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  • Old Grumpy
    Full Member
    • Jan 2011
    • 3693

    #16
    Originally posted by Ian Thumwood View Post
    Seems like a "jazz police" kind of response.

    I am pretty shocked to learn that Alan Barnes in 60 because I always thought he was one of the young talents emerge in the 1980s - I think with Tommy Chase.

    I have heard him do some quite interesting stuff with another under-rated player, Tony Kofi, which is good but the performances of music recorded in 1959 really emphasizes for me the fact that anything of this ilk really falls in to the Mainstream category rather likes players from the States such as Scott Hamilton or Harry Allen. It is difficult to fault but it always begs the question in my mind who is this music for? We are now in the last throes of a situation with a generation of fans who are perhaps looking at jazz from the point of view of nostalgia as opposed to a creative process which is still capable of existing in all styles of jazz. I remember a festival promoter from (I think) Belgium once explaining to me in about 2002 that they could see a time when a lot of jazz created between 1920s and 70s no longer had a bearing upon the audience.

    I find that the judgement of mainstream jazz is probably more subjective and open to uninformed criticism and prejudice than any other form of jazz. It was nicely summed up by the stance taken by the ridiculous Terry Cooper (late of this board) who would dish out vitriol on player like Alan Barnes and Simon Spillett whilst lauding the likes of Steve Fishwick who ploughed a similar furrow. By it's very nature this kind of music is not going to produce innovators and it only rarely comes up with musicians who can re-cast the Mainstream in a new concept such as the clarinettist Anat Cohen or the pianists Bill Charlap and , to a lesser degree, Gerald Clayton. I have some admiration for these kinds of players whilst keeping in the back of my mind the nagging doubt that the audience for this kind of jazz must be diminishing. However, whenever I have gone to "mainstream" gigs the halls have been fully booked even if the demography of the audience usually means I am often the youngest person there!

    The whole concept of "old fashioned" is decidedly slippery territory. The Free jazz and Jazz-rock of the late 60s and early 70s is now 50 years old itself and had those musicians been playing the music of 50 years prior to that they would be performing ODJB -style Dixieland. There is little in jazz that has dated as poorly as Fusion or Jazz Rock (maybe some of the Hip-hop musings from early 90s or early 2000's Nu Jazz) and I would reiterate that I still think that poor quality avant garde jazz sucks like nothing else. I would also add that I find the idea of Charlie Parker as being "Modern Jazz" pretty ludicrous these days and certainly the differences between jazz produced in 1929 and 1959 no longer seem quite so pronounced. Parker is as much of a historical figure in 2019 as Freddie Keppard.

    In my opinion, fair play to the likes of Barnes' finding something to say in this idiom but I think the results need to be good / original /interesting to stand out above the best jazz being recorded in the 2010's. I think the issue is whether the music such musicians are producing stands up to similar music in the style. I would also have to add that the Birchall track sounded no less "old fashioned" and even listening to an earlier JD Allen trio recording of blues material I would have to say that the ghost of Coltrane's "Crescent" hangs over this recording even though the newest record and "Radio Flyer" are far more outside and interesting.

    I can appreciate why there are those who love Barnes and others see him as an irrelevance but British jazz has always had a niche for this kind of music making which is slightly in reverence of American jazz as opposed to looking at what it might offer and running with the baton. I do not feel that it is reasonable to discard all musicians offering this approach and it is a sad world that cannot embrace the full gamut of a music that has a recorded history which now exceeds 100 years. However, I think it probably says a lot more about the jazz audience and why Bluesnik's comment to Tina May is probably what a lot of other fans think - especially those whose experience is generally limited to listening to records as opposed to live gigs as was the case with TC. Funny to see the "Cooperisms" now manifesting themselves in SA's posts!
    A thoughtful post, Ian, thank you. I agree, there should be space for all. It seems to me the "jazz police" may have as many subdivisions as the music itself.

    OG

    Comment

    • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
      Full Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 4353

      #17
      Originally posted by Old Grumpy View Post
      A thoughtful post, Ian, thank you. I agree, there should be space for all. It seems to me the "jazz police" may have as many subdivisions as the music itself.

      OG
      Chorus..
      "Jazz police are looking through my folders
      Jazz police are talking to my niece
      Jazz police have got their final orders
      Jazzer, drop your axe, it's Jazz police!"

      Leonard Cohen.

      BN.

      Comment

      • Serial_Apologist
        Full Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 38184

        #18
        Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View Post
        Chorus..
        "Jazz police are looking through my folders
        Jazz police are talking to my niece
        Jazz police have got their final orders
        Jazzer, drop your axe, it's Jazz police!"

        Leonard Cohen.

        BN.
        I'm surprised you're not upset by Ian's implication in his penultimate paragraph in #15, intended or otherwise! I was also surprised to find myself in agreement with much of what he wrote, notwithstanding the opening jibe at me about "thought police", and leaving aside his and my disagreements bout the significance of bebop as a qualitative break from Swing, imv. That said, there was actually a surprising amount of innovation in 1950s Mainstream, if we think of it as a genre in which older than bebop generation players like Hawk played and recorded in Jazz at the Phil-type settings, rather than what writers referred to as a post-bop mainstream in the 1980s, as represented by The Jazz Messengers. If line-ups Steve Lacy was involved in prior to working with Taylor can be considered under the former heading, then so, especially, could bands in this country outside the two main modernist circles led by Scott and Dankworth, in particular those of Sandy Brown and Humph Lyttelton, who incorporated West Indian tunes and rhythms into their repertoires. Humph, I believe, even collaborated with Ewan MacColl in the re-emergent folk movement of the 1950s, alongside promoting veteran American blues artists in parallel with Barber. Tony Coe is one example of a musician who evolved a strong modernist improvising vocabulary out of three players of the Ellington circle, Johnny Hodges, Russell Procope and Paul Gonsalves; I even went as far, admittedly (me) having imbibed a fair few, to approach him at the end of a gig a few years ago, to tell him how much more progressive his own playing was in comparison with more recent claimants to the Ellington sax heritage such as David Murray, because the styles he was drawing from were still current at the point he was taking them further, not 30 years distant. Nice man that he is, he answered that he didn't really think his debt to Gonsalves put him in an avant-garde category, though maybe his work with Derek Bailey might have! Bruce Turner, with his adaptation of Lee Konitz type thinking to fit in with more mainstream conceptions, is another example "in reverse", so to speak, in its representing a diminution of post-Parker improvising - innovative, nonetheless, but innovative in its time as it was dealing in what was then still current: there was still mileage to be made from previously unrealised potential. One can instance others - the British pianist and gracer of many a Tony Coe and even Kenny Wheeler recording Brian Lemon from the 1970s and 1980s, who was conversant with a very broad spectrum of the jazz tradition, deploying from Hines to Taylor by way of Garner and Powell to mostly non-progressive ends. One could almost consider Michael Garrick in the same terms.

        The extent to which it is possible to distinguish Mainstream innovators over here from their American comparators, and I'm thinking initially of those associated with Mingus from the "Ah Um" period onwards, is that with the latter one is conscious of a deliberate ironic aspect to the tributes - they are, among other things to do with acknowledgement of the history, in some ways a mild rebuke to the beboppers' disparagement of hyper-vocalised tone in parcicularly brass players of earlier generations, from whom they were making a big point of differentiating themselves as new, and non-compromising over white representative associations of "image". Jackie Byard was in effect saying, "I'm not merely a single line improviser in the bebop Walter Bishop mould, I can cover the whole tradition and play as well as anyone you could name, from James P Johnson to Cecil Taylor by way of Tatum". By the time we get to Herbie Hancock duetting with Chick Corea in 1977, the whole ethos of their "Lisa" interpretation, magnificent though it may be from a virtuosic pov, has become a knowning take on the past that can be spun post-modernistically for a while before being returned to base, but is as much virtuoso concert pianist encoring on a novelty as jazz, if not more so; and nothing done today in that light can change the fact: jazz that has become idiomatically outworn was once avant-garde, on its own terms. That this is is not the attitude a non-American could possibly hold at that time, and not just because he or she is going out of their way not to caricature - attitudes towards race in British jazz of the 1950s and 60s were often no better among the "modernists" than the "traddies" - but it is noteworthy that in its universalisation beyond American shores, jazz, in its idiom and performance principles (as if the two could be somehow separated!) has repeatedly shown its power to enrich music and musical cultures, without having to agree on every direction that enrichment process has taken.

        Comment

        • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 4353

          #19
          Well, I'd once again state (boringly no doubt) that jazz (to me) is about self-expression coupled with human communication. In which case the way people chose to play, the idom and era they associate with, is their prerogative. Not some "critic in the dung cart of progress" - Rimbaud. It's up to any audience to like or dislike, stay or walk away. It's not about winning prizes, the fastest in the spoon race, Cecil's got ten O levels etc. I now get totally sick of critical professorial prescription, the Cook/Morton books now being almost unreadable to me with their smart alec glib certainties (changed for the next edition), miles from the action unamusing putdowns. There is no meter to measure artistic value, its not a science despite the half digested faux sociology, that's the fucking point. As Ellington said exasperatedly, "Look, what you see is sixteen guys trying to earn a living". It really is "about time", comps to Mr Roach, that we ALL got over the juvenile romance of all this. If Alan Barnes wants to play somewhere between Benny Carter and Art Pepper, that's HIS choice, you don't have to eat there.

          Comment

          • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
            Full Member
            • Dec 2010
            • 4353

            #20
            And...

            "No judgement of taste is innocent - we are all snobs. Pierre Bourdieu’s Distinction (France 1979) brilliantly illuminates the social pretentions of the middle classes in the modern world, focusing on the tastes and preferences of the French bourgeoisie. First published in 1979, the book is at once a vast ethnography of contemporary France and a dissection of the bourgeois mind.

            In the course of everyday life we constantly choose between what we find aesthetically pleasing, and what we consider tacky, merely trendy, or ugly. Taste is not pure. Bourdieu demonstrates that our different aesthetic choices are all distinctions - that is, choices made in opposition to those made by other classes. This fascinating work argues that the social world functions simultaneously as a system of power relations and as a symbolic system in which minute distinctions of taste become the basis for social judgement."


            In the course of this he highlights French petite bourgeois film devotees and enthusiasts (substitute jazz fans?) who, outside established academic status routes, become obsessed with the minutiae of directors, producers, camera men, sound technicians, script writers etc as a means to acquire status - "social capital" - with their class peers and hopefully boost their own uncertain self image. Endless lists as analysis, a pretentious form of train spotting and VERY MALE. I would hesitate to draw comparisons...

            BN.

            Comment

            • Serial_Apologist
              Full Member
              • Dec 2010
              • 38184

              #21
              The fact that jazz lends itself to such a wide range of approaches to appreciation goes to show what a rich and complex thing it is: you, Ian and I can express different facets and decide what is most important to what makes it up; we might disagree on the angle, but yet agree on many other things. Jazzers - the musicians as opposed to some of the critics, I agree - are wonderful people on the whole, who I have found to be open to talking about themselves and the music more generally in terms of contents and well as lives and livelihoods; and I've made quite a few friends among the fan base who can always be drawn into conversations over the molre technical aspects, regardless of background: jazz is an excellent musical as well as social, cultural, historical and political learning vehicle.

              Comment

              • Ian Thumwood
                Full Member
                • Dec 2010
                • 4361

                #22
                SA & Bluesnik

                Just to clarify, the comments were made in jest although my observation about Bluesnik's remarks about Tina May's boyfriend are probably no different from many other comments I have heard at gigs over the years. I made the comment about the "Cooperism" because I think that it was necessary to explain the arbitrary nature of criticism from fans and this was probably best demonstrated by Trevor Cooper's posts which demolished the reputation of some musicians whilst lauding that of others who were probably little different - I never really felt TC actually listened to the music and jazz was more of a badge for him to wear to discuss his prejudices. As you say, most jazz fans are open-minded although TC's definition of jazz wavered beyond anything that wasn't produced by Dennis Preston! It wasn't meant to cause offence although I must admit I loved winding up Cooper when he contributed to the board although I think it was "The Old fella" who usually beat him up on this board!

                I think I should clarify that the gist of my post was centred along the idea that it is the criticism of "Mainstream" jazz which is probably the least consistent these days. I would also clarify that the definition of "mainstream" in 2019 is probably pretty broad these days!

                Comment

                • Serial_Apologist
                  Full Member
                  • Dec 2010
                  • 38184

                  #23
                  Originally posted by Ian Thumwood View Post
                  SA & Bluesnik

                  Just to clarify, the comments were made in jest although my observation about Bluesnik's remarks about Tina May's boyfriend are probably no different from many other comments I have heard at gigs over the years. I made the comment about the "Cooperism" because I think that it was necessary to explain the arbitrary nature of criticism from fans and this was probably best demonstrated by Trevor Cooper's posts which demolished the reputation of some musicians whilst lauding that of others who were probably little different - I never really felt TC actually listened to the music and jazz was more of a badge for him to wear to discuss his prejudices. As you say, most jazz fans are open-minded although TC's definition of jazz wavered beyond anything that wasn't produced by Dennis Preston! It wasn't meant to cause offence although I must admit I loved winding up Cooper when he contributed to the board although I think it was "The Old fella" who usually beat him up on this board!

                  I think I should clarify that the gist of my post was centred along the idea that it is the criticism of "Mainstream" jazz which is probably the least consistent these days. I would also clarify that the definition of "mainstream" in 2019 is probably pretty broad these days!
                  And I think Bluesnik's remarks about Tina May's boyfriend were likewise intended in jest. There seem to be any number of crossed wires in the last few posts up to yours, Ian. But never mind!!

                  Comment

                  • Jazzrook
                    Full Member
                    • Mar 2011
                    • 3167

                    #24
                    Was it Frank Zappa who said "Writing about jazz is like dancing about Architecture"?

                    JR

                    Comment

                    • Old Grumpy
                      Full Member
                      • Jan 2011
                      • 3693

                      #25
                      Originally posted by Jazzrook View Post
                      Was it Frank Zappa who said "Writing about jazz is like dancing about Architecture"?

                      JR
                      As with many things...


                      ...possibly, possibly not, it would seem!


                      OG

                      Comment

                      • Jazzrook
                        Full Member
                        • Mar 2011
                        • 3167

                        #26
                        Originally posted by Old Grumpy View Post
                        As with many things...


                        ...possibly, possibly not, it would seem!


                        OG
                        Thanks for that, OG.
                        Seems like comedian-musician, Martin Mull is the most likely originator of this mysterious quotation.

                        JR

                        Comment

                        • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                          Gone fishin'
                          • Sep 2011
                          • 30163

                          #27
                          Isn't most dancing done "about architecture"?
                          [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                          Comment

                          • Serial_Apologist
                            Full Member
                            • Dec 2010
                            • 38184

                            #28
                            Originally posted by Jazzrook View Post
                            Thanks for that, OG.
                            Seems like comedian-musician, Martin Mull is the most likely originator of this mysterious quotation.

                            JR
                            Something to Mullova then. Oh, somebody already bagged that for a name!

                            Comment

                            • Jazzrook
                              Full Member
                              • Mar 2011
                              • 3167

                              #29
                              Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
                              Something to Mullova then. Oh, somebody already bagged that for a name!
                              Will be listening to jazz bassist Misha Mullov-Abbado(& his violinist mum) on 'New Generation Artists' tonight(Radio 3, 10.30pm).

                              JR

                              Comment

                              • Serial_Apologist
                                Full Member
                                • Dec 2010
                                • 38184

                                #30
                                Originally posted by Jazzrook View Post
                                Will be listening to jazz bassist Misha Mullov-Abbado(& his violinist mum) on 'New Generation Artists' tonight(Radio 3, 10.30pm).

                                JR
                                Me too.

                                Comment

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