's referring to mostly heroin. And he comes across as open and honest about it - at the end admitting what musical-perceptual advantage might be gained from experience with drugs, saying that any such advantage remains after the experience is over (which chimes with what Richard B said above) and that similar effects can be achieved with meditation, which I agree with.
Personally I never liked heroin, which I smoked from a pipe, since it would just make me fall asleep then vomit for hours after waking up. Stimulants on the other hand I greatly enjoyed owing to their enhancing effect on one's concentration and perception not to mention the incredible amounts of euphoria that could be involved. Cannabis depending on set and setting, but daily use i.e. addiction laid the ground for psychosis. Psychedelic could be nice albeit heavily muted for me owing to use of antipsychotics.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
I went to two of Bill’s final appearances in the UK . I wasn’t conscious of any speeding up at all. Possibly more notes but that’s often a feature of playing live. The only thing one can say is that had he not been a cocaine addict he might possibly be still delighting us with his mastery.
There are stories of his (later) trio with Philly Joe Jones, with Philly speeding up and then Bill and so on. And I think one of his later bassists or certainly someone he auditioned refused the gig despite the prestige. His use at the end was industrial and a lot of the time he wasn't working, La Barbara taking wedding jobs to earn.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI remember Alan Watts's book on Zen Buddhism which again was deeply formative, but I never got around to his other writings. I really ought to put that right some time.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View Post
"Yet, at a certain juncture, even flicking the switch no longer solved all the problems at hand. During his early months with the trio, La Barbera hadn’t noticed Evans’s drug use impacting the music, but things started to change after Harry Evans’s suicide. “Bill’s tempos began to rush, sometimes badly.” When he raised this issue with pianist, Evans got angry. “He went ballistic and said, ‘Just deal with it.’” La Barbera later concluded that Evans himself was frustrated, because he understood the impact his spiraling drug use was having, and didn’t have a solution for handling the consequences, musical or otherwise. But La Barbera adds: “I make this observation with 20/20 hindsight.”
There are stories of his (later) trio with Philly Joe Jones, with Philly speeding up and then Bill and so on. And I think one of his later bassists or certainly someone he auditioned refused the gig despite the prestige. His use at the end was industrial and a lot of the time he wasn't working, La Barbara taking wedding jobs to earn.
A member of my family had a personal connection with him and we had a couple of brief chats with him. I wasn’t conscious of any cocaine symptoms but of course heavy users tend not to exhibit those.How very sad it all seems now.
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Not sure drug taking should really be lauded in this chat room. Never done drugs and not really a bit consumer of alcohol but I think the Evans anecdote underscores the reality of drugs on performance and how this differs frim the user's perceptions. In the case of Bill Evans , I am really put off by his later stuff and always wondered how much was improvised and how much was premeditated. The later recordings are erratic but not in the way that makes someone like Bud Powell interesting.
It is a shame that the initial article had to pick up on drugs when there is so much more informed research about jazz which is 'good history writing and strips the narrative away from cliche into something that is more nuanced. Sometimes this room descends in to a kind 1970s Open University discussion group with more interest in things which are purely philosophical as opposed to real. I am much more inclined to listen to genuine analytical assessments than stuff which is subjective and will differ for each individual. This is especially the case where backed up with this like empirical data or good research. Sometimes this room is prone to too much beard scratching
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