Originally posted by Ian Thumwood
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2. The other tune performed was "San" which , I believe, was an arrangement by Bill Challis. If if is ok to perform Brahms, why not work by Challis?
3. This is the first time that I have heard earlier styles of jazz performed on JLU. It is totally under-represented on the radio.
3. As far as I am aware, Ms Herbert and her husband have been on JLU twice during the course of the current football season . I have turned off on both occasions . Granted it may be clever and quite sophisticated, but it just seems too cute and lightweight. Not really jazz. Jelly Roll Morton would not have bee impressed!
3. As far as I am aware, Ms Herbert and her husband have been on JLU twice during the course of the current football season . I have turned off on both occasions . Granted it may be clever and quite sophisticated, but it just seems too cute and lightweight. Not really jazz. Jelly Roll Morton would not have bee impressed!
4. Why do you consider that earlier jazz musician's ability to express themselves by limited experience ? This is clearly a poorly judged statement. I think that the appeal of earlier jazz is strong because they do express their experiences better in their music. It is more personal and more individualistic. Whilst musicians today have bags more technique, it certainly doesn't make their music more compelling and is prone to lead to more monotonous music.
5. What is curious it that you love the free jazz / Improvised music scene. I can appreciate this too but it is worthwhile noting that a lot of this music has changed very little over the last 50 years. Go back 50 years before the explosion of the avant garde and Jelly Roll Morton had yet to record. Basically, a lot of the Free Jazz music is closer from a chronology to Morton's time than our own.
6. At what point do you say that it is unacceptable to perform music from jazz's past. Where would you stop? Say no to Morton, Ellington , Fletcher Henderson, Monk, Kenny Wheeler and Andrew Hill as all these musicians have passed. What about Chris McGregor ? Surely any BoB re-union is no different from Jelly Roll Morton as these charts date from over 40 years ago? How about Buck Clayton ? Do we put his music in the skip because it is no longer "reflective of a complex world?! I think not. In your argument, there is no credibility in performing this music and it is a pointless exercise revisiting a composer whose music crystalized big band swing / mainstream jazz despite the fact that it has musical merits and is great fun to listen to. At what point did jelly Roll Mroton and Buck Clayton reach their sell by date ? Hoe much shelf life has Kenny Wheeler's music got. Should we cease trying to explore unperformed works by Herbie Nichols just because they were written in the 1950's or does the fact that they are written make this ok ?
I think the definition of jazz is very broad but the idea that improvised is evolving and reflecting a more complex world is a generalisation. Granted that there will be things like the Herbert concert that make me cringe and have limit connection to the jazz I listen to, I think jazz has always been varied even in the early 20's when there was an ideological battleground between orchestrated and improvised approach to jazz. Later the likes of Eddie Condon would record tracks like "Carnegie Drag" in response to Goodman's concert in 1938. There have always been multiple strands running in the music and not everybody has been cutting edge. Even cutting edge musicians have recorded mainstream stuff. Most fans these days can see the connection between the different styles of jazz and can listen to all.
It is always worthwhile reading your posts , SA as you are by far the most eloquent poster on here but I think in this instance you have over generalised. Earlier styles of jazz get a raw deal these days. Better off expressing your annoyance at the stuff on JLU that purports to be jazz but which isn't.
Off to play squash.......
Off to play squash.......
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