I've been listening to some Charlie Parker this weekend (Massey Hall / session with dizzy, Monk, Rich, etc) as I hadn't listened to his records for a very long while. When I was about 16 /17 I stumbled on his records after hearing him with Swing groups like Jay McShann and Tiny Grimes and his music automatically hit home. It never seemed "outside" or inaccessible to my ears and I have never understood just why he was such a shocking revelation at the time because his phrasing seemed to sing in a way that I found hard to appreciate why so many older people I knew detested his music. When I was getting in to jazz I was advised and encouraged by people who preferred Big Band jazz and Parker's music still seemed pretty radical and exciting back in the mid 1980's. I don't think he was far enough in the past to not have a relevance. Bebop may have had an esoteric value about it but there is nothing quite as agreeable as hearing a multitude of groups from the late 1940's and the music never fails to excite. I would have to say that Dizzy Gillespie is still one of my all-time trumpet heroes and his use of dynamics and timbre has continued in practically all the jazz trumpeters who have followed on from his such as Kenny Dorham, Dave Douglas, Ambrose Akinmusire, Don Cherry and josh Berman. The fact that Gillespie managed to bridge "Swing", Be-bop" and "R n; B" seems to have made him more "contemporary" than Parker whose music was locked in to a particular period in the 1940's / early 1950's.
Wind forward thirty years and it is fascinating to re-visit Charlie Parker , especially as I was so passionate about his playing in the past. I wanted to sound like that when I played piano and it was Be-bop I sought to teach me how to play improvised lines. I'm not quite so convinced by some aspects of Parker and think that his place in jazz has really shifted in the last thirty years. There are two problems for me. The first is that he never seemed to put together a truly great regular band. It was a shame that the Massey Hall line up was not a working group as it was totally devastating. The use of unison alto and trumpet combined with the themes employed gets a bit repetitive after about five or six tracks. I love the way Parker structures his Blues themes and there are compositions like "Cheryl" and Segment" which still sound contemporary. The lack of any real variety in his recorded output is also problematic - you can quickly appreciate why he became disillusioned with the limitations of jazz at the time and you can't help thinking that he would have been more inspired by the way jazz exploded in the range of possibilities in the 1960's. I don't think that any of his bands got anywhere nears as good as Miles , Coltrane's or a host of Blue Note records.
The other issue is that Parker no longer seems relevant. He is a source of inspiration for the likes of Rudresh Mahanthappa , for example, but he probably has as much in common with most of contemporary jazz as say King Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton or Benny Goodman. i.e. Maybe the inspiration for a particular "project." Parker almost seems eclipsed by other players from earlier generations who still seem to have a bearing on contemporary jazz. (i.e. Tenor players like David S Ware , David Murray or Branford Marsalis taking their cures from Ben Webster or a host of composers like Jason Roebke who are clearly indebted to Duke Ellington.) By contrast, Parker seems a bit quaint and, to be honest, not as radically different from his contemporaries like Johnny Hodges or Benny Carter - especially if you listen to the music they produced in the 1950's. He is slightly more adventurous from a rhythmic point of view but not radically different. There is a bigger gap between Eric Dolphy and Parker than there is between Parker and Carter, in my opinion.
I would have to say that Charlie Parker sound terrific on the records that I have been playing and his soloing is pretty consistent , even when he was getting a bit lazy in the composition stakes, rather like on the Venuti / Lang record I have had on recently where the "originals" are just re-workings of "Tiger Rag." I'm still a fan but Bird sounds more like Vintage Jazz / Classic Jazz than anything remotely "Modern." It is almost impossible to appreciate the shock value of his music and would have thought that most people who never listen to jazz could "get " his music really quickly.
Wind forward thirty years and it is fascinating to re-visit Charlie Parker , especially as I was so passionate about his playing in the past. I wanted to sound like that when I played piano and it was Be-bop I sought to teach me how to play improvised lines. I'm not quite so convinced by some aspects of Parker and think that his place in jazz has really shifted in the last thirty years. There are two problems for me. The first is that he never seemed to put together a truly great regular band. It was a shame that the Massey Hall line up was not a working group as it was totally devastating. The use of unison alto and trumpet combined with the themes employed gets a bit repetitive after about five or six tracks. I love the way Parker structures his Blues themes and there are compositions like "Cheryl" and Segment" which still sound contemporary. The lack of any real variety in his recorded output is also problematic - you can quickly appreciate why he became disillusioned with the limitations of jazz at the time and you can't help thinking that he would have been more inspired by the way jazz exploded in the range of possibilities in the 1960's. I don't think that any of his bands got anywhere nears as good as Miles , Coltrane's or a host of Blue Note records.
The other issue is that Parker no longer seems relevant. He is a source of inspiration for the likes of Rudresh Mahanthappa , for example, but he probably has as much in common with most of contemporary jazz as say King Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton or Benny Goodman. i.e. Maybe the inspiration for a particular "project." Parker almost seems eclipsed by other players from earlier generations who still seem to have a bearing on contemporary jazz. (i.e. Tenor players like David S Ware , David Murray or Branford Marsalis taking their cures from Ben Webster or a host of composers like Jason Roebke who are clearly indebted to Duke Ellington.) By contrast, Parker seems a bit quaint and, to be honest, not as radically different from his contemporaries like Johnny Hodges or Benny Carter - especially if you listen to the music they produced in the 1950's. He is slightly more adventurous from a rhythmic point of view but not radically different. There is a bigger gap between Eric Dolphy and Parker than there is between Parker and Carter, in my opinion.
I would have to say that Charlie Parker sound terrific on the records that I have been playing and his soloing is pretty consistent , even when he was getting a bit lazy in the composition stakes, rather like on the Venuti / Lang record I have had on recently where the "originals" are just re-workings of "Tiger Rag." I'm still a fan but Bird sounds more like Vintage Jazz / Classic Jazz than anything remotely "Modern." It is almost impossible to appreciate the shock value of his music and would have thought that most people who never listen to jazz could "get " his music really quickly.
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