Originally posted by RichardB
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No sure that I agree that improvised music necessary has an athencity about it or vice versa. The latter is clearly the case whether you are talking about Robert Johnson perfoming a blues (pre-rehearsed and not improvised ) or any number of Classical composers whose music is no less authentic than improvised works. Is Bartok's music any more of less athentic that is folk music sources ? I think there is a lot of the idea of "truth" being captured that could be considered spurious but, by the same token, this is also a lot of music where this does apply. There is also a lot of music which is clearly superifical or shallow in it's execution and maybe even cynical as is increasngly the case these days where commercial pressures seem paramount.
I would also argue that you might have to take a lot of the social, political or even personal circumstances in to consideration as to whether a musician is being truthful, honest or authentic. It is very subjective and clearly the idea of what is "truthful" in jazz can be seen as being on dodgy ground. I recall someone on here commenting about the pianist Phineas Newborn being poorly considered by some crdits of his day because of the perceived view of his style of playing. Seventy yers later and these comments seem a bit stupid. I find it interesting how some jazz or blues musicians are dismissed for a lack of authencity and hoe these views are often propagated by non-musicians. You just have to look back to earlier generations of critics and writers such as Rudi Blesh or Eric Hobsbawm where their arguments no longer stand up to close scrutiny.
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