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Black Beauty – Black Power

Tradition and revolution in the music of John Coltrane, illustrated by looking at various interpretations of “My Favorite Things”

Written for the  Festschrift for Alfons Michael Dauer. Published in: Bernd Hoffmann & Helmut Rösing (Hgg.): ... Und der Jazz ist nicht von Dauer. Aspekte afro-amerikanischer Musik, Karben 1998, p. 309-332. This is a translation from the German original.

John Coltrane is – not without reason – considered one of the most important and influential jazz musicians of the 1960s. His music acts as a link between the bebop-rooted styles of the 1950s and the avant-garde jazz of the 1960s. The free jazz of musicians such as Albert Ayler, Pharoah Sanders, Archie Shepp and others is generally regarded as a kind of musical “revolution”. Coltrane's enormous influence on these same musicians makes him a forerunner of the new music. Experience has shown, however, that the pioneers of revolutions are usually the greatest revolutionaries – they are the ones who break with the old and thus make the new possible. They are also the link between tradition and the avant-garde, without which a revolution would be impossible – and a musical revolution even less so.

When critics listened to musicians such as Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor and John Coltrane in the 1960s, they found that something new was emerging that was clearly different from the swing and bebop-influenced music. The quick verdict of the critics was that the free jazz of these musicians was the ideal example of a musical revolution, a revolution that reflected social and societal developments in America in those years or – the hopeful version – anticipated them. 

Liberal American cultural theorists in particular, such as the white journalist Frank Kofsky[1] and the black poet LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka)[2] were among the proponents of such a theory of revolution. But musicians also acknowledged the political function of their music. Archie Shepp has often expressed himself in this direction[3]; in 1964, a festival at which some of the young avant-garde artists performed was called “October Revolution”[4]; and in 1971 there was even a trio called the Revolutionary Ensemble, which included violinist Leroy Jenkins, bassist Sirone and drummer Frank Clayton. 

The political content of these developments concerned titles, the lyrics of vocal pieces, public statements by musicians, participation in political activities, but also, for example, the consistent rejection of jazz performance conventions: free jazz musicians sometimes played extremely long pieces that demanded their audience's full attention. Club owners were anything but happy about this, as it had a direct impact on their drinks sales. As a result, many musicians began organizing their own concerts or opening up new venues for their music. Musical decisions therefore had concrete results in terms of changing working and presentation conditions.

In John Coltrane's music, there are few references to a political statement in his music. Coltrane played jazz standards well into the 1960s. There were also numbers the titles of which referred to black American history – including music history – such as “Africa”, “Spiritual”, “Afro-Blue”, etc. From the mid-1960s onwards, there were more and more compositions the titles of which referred to a new mindset – to Coltrane's fascination with Far Eastern philosophy. His compositions are now called “Peace on Earth”, “Out of This World”, “Compassion”, “Love”, “Serenity”, “Meditations” and so on. At most, titles such as “Reverend King” – an allusion to Dr. Martin Luther King –, “Song of the Underground Railroad” or “Alabama” have a direct political reference[5].

Aside: USA, 1960s

In the wake of the legendary bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama, the black civil rights movement in the United States found a new and influential leader in Dr. Martin Luther King. King was a revolutionary in the sense that he aligned his political work with ideals that aimed for the peaceful coexistence of black and white in American society. The “revolutionary” aspect of King's actions and speeches was therefore to be found in his demand for constitutional civil rights for black people – non-violently, but with the highest moral standards. The assassination of Martin Luther King may very well be seen as evidence that his kind of “peaceful” revolution, which took place “on the soil of the Constitution” and did nothing other than demand this Constitution for all citizens of the United States everywhere and at all times, was far more dangerous for a reactionary and thoroughly racist America than the clear political fronts created by the propaganda of the Black Muslims or later the Black Panther Party.

The Black Muslims attempted to establish new ethical, political and cultural values – with the aim of restoring black Americans' pride in their own origins, history and skin color. The slogan of the late 1950s “Black Is Beautiful” already points to this policy of the Black Muslims. The Muslims provided an illusion-free and therefore quite radical analysis of white American society and thus played an important role in the radicalization of the civil rights movement. Malcolm X, who came from the Black Muslim community but separated from it again in the mid-1960s, became a potential leader of the black proletariat and was probably murdered for this reason. While the slogan “Black Is Beautiful” called for a growing self-confidence of black people in their skin color and their own tradition, the call for “Black Power”, which resounded in America from the mid-1960s, was an even more radical demand for power and self-determination, a demand to break out of the ghetto and thus an attack on the status quo of social conditions in the United States. 

During the “hot summer” of 1964, there were "race riots" in New York, Philadelphia and Chicago. In August 1965, there were similar riots in the black neighborhood of Watts in Los Angeles. Despite checks by the federal authorities, the voting procedures in the Southern states were not carried out correctly. In 1966, the growing radicalization of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States led to the founding of the Black Panther Party, which rejected the non-violent policies of Dr. Martin Luther King and his followers and now demanded their rights through violent action. Bobby Seale, Huey P. Newton and Stokeley Carmichael claimed the right to self-arm for themselves and their Black Panthers. The Black Panthers organized their “party” very tightly and even awarded offices with titles such as “Minister of Defence”, “Minister of Information” or “Foreign Minister”[6].

The radicalization of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s subsided in the early 1970s. One reason for this was certainly the changed living conditions of black people in the United States, the causes of which were undoubtedly rooted in the actions of the Civil Rights Movement. The Vietnam trauma, which caused America's political self-confidence to shrink considerably by the end of the 1960s at the latest, also contributed to a softening of the fronts. Civil Rights groups such as the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), SNCC (Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee), CORE (Congress of Racial Equality), SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership Conference), Black Muslims and Black Panthers all contributed in their own way to the fact that the situation not only of the black middle class improved to some extent in the 1970s. (The fact that in recent years there has been an increasing radicalization among blacks, especially in the big city ghettos, and that the still existing black Islamic groups (today: Nation of Islam) have recently experienced considerable growth, is certainly related to the fact that under the policies of Ronald Reagan and George Bush the gap between rich and poor – and thus automatically also the gap between white and black – has widened considerably again.[7], der trotz seiner offen antisemitischen, antifeministischen  und homophoben Äußerungen dazu in der Lage war, auch die schwarzen Intellektuellen zu mobilisieren, beispielweise bei dem von der Nation of Islam organisierten „Million Man March“ im Oktober 1995.) 


The revolt in jazz

When John Coltrane made a name for himself in the 1950s in various groups around Miles Davis, there was no question of a revolution in the music scene and jazz development. The Miles Davis Quintet or Sextet of the late 1950s was still rooted in what is commonly referred to as hard bop. The modal improvisation style that Davis and Coltrane cultivated together in this group was a logical attempt to further develop the harmonic achievements of bebop. At the same time, however, the formal constrictions of jazz were to be overcome, such as those resulting from the constant stringing together of countless choruses with the same structure and the same harmonic progressions. In modal playing, improvisation was based on a specific modal scale from which the musicians derived the tonal material for their solos. Ultimately, the modal playing style of Davis, Coltrane and others was an attempt to free themselves from the formal dilemma of jazz in those years – the Third Stream, the music of Charles Mingus or the early free jazz of Ornette Coleman or Cecil Taylor were other attempts, but they were started for the same reason[8].

None of this was a revolution by any means. Even Coltrane's first own groups were still musically based on what the saxophonist had made famous with the Miles Davis Quintet: on modal improvisational structures that Coltrane – just like conventional ballads or other changes compositions – combined with sound surfaces, what critics soon called “sheets of sound”[9] . These are irregular groups of notes in which the saxophonist breaks up chords so that he seems to spread out a chordal carpet of sound from his instrument. In his early bands, Coltrane developed this technique to a mastery that explains why he has been regarded as a master and innovator of his instrument since the early 1960s – and not only by younger colleagues.

With his “sheets of sound”, Coltrane went beyond the primarily harmonically oriented modal improvisation style. This was quite logical, since the breaking up of harmonic form in jazz had to be followed by the breaking up of metric form, especially when irregular tone groupings became increasingly important in the phrasing of a musician like Coltrane. Despite all this, however, Coltrane did not abandon the traditional characteristics of jazz until the mid-1960s. He continued to play standards, original compositions on changes and ballads. His sound had his own espressivity, that personal expression that plays such an important role in jazz. His bands still worked with the division of tasks into melody and rhythm section, a division that was questioned by other musicians – Taylor, Coleman. 

To put it succinctly: there were far more advanced examples of improvised jazz in the early 1960s. Ornette Coleman and Cecil Taylor had ventured – each in their own way – into freer spheres. Even the Third Stream of Gunther Schuller with improvised parts by Coleman or Eric Dolphy seemed more daring and “revolutionary” than the thoroughly conventional music of Coltrane[10]. At the end of 1962 Coltrane recorded the album “Ballads”, which today could easily be played as party background music without anyone getting upset[11]. “Lush Life”, an album with singer Johnny Hartman, was released at the beginning of 1963[12]. It was not until 1964 that “A Love Supreme”[13] or “Ascension” (1965)[14] and other records that – at least in retrospect – made it possible to understand why Coltrane was considered musically revolutionary. 

Im Oktober 1958 und im Juli 1960 ging John Coltrane mit einigen Musikern ins Studio, die gemeinhin der anderen Seite jener Jazzentwicklung zugerechnet werden, die wir als Free Jazz bezeichnen: mit Cecil Taylor (under dessen Namen diese Aufnahmesitzung lief) und Don Cherry. Mit Taylor und dem Trompeter Kenny Dorham entstand 1958 die Platte „Coltrane Time“[15], die an keiner Stelle das über­schreitet, was im Hardbop jener Jahre üblich war – abgesehen höchstens von den stilistisch widerborstigen Klaviereinwürfen Taylors. Die Plattensitzung für „The Avant-Garde“[16] von 1960 mit Don Cherry und anderen Musikern aus dem Umfeld Ornette Colemans ist vor allem durch drei Coleman-Kompositionen geprägt sowie durch die Coleman verbundene Spielkonzeption. In beiden Fällen handelt es sich also nicht etwa um eine gleichberechtigte Begegnung Coltranes mit Musikern und Spielkonzepten der damaligen Avantgarde, sondern eher um Sessions, bei denen Coltrane wie eine Art Gaststar wirkt, der sich in das Repertoire und die Spielauf­fassung seiner Mitmusiker einzupassen hat. Das Ganze ermöglicht somit zwar einen Einblick, inwieweit Coltranes Spielauffassung mit dem Konzept der jungen Avant­garde kompatibel ist, zeigt aber vor allem die Anpassungsfähigkeit Coltranes in unterschiedlichen musikalischen Umgebungen. In „The Avant-Garde“ wirkt Coltrane wie ein – durchaus willkommener – Fremdkörper in der bis zum fehlenden Klavier hin durchgestalteten Ornette Coleman-Besetzung. 

Ornette Coleman and Cecil Taylor never referred directly to Coltrane in order to justify their own playing concept. There were fundamental differences between the three musicians. Coltrane stood for harmonic, Taylor for tonal and Coleman for melodic/rhythmic upheavals[17]. Musicians around and after Coltrane were therefore primarily concerned with harmonic-sound innovations; the Coleman group concentrated on the development of melodic-motivic improvisation; and the musicians who gathered around Taylor were particularly interested in group sound, sound-oriented collective improvisation and thoroughly emotional musical communication. 

The group around Coleman was all too easily suspected of “intellectualism”, as they had intensive contacts with the Third Streamers around Gunther Schuller and John Lewis – Coleman took part in some of the Orchestra USA concerts, with which Schuller and Lewis wanted to present their ideas to a wider public. However, this contact with a kind of “intellectual” jazz scene made them highly suspect as musical “revolutionaries”. With their idea of bringing together different traditions, didn't Schuller, Lewis and other third streamers want to soften the “Afro-American heritage” and impose an aesthetic value system on black music that had been imported from Europe?[18]?

Cecil Taylor's apparent break with many obvious traditions was no less problematic. His concept was too individual and stubborn, too little based on understanding or at least emotional empathy, for this music to have achieved the charisma of revolution. And perhaps this is precisely one reason why, instead of those who seemed to go much further musically than Coltrane, it was precisely Coltrane who had the reputation of being a revolutionary.

In the 1960s, John Coltrane was appropriated by a number of spokespeople for the black cause, not least because his music seemed to stand much more clearly in a soul and blues-influenced tradition than was the case with Taylor or Coleman. His turn to Far Eastern attitudes was also very much on the same wavelength as developments of the time. The turn to Islam, which was so popular in black society in America in those years, was nothing other than the search for a new spiritual or religious identity – a conscious rejection of Christianity, which had shaped African-American history so significantly, but was still seen by the angry black men of the 1960s primarily as a religion of the white world. Coltrane's spiritual turn to Far Eastern ways of thinking and living was far less of a political statement than the newly adopted Islamic names of Black Muslims[19]. Nevertheless, the effect of his new appearance – perhaps only because of the interpretation by the black cultural popes of the time – was a thoroughly political one. 


Coltrane and the aesthetic discourse of the 1960s

The myth of the revolutionary Coltrane can really only be understood with knowledge of the aesthetic discussion of the 1960s, in which black cultural theorists such as LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka), Ron Karenga and others played an important role.

Karengas Auffassung von schwarzer Kunst ist schnell zusammengefaßt: „All art“, so sagt er, „must reflect and support the Black Revolution, and any art that does not discuss and contribute to the revolution is invalid“.[20]

In 1965 LeRoi Jones writes 1965 about John Coltrane's music: "Trane is a mature swan whose wing span was a whole new world. But he also showed us how to murder the popular song. To do away with weak Western forms.“[21] In his autobiography, Jones further describes this “revolutionary” element in Coltrane's music: “(...) he'd play sometimes chorus after chorus, taking the music apart before our ears, splintering the chords and sounding each note, resounding it, playing it backwards and upside down trying to get to something else. And we heard our own search and travails, our own reaching for new definition. Trane was our flag.”[22] 

And Miles Davis adds: "Trane’s music and what he was playing during the last two or three years of his life represented, for many blacks, the fire and passion and rage and anger and rebellion and love that they felt, especially among the young black intellectuals and revolutionaries of that time. He was expressing through music what H. Rap Brown and Stokely Carmichael and the Black Panthers and Huey Newton were saying with their words, what the Last Poets and Amiri Baraka were saying in poetry. He was their torchbearer in jazz, now ahead of me. He played what they felt inside and were expressing through riots – 'burn, baby, burn' – that were taking place everywhere in this country during the 1960s. It was all about revolution for a lot of young black people – Afro hairdos, dashikis, black power, fists raised in the air. Coltrane was their symbol, their pride – their beautiful, black revolutionary pride."[23]

The American literary scholar William J. Harris places Coltrane in the tradition of signifyin', the coding and encoding of black tradition, which has persisted in black American popular culture right up to the present day[24]. Coltrane, he says, uses this tradition of signifyin' in relation to the white song tradition when he musically dissects a musical hit like “My Favorite Things”, seemingly creating a parody, but one that is well within the black tradition of appropriating white values (language, gestures, religion, imagery, etc.)[25]. And this kind of appropriation and simultaneous re-evaluation of a white musical aesthetic is probably what made Coltrane's music considered revolutionary by many spokespeople of the 1960s, even though the pronounced individuality of his music was completely at odds with the concept of “socialist realism” that many of the black spokespeople of those years were leaning on[26].

If one understands Coltrane's music as LeRoi Jones does, one may indeed see a parallel to the demands of the young angry theorists, the Black Nationalists, who became the spokesmen of the Black movement in the United States from the mid-1960s. But can such a concept really be found in Coltrane's music? Isn't Coltrane still firmly rooted in the tradition of jazz appropriation of musical material, even in his late recordings? Is there really a difference whether Coleman Hawkins interprets “Body and Soul”, Charlie Parker “Just Friends” or John Coltrane “My Favorite Things”? An analysis of the various versions of the latter composition recorded by Coltrane can clarify what Jones means by “taking apart” the popular song, by breaking up the formal structure for which Coltrane himself functionalizes the original composition.


“My Favorite Things”, composition

„My Favorite Things“ wurde vom Komponisten Richard Rodgers und vom Textdichter Oscar Hammerstein II. 1959 für das Musical „The Sound of Music“ verfaßt. Die Komposition hat eine relativ einfache Themenstruktur (A1-A2-A3-B) und ist auch harmonisch eher simpel konzipiert (vgl. Abbildung 1). Die Teile A1 und A2 stehen in e-Moll, A3 in der Dur-Variante E-Dur, der Teil B schließlich führt in die Dur-Parallele G-Dur. Den Teilen A2 und A3 steht jeweils ein Vamp voran – vor A2 in e-Moll, vor A3 in E-Dur. Der 3/4-Takt ergibt sich aus dem Musical-Plot, der im Österreich des Jahres 1938 angesiedelt ist. 

„My Favorite Things“, 1960[27]

Coltrane's most famous recording from October 1960[28] war eine der ersten und ist sicher die bekannteste Jazz-Version des Musical-Hits. Die Grundstruktur des Arrangements arbeitet mit einer konstanten Abwechslung von thematischen Teilen und Improvisation über dem durchgehenden Dreierrhythmus von Klavier, Baß und Schlagzeug (vgl. Formschema Abbildung 2). Alle Thementeile hintereinander erklingen in korrekter Reihenfolge zum Schluß – in der ersten Hälfte unterbrochen von langen Improvisationspartien. Ausgangspunkt der modalen Improvisationsteile der Aufnahme sind jeweils die Einleitungs-vamps der einzelnen Formteile (s.o.) in e-Moll bzw. E-Dur. In der Gewichtung zwischen Thema und Improvisation allerdings entsteht dabei der Klangeindruck, das die Improvisationsteile den jeweils vorangegangenen A-Teilen folgen, nicht wie ein vamp auf die jeweils nächsten hinzielen (Vergleich des generellen Formverlaufs der Originalkomposition und der Coltrane’schen Versionen vgl. Abbildung 1). Bei der Themenvorstellung zu Beginn sind diese Improvisationsteile mit acht bzw. 16 Takten noch relativ kurz, nehmen im Klavier- bzw. Sopransaxophonsolo dann bis zu 18 Achttaktern ein. A1 und A2 des Sopransaxophonsolos sind in den Improvisationsablauf eingepaßt, A3 und ein verfremdeter B-Teil werden – ohne zwischengeschaltete Improvisation – zum thematischen Abschluß der Aufnahme. Während McCoy Tyners Solo kaum melodische Erfindung enthält und über lange Strecken wie ein ausgedehnter vamp wirkt – und damit eigentlich ganz in der Atmosphäre der Originalkomposition bleibt –, entwickelt Coltrane dynamische Steigerungspartien, die schließlich zum jeweils neuen Themenstatement zurückführen. Die stete Abwechslung thematischer und improvisierter Partien innerhalb der Struktur der zugrundeliegenden Komposition – also nicht in der im Jazz üblichen Chorusreihung – ist Programm, und so wirkt es auch ganz folgerichtig, daß der B-Teil erst am Schluß der Aufnahme erklingt. Die ganze Realisation ist damit quasi eine Erweiterung der inneren Struktur von „My Favorite Things“, wobei erst das vollständige Statement aller Teile in Sopransaxophonsolo und thematischem Abschluß beim (vorgebildeten) Hörer das Schlußerlebnis bewirkt.

“My Favorite Things”, 1962

In a live recording from the Village Vanguard from 1962[29] stößt der Flötist Eric Dolphy zum klassischen Coltrane-Quartett. Dolphy stammt nicht – wie der spätere Coltrane-Partner Pharoah Sanders – aus der Coltrane-Schule, sondern bildete seinen Stil eher aus Third-Stream-zugeneigten Erfahrungen in den Gruppen Chico Hamiltons und in der New Yorker Szene um Gunther Schuller und John Lewis. Er arbeitet in seinem Solo über „My Favorite Things“ mit motivischen Floskeln, die – an Anfang und Ende der Improvisation gesetzt – fest geformte Bestandteile seines „Favorite Things“-Solos in jener Zeit bei Coltrane zu sein scheinen. Er nutzt Überblas­techniken in einem „zahmeren“ Sinne als dies bei Pharoah Sanders und späteren Free-Jazz-Musikern der Fall ist. Coltranes Sopransaxophonsolo in dieser Fassung zeichnet sich dadurch aus, daß die Intensität seiner Improvisation scheinbar mit der erreichten Tonhöhe zusammenhängt und nicht so sehr durch rhythmische oder klangliche Elemente bewirkt wird. Mitten im Solo finden sich motivisch-thematische Bezüge. Im Ablauf der Realisation aber gleicht die Aufnahme dem Ablaufkonzept von 1960.

“My Favorite Things”, 1963

Eine Live-Einspielung vom Newport Jazz Festival des Jahres 1963 läßt konzeptionelle Konstanten und bewußte Änderungen der Struktur erkennen. In der Einspielung, die auf der LP „Selflessness“ veröffentlicht wurde[30]the standardization of Coltrane's thematic statement becomes clear once again: in both the early and later interpretations, it repeatedly leads to an ecstatic climax, from which either the new beginning of the theme emerges or the stylized improvisation develops. The typical Coltrane style of playing – the breaking up of chords, the sequencing of scale fragments etc. – also plays an important role in the 1963 version. As in 1960 and 1962, but unlike in later recordings, the waltz rhythm of the theme is retained at every point in 1963, so that a thematic frame of reference exists throughout the realization – albeit broken up by extended modal phases. More than in the previous versions, Coltrane's solo before the final theme in 1963 has the effect of a long extended cadenza which is resolved in the theme – an effect which is reinforced by the fact that this final theme is immediately followed by another modal improvisation by Coltrane.

“My Favorite Things”, 1966

From May 1966[31] comes a live version, which also shows considerable conceptual differences to the versions discussed so far. Its altered concept is also repeated in other recordings from the mid-1960s[32]. In addition to Coltrane on soprano saxophone and in the dialog passages on bass clarinet, Pharoah Sanders (tenor saxophone, flute), Alice Coltrane (piano), Jimmy Garrison (bass), Rashied Ali and Emanuel Rahim (drums) play in the recording of a concert from the New York club Village Vanguard. 

Coltrane himself commented on the changes to the concept of “My Favorite Things”: 

"In 'My Favorite Things' my solo has been following a general path. I don’t want it to be that way because the free part in there, I wanted it to be just something where we could improvise on just the minor chord and the major chord, but it seems like it gets harder and harder to really find something different on it. I’ve got several landmarks that I know I’m going to get to, so I try to play something in between that’s different and keep hoping I hear something different on it. But it usually goes always the same way every night. I think that 3/4 has something to do with this particular thing. I find that it’s much easier for me to change and be different in a solo on 4/4 tunes because I can play some tunes I’ve been playing for five years and might hear something different, but it seems like that 3/4 has kind of got a straight jacket on us there!"[33] 

Accordingly, one of the most important changes in the interpretation of the mid-60s is the abandonment of a continuous 3/4 meter in the improvisation parts as well as the abandonment of the thematic statement of A1 and A2 in the second section, in which free improvisation predominates (cf. the flow chart of this recording, figure 3).

Ein Klaviersolo, wie es in den Versionen mit McCoy Tyner immer gleich nach der Themenexposition zu finden ist, fehlt in der Fassung vom Mai 1966. Nach einem fünf-minütigen, thematisch unabhängigen – und auf der Schallplattenveröffentlichung auf die andere Plattenseite gepreßten – Baßeinleitung beginnt Coltrane mit einem langen modalen vamp, in dem er das harmonische Material ausbreitet – über geduldigen Klavierakkorden und intensivem Schlagzeugspiel. Unter dem ersten Themenstatement hält die Rhythmusgruppe die modale Atmosphäre bei, so daß die Melodie des ein­gängigen Themas harmonisch verfremdet scheint, damit aber zugleich der Weg geöffnet ist zu einer Improvisation, deren thematischer Zusammenhang mehr im Atmosphärischen liegt als in den vorangegangenen Fassungen. Das folgende Themenstatement ist immerhin sehr viel deutlicher – hier tritt die Themenform weit stärker in den Vordergrund. 

Coltrane steps back and Pharoah Sanders begins his tenor saxophone solo in the low register – as mentioned, without a thematic statement. But Sanders' solo also seems to have far less of a direct melodic connection to the song theme than Coltrane's playing before. There is no longer a harmonic outline, tonal references can only be guessed at in places, and the metrical basis is also completely broken up. Sanders' screeching, overblown chains of sound sometimes seem like the playing of a man possessed. Coltrane can be heard in the background with driving calls on the bass clarinet. After an energetic climax, Sanders' intensity drops, only to rise again immediately afterwards in a dialog between the two saxophonists - the transition, as it were, to Coltrane's soprano saxophone solo. Coltrane works over a clearly reduced percussive ground and a modal basis that now shines through again. He uses harmonically/modally identifiable chains of motifs, scale breaks in which the pitch reached in each case indicates the intensity of the music – not rhythmic, tonal or other parameters. The whole thing has an etude-like effect over long stretches - short scales/chord breaks that chase across the entire instrument in sequences. A final thematic statement (A3 and B) seems to want to take back what has happened in between, creating an unworldly – and therefore conciliatory? – atmosphere. 

It is astonishing how the familiar, chant-like theme seems to harmonize the entire 20-minute musical event almost retrospectively, how it perhaps actually seems a little as if the breaking apart of the thematic foundation – the “revolution” against the rule of chorus and harmony – is the basis of a new order, the prerequisite for a complete appropriation of the material. But all this – as must be emphasized again and again – is by no means new. Many musical concepts are ultimately based on the idea of “per aspera ad astra” – whether in the mind of the composer or in the reflections of the theorist – above all the sonata form that so defined European music of the 18th and 19th centuries, in which the initial theme is broken up and an examination of the musical material takes place, which ultimately leads to the theme appearing “purified”, as it were, in a new light in the recapitulation. Of course, Coltrane, or jazz in general, is a long way from being able to be compared with the formal models of European music history. And yet, especially with such clear and memorable themes as in “My Favorite Things”, the arguments of LeRoi Jones are quite comparable to those of the theorists of the 19th century. On a somewhat crudely defined musical terrain, they see the path described here that black art, black society, “black power” must take: in an appropriation of white music.


A comparison of the different versions of “My Favorite Things” by John Coltrane reveals the following: 

Ein Grund für die Faszination Coltranes durch den relativ simplen Walzer von Rodgers und Hammerstein mag gerade darin begründet liegen, daß es sich um sehr einfache und einprägsame Harmonien handelt, um eine Melodik, die eigentlich diese Harmonik nur noch unterstützt, um eine Reihungsform (A1-A2-A3-B), in der ein Aufbrechen des Chorus einfacher ist als in der im popular song sonst üblichen Reprisenbarform. Schon Coltranes Themenstatement zeigt, welche von üblichen Chorusstrukturen abweichende Vorstellung der Saxophonist von einem optimalen Ablauf über „My Favorite Things“ hatte: Er deutet den in der ursprünglichen Komposition kurzen vamp als Hauptmoment, ja geradezu als Ziel- und Höhepunkt seiner Interpretation. Coltranes Konzept bewerkstelligt den Aufbruch der musikalischen Form damit aus der ursprünglichen Komposition heraus und mündet in einen Formverlauf, in welchem alle Bestandteile – Einleitung, thematische Partien, Soli – dem dramatischen konzipierten Gesamtverlauf untergeordnet sind, ohne das die Solisten dabei eingeschränkt wären. Wenn erst am Ende das vollständige Thema erklingt, wird dem Hörer ganz unbewußt der Zusammenhang dieser so unaufdringlich durchkonzipierten Form bewußt. 

Coltrane kombiniert nebenbei meisterhaft traditionelle Elemente – ein Walzerthema, das in durchaus tänzelnder Manier formuliert wird – und freie Improvisation — wobei die Freiheit vor allem die harmonische Freiheit ist, die Coltrane in den späten 1950er Jahren durch seine Meisterschaft in der modalen Improvisation errungen hat. Coltrane ist es gelungen, diese modale Improvisationsweise auf eine Komposition des american popular song anzuwenden, nicht – wie bei Davis – auf eigens geschriebene Stücke, denen das modale Schema von vornherein zugrundelag. Und dazu entwickelt er sie auch noch aus der Komposition selbst heraus – gewiß ein Musterbeispiel für den prozeß des signifyin‘ in afro-amerikanischer Musik. Diese Art eines „revolutionären Aktes“, den Coltrane der Musik angedeihen läßt, diesen signifyin‘-Prozeß des Umdeutens eines Schlagers in genuine afro-amerikanische Musik meinte LeRoi Jones – der ja 1965 nur die frühen Aufnahmen kannte –, wenn er das Aufbrechen überkommener Strukturen in Coltranes My Favorite Things hervorhob.

Coltrane's late phase is often characterized by the fact that the saxophonist had gathered together all the musical experiences and developments he had gathered and undergone in earlier years, that he could now “draw from the full”, so to speak. Perhaps there really is something to the characterization of the “mature phase” with which various critics have tried to describe Coltrane's years 1965 to 1967. Such maturity is characterized, for example, by the fact that Coltrane did not follow any of the previously chosen paths with “blinkers”, but used the vocabulary, the musical grammar that made up his personal style, quite inconsistently – namely in the service of the music (!). Ekkehard Jost writes with reference to Coltrane's last years: “Modality was hardly used any more; and the exception, namely the recording of the old standard ‘My Favorite Things’, which is so closely linked to Coltrane's career, only confirms the rule here too.”[34] In fact, however, the recording with Pharoah Sanders shows that this modal principle is not always carried out consistently in the late years, that other moments are more prominent, whether they are called emotionality, spirituality or transcendence of the musical material – all terms that are often used in connection with Coltrane. 


Conclusion

When people talk about Coltrane as a musical innovator or even a revolutionary, they are primarily referring to the influence that the saxophonist had on the musicians who followed him - on saxophonists and other instrumentalists alike. And it is not only the recordings of 1966 or 1967 that are generally meant, but also those of the Atlantic years around 1960, the Impulse records from 1961 to 1965, when one thinks of Coltrane, whose virtuosity and playing concept was so influential on the development of jazz. In “My Favorite Things” it becomes particularly clear how the concept for a piece that was taken into the repertoire as a feature for modal improvisation can change over the years to accommodate new forms of musical expression, without the free playing of the mid-1960s being understood as a complete rebellion against the fixed scheme of the early recordings. The label of the revolutionary Coltrane – however well it may characterize the new attitude – obscures those qualities that are far more to the fore in the saxophonist than the subversive: his ability to deal creatively with the musical tradition from which he came. 


[1] Frank Kofsky's articles have appeared in the leading jazz magazine Down Beat as well as in other influential US magazines. See Frank Kofsky: Black Nationalism and the Revolution in Music, New York 1970, a collection of essays originally published in the mid-1960s.

[2] LeRoi Jones: Blues People. The Negro Experience in White America and the Music that Developed from It, New York 1963; ders.: Black Music, New York 1967

[3] Cf.–- representative of many similar sources – Valerie Wilmer: Jazz People, London 1977, p. 153 ff (chapter “The Fire This Time”); Archie Shepp: An Artist Speaks Bluntly, in: Down Beat, 32/26 (16.Dezember 1965), S. 11, 42

[4] Cf. Ekkehard Jost: Sozialgeschichte des Jazz in den USA, Frankfurt/Main 1982, S. 212 f; Dan Morgenstern und Martin Williams: The October Revolution. Two Views of the Avant Garde in Action, in: Down Beat, 31/30 (19.November 1964), S. 15, 33

[5] Africa auf Africa/Brass (Impulse 6); Spiritual auf Coltrane Live at the Village Vanguard (Impulse 10); Afro-Blue auf Coltrane Live at Birdland (Impulse 50); Peace on Earth auf Infinity (Impulse 9225); Out of This World auf Live in Seattle (Impulse 9202-2); CompassionLove und Serenity auf Meditations(Impulse 9110); Reverend King auf Cosmic Music (Impulse 9148); Song of the Underground Railroad auf Africa/Brass Vol. 2 (Impulse 9273); Alabama auf Coltrane Live at Birdland (Impulse 50). Incidentally, Coltrane himself felt that the political function of his music was of secondary importance. In an interview shortly before his death, he answered the question “Quelques musiciens ont dit qu'il ya un rapport entre certaines des idées de Malcolm [X] et la nouvelle musique. Le penses-tu?": Je crois que la musique étant une expression du coeur et de l’être humain, elle exprime justement ce qui se passe, la totalité des expériences de la vie à un moment donné. Cf. Frank Kofsky: John Coltrane. Un interview inédite, in: Le Jazzophone, 16 (November 1983), S. 38.

[6] See Gene Marine: The Black Panthers, New York 1969

[7] About Louis Farrakhan cf. Henry Louis Gates: The Charmer, in: The New Yorker, 9. April & 8. Mai 1996, S. 116-131

[8] On the developments between bebop and free jazz, see Wolfram Knauer: Zwischen Bebop und Free Jazz. Komposition und Improvisation des Modern Jazz Quartet, Mainz 1990

[9] Ekkehard Jost: Free Jazz. Stilkritische Untersuchungen zum Jazz der 60er Jahre, Mainz 1975, S. 114 f

[10]   On the significance of the Third Stream in those years, see Wolfram Knauer, Zwischen Bebop und Free Jazz, S. 80-82, 310-316

[11]   Impulse 32

[12]   Impulse 40

[13]   Impulse 77

[14]   Impulse 95

[15]   United Artists 5638

[16]   Atlantic 1451

[17]   Cf. A.B. Spellman: liner notes for The Avantgarde, Atlantic 1451

[18]   Cf. Gunther Schuller: Third Stream Redefined, in: Saturday Review, 44 (13. Mai 1961), S. 54 f.

[19]   Among jazz musicians, examples can be found in Art Blakey (Abdullah Ibn Buhaina), Kenny Clarke (Liaquat Ali Salaam), Yusef Lateef (birth name: William Evans) and others.

[20]   Ron Karenga: Black Cultural Nationalism [1968], in: Addison Gayle, Jr. (Hg.): The Black Aesthetic, New York 1971, S. 33

[21]   LeRoi Jones: Black Music, New York 1967, S. 174

[22]   LeRoi Jones: The Autobiography of LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka, New York 1974, S. 176

[23]   Miles Davis & Quincy Troupe: Miles. The Autobiography, new York 1989, S. 285-286

[24]   William J. Harris: The Poetry and Poetics of Amiri Baraka, Columbia 1985, S. 19 f. 

[25]   Henry Louis Gates also sees Coltrane's interpretation of My Favorite Things as a formal parody of the musical hit. He emphasizes: Resemblance thus can be evoked cleverly by dissemblance. Vgl. Henry Louis Gates, Jr.: The Signifying Monkey. A Theory of African-American Literary Criticism, New York 1988, S. 104

[26]   In this context, LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka also points directly to My Favorite Things, cf. Amiri Baraka The „Blues Aesthetic“ and the „Black Aesthetic“. Aesthetics as the Continuing Political History of a Culture, in: Black Music Research Journal, 11/2 (1992), S. 106

[27]   The four selected Coltrane versions of My Favorite Things are intended to illustrate the development of Coltrane's interpretation of this piece. In addition to the recordings mentioned in the text, there are several other versions that have been released on record, mainly in – often illegal – live recordings. Yasuhiro Fujioka provides an overview of all of Coltrane's recordings: John Coltrane. A Discography and Musical BiographyFuijoka alone lists 47 Coltrane versions of My FavoriteThings – although he counts both published and non-published recordings and recordings.

[28]   Atlantic 1361

[29]   Jazz Anthology/Musidisc 30 JA 5184. another version of My Favorite Things with Eric Dolphy comes from a live recording from November 1961 (Rhino R2 71255: John Coltrane Anthology: The Last Giant)

[30]   Impulse 9161

[31]   Impulse AS 9124

[32]   E.g. Tokyo 1966, Impulse IMR 9036 C

[33]   Quoted from Ralph J. Gleason, liner notes for John Coltrane: Olé Coltrane, Atlantic 1373

[34]   Ekkehard Jost: Free Jazz. Stilkritische Untersuchungen zum Jazz der 60er Jahre, Mainz 1975, S. 111

Categories
Essays

Jazz Meets the World

In den späten 1960er Jahren veröffentlichte Joachim Ernst Berendt eine Reihe an Platten unter dem Obertitel "Jazz Meets the World". Für eine Wiederveröffentlichung im Jahr 1997 durfte ich die Liner Notes zu den beiden CDs "Jazz Meets Europe" (MPS 531 847-2) und "Jazz Meets Africa" (MPS 5312 720-2) schreiben.

JAZZ MEETS EUROPE

Fragt man Amerikaner nach europäischen Jazzmusikern, so wird man außer einem Verweis auf Django Reinhardt vor allem Achselzucken ernten. „Europäischer Jazz“ – ein Widerspruch in sich? Tatsächlich haben sich die europäischen Jazzer erst relativ spät auf das besonnen, worauf es im Jazz ankommt: auf Individualität und den persönlichen Umgang mit der afro-amerikanischen Musiksprache. Vor den 60er Jahren war Django Reinhardt einer der ganz wenigen Europäer, die nicht einzig dem Vorbild amerikanischer Jazzmusiker folgten, sondern einen eigenständigen Personalstil ausbildeten, der seine Wurzeln genauso in ihrer Herkunft aus Europa besaß wie im Vorbild amerikanischer Kollegen. Zum Vergleich: Benny Goodmans oder Artie Shaws Klarinettenspiel beziehen sich auf die afro-amerikanische Tradition genauso wie auf die jiddische Musik der Welt, in der sie groß wurden. In Musik aus New Orleans finden sich immer wieder regionale Einflüsse durch Cajun-Musik oder den „latin tinge“ karibischer Provenienz. Niemanden verwundert, daß Kubaner, die seit den 30er Jahren in New York Fuß faßten, die Rhythmen ihrer Heimat mitbrachten und in den Jazz integrierten. Und das Lob des ausgesprochenen Individualstils bei Django Reinhardt fußt vor allem auf der Feststellung, daß er sich nicht nur auf die Tradition schwarzer Amerikaner, sondern auch auf die seiner Sinti- und Roma-Gefährten bezog und damit eine Musiksprache entwickelte, die nicht aufgesetzt, sondern authentisch wirkt – „authentisch“ im Sinne von „selbst-erlebt“.

Bis in die 60er Jahre hinein aber hatten die meisten Europäer genug damit zu tun, die Entwicklungen des amerikanischen Jazz technisch wie ästhetisch nachzuvollziehen, die amerikanischen Vorbilder zu imitieren. Kaum jemand kam auf die Idee, daß die nationalen Traditionen des eigenen Landes für eine Umsetzung in die Jazzsprache taugen könnten. Als der Produzent Joachim Ernst Berendt bei den von ihm initiierten 4. Berliner Jazztage 1967 einen Abend mit dem Motto „Jazz Meets the World“ überschrieb, wollte er mit diesem Programm die Offenheit des Jazz und seiner Musiker dokumentieren, ihren Mut, aber auch die Möglichkeiten im Umgang einer improvisierten Musik mit nationalen Traditionen aus aller Welt. Berendt brachte an einem Abend indonesische, indische, afrikanische und spanische Musiker mit Jazzern zusammen, so wie er bereits 1964 Albert Mangelsdorff dazu animiert hatte, für eine Asien-Tournee Themen einzustudieren, die auf der Folklore der bereisten Länder basierten. In der Plattenfirma MPS fand Berendt einen kooperativen Partner für die Plattenreihe „Jazz Meets the World“. Zwei seiner Produktionen konfrontierten Jazzmusiker mit europäischen Folkloretraditionen: dem Flamenco und dem Basler Trommeln.

Den spanischen Saxophonisten Pedro Iturralde hatte Berendt erstmals bei einem Programm der European Broadcasting Union (EBU) gehört. Als er an die Planung seines „Weltmusik“-Festivals ging, bat er Olaf Hudtwalker vom Hessischen Rundfunk, Iturraldes Adresse über den schon damals hochgerühmten Pianisten Tete Montoliu ausfindig zu machen, der regelmäßig im Madrider Jazzclub „Jamboree“ auftrat. Hudtwalker sollte Montoliu dabei gleich fragen, ob nicht auch er an einem Auftritt bei den Berliner Jazztagen interessiert sei, bei dem es um die Begegnung von Jazz und Flamenco gehe. Im Plattentext zur Original-LP „Flamenco-Jazz“ erzählt Hudtwalker: „Ich traf [Montoliu] an der Bar, entledigte mich freudestrahlend meines Auftrages – und tappte in ein nicht zu unterschätzendes Fettnäpfchen! Die Adresse von Pedro habe er Berendt gerade mitgeteilt, er würde auch gerne einmal wieder nach Berlin kommen – mit einer internationalen Jazzgruppe, denn vom Flamenco verstünde er leider nichts, da er Katalane sei.“

Flamenco und Jazz haben in ihren Ursprüngen ohne Zweifel vergleichbare Entwicklungen durchgemacht. Beide entstanden in einer Art multikultureller Gesellschaft: Im New Orleans des ausgehenden 19. Jahrhunderts trafen sich europäische und afrikanische Kulturen und durch die musikalischen Erfahrungen Lateinamerikas gebrochene Derivate beider Traditionen (jener schon erwähnte „latin tinge“). In der Kulturgeschichte des südspanischen Andalusiens, der Gegend zwischen Sevilla und Cádiz, spiegelten sich Traditionen von Zigeunern, Berbern, seraphischen Juden, Arabern, Europäern und Nordafrikanern (Mooren/Mauren). Die Entwicklung des Flamenco zur künstlerischen Reife geschah etwa parallel zu der des nordamerikanischen Blues, obwohl erste Zeugnisse dieser Musik bereits seit dem späten 18. Jahrhundert vorliegen. Erst gegen Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts aber wurde der Flamenco popularisiert. Damals öffnete in Sevilla das erste Café cantata, dem bald viele folgten, in denen die gitanos Andalusiens sangen, spielten und tanzten. Mit seiner Popularisierung ging der Flamenco dabei improvisatorisch – also durchaus wieder dem frühen Jazz vergleichbar – auf die vielfältigen in der spanischen Folklore verwurzelten Musikstile ein: Toná, Bulería, Seguidilla, Tango, Bolero, Fandango, Malagueñas u.v.a. 

Pedro Iturralde stammt aus der nordspanischen Stadt Falces. Mitte der 60er Jahre wagte er erstmals die Fusion von Jazz und Flamenco, die seine Musik seither charakterisiert. Iturralde selbst meint, er habe eine Musik machen wollen, „die den aktuellen musikalischen Konzepten entspricht, ohne ihren spanischen Charakter zu verlieren“. Iturraldes erster Versuch solch einer Fusion entstand schon einige Monate vor dem Berliner Konzert und wurde unter dem Titel „Jazz Flamenco“ auf dem spanischen Plattenlabel HispaVox veröffentlicht. Der gerade 20-jährige andalusische Gitarrist Paco de Lucia war bereits dabei – er nannte sich nach seiner Heimatstadt „Paco de Algeciras“. Für Paco de Lucia war die Zusammenarbeit mit Pedro Iturralde der erste Ausflug in die Welt des Jazz. 

Die anderen Musiker, die Iturralde mit nach Berlin brachte, gehörten zu seiner regelmäßigen Band: Pianist Paul Grassl aus München, Schlagzeuger Peer Wyboris aus Berlin und Bassist Erich Peter aus der Schweiz. Der italienische Posaunist Dino Piana wurde eigens für den Berliner Auftritt engagiert.Zwei der Stücke („Cancion de las penas de amor“ und „Cancion del fuego fatuo“) stammen aus Manuel de Fallas Ballettmusik „El amor brujo“ von 1915. „Valeta de tu viento“ und „El Vito“ sind Eigenkompositionen Iturraldes. Iturralde wählte bewußt möglichst „neutrale“ Themen, die der Flamenco-Welt Paco de Lucias genauso nah sein sollten wie der Welt der Jazzer. Die Improvisationen basieren auf modalen Strukturen, wie sie sich auch in der Flamencomusik finden lassen. Doch keine der beiden Welten steht im Vordergrund: Anklänge an swingend-jazzige Arrangements werden immer wieder schnell ins exotische melodische Ambiente spanischer Musik überführt; die original wirkenden Flamenco-Partien Paco de Lucias werden bald durch Einwürfe des Klaviers oder der Bläser in die Welt des Jazz zurückgeholt.

***

Die Kombination einer authentischen Schweizer Volkstradition mit dem Jazz sollte dem Mitteleuropäer – so mag man glauben – vertraut klingen. Und doch ist das Ergebnis nicht minder exotisch als die Aufnahmen der „Jazz Meets the World“-Reihe mit außereuropäischer Folklore.

Wer an einem Winterabend durch die engen Gassen der Basler Altstadt geht, wird in vielen Hinterräumen von Gasthäusern die Fastnachtsgruppen beim Üben hören, wird von komplexen Rhythmen und unwirklich wirkenden Pfeifenmärsche begleitet. Die Fasnachtsgruppen proben nach ehernen Gesetzen die alten, meist im Unisono der Pfeifen bzw. Trommeln vorgetragenen Märsche. Basler Trommelmärsche haben ein festes, notierbares Ablaufbild. Die teilweise überaus schweren Marschfiguren werden von großen Trommelgruppen präzise im Unisono vorgetragen. 

Viele der ältesten Fastnachtsmärsche – beispielsweise der „Morgenstreich“, der „Römer“, der „Dreier“, der „Neapolitaner“ oder der „Walliser“ – sind militärischen Ursprungs. Anders als reines Militärtrommeln aber will der Basler Trommler nicht einfach nur den Tritt kommandieren. Er akzentuiert seine Trommelmärsche mit Akzentverlagerungen und Nuancierungen der Tonstärke, variiert die perkussiven Figuren fast zu perkussiven Melodien. 

Musiker waren von der lebendigen Tradition des Basler Trommelns immer schon beeindruckt. Der Komponist Rolf Liebermann schrieb 1959 mit seiner „Phantasie über Basler Themen“ ein Sinfoniekonzert für Basler Trommel und großes Orchester. Auch der Swing-Drummer Gene Krupa zeigte sich bei einem Besuch zur Fasnachtszeit begeistert. 

Der Jazzpianist George Gruntz schließlich sorgte für die erste Begegnung zwischen Basler Trommlern und Jazz. Anders als Pedro Iturralde wollte Gruntz die Welten der Volksmusik und die des Jazz nicht vermischen, sondern beider Eigenart bestehenlassen. Für das Konzert im Stadttheater Basel engagierte er vier namhafte Schweizer Jazzschlagzeuger, die zugleich zur ersten Garde der europäischen Drummer gehören. Zu Charly Antolini, Pierre Favre, Daniel Humair und Mani Neumeier stoßen der Trompeter Franco Ambrosetti, die damals in Europa beheimateten Amerikaner Nathan Davis und Jimmy Woode sowie George Gruntz, der als Jazzpianist und gebürtiger Basler sozusagen zwischen den Welten der afro-amerikanischen Musik und der Schweizer Folklore vermittelt.

Beim vorliegenden Konzert von 1967 beginnt die Tambouren-Gruppe um Alfred Sacher (in Basel bekannt als die „Mistkratzerli“) mit dem uralten „D’Reemer“ (Römer). George Gruntz und sein Quintett (mit Pierre Favre am Schlagzeug) folgen mit „Hightime Keepsakes“, einem Blues, dem sechs Motive aus vier Basler Märschen zugrundeliegen. In „Intercourse“ kommen die beiden Gruppen zusammen: Die Begleitung hinter den jeweils 64-taktigen Soli von Baß, Trompete und Tenorsaxophon werden je hälftig von den Basler Tambouren und vom Jazzer Charly Antolini begleitet. In der Konfrontation entsteht die Spannung dieser Arrangements: Der Basler Triolen-Marschrhythmus macht dem swingendem Jazz-3/4-Takt Platz. Für seine „Sketches for Percussion“ griff Gruntz auf alte Landskriegsmärche zurück, die er im Zusammenspiel aller Perkussionisten und in etlichen Kombinationen der Gruppen zu einer Art Concerto für Basler Tambouren und Jazz-Drummer macht. Mani Neumeier beginnt auf der Conga, gefolgt von Daniel Humair auf der Pauke. Die Tambouren werden anschließend durch Antolini und Favre an den Jazz-Schlagzeugen verstärkt. Dem ersten Tutti folgen Dialoge: Tambouren – Antolini; Tambouren – Favre; Tambouren – Humair (Pauken); Tambouren – Neumeier (Congas). Nun gibt es gemeinsam gespielte Duos: Neumeier-Favre, Antolini-Humair, Neumeier-Humair, Antolini-Favre. Am Schluß dieser wechselvollen und äußerst abwechslungsreichen Trommelpartie sind alle Perkussionisten in einem End-Tutti zu hören. Gruntz’s „Retraite Celeste“ nimmt auf das „Retraite diable“ Bezug, eines der schwierigsten Stücke der Basler Trommeltradition, das nur alle fünf oder sechs Jahre einem großen Meister nach monatelangem Proben gelingt. Gruntz setzt in seiner himmlischen Retraite verschiedenste Metren (4/8, 5/8, 4/8, 2/8) nebeneinander, wie dies nicht nur in der Schweizer Volksmusik üblich ist. Dann vermischen sich die Gruppen auf allen Ebenen: Jazz-Schlagzeuger mit den Tambouren, Jazz-Bläser mit den Basler Pfeifern. Nicht nur im Schlußstück meint man im Höreindruck das Bild auf der Bühne vor Augen zu haben: Jazzmusiker, die mit bewunderndem Respekt die Fertigkeit und lange Tradition der Volksmusiker betrachten; den Stolz der Volksmusikanten, mit den fremden Jazzern in ihrer eigenen Tradition geehrt zu werden. Um solch eine Art der Kommunikation geht es im Jazz, um das Interesse am Neuen, am Fremden, um die Lust an Risiko und Experiment – nicht zuletzt also um die offenen Ohren der Musiker wie der Zuhörer.


JAZZ MEETS AFRICA

Afrika – für den amerikanischen Jazz ein musikalischer Mythos: Ursprung des Rhythmus, Zauber dieser Musik. Im 20. Jahrhundert haben sich afro-amerikanische Musiker immer wieder auf den schwarzen Kontinent besonnen, um die Herkunft ihrer Musik zu beschwören, die magischen Komponenten, die sich bis heute in Jazz und andere schwarze Musik hinübergerettet haben. Komponisten wie William Grant Still, James P. Johnson oder Duke Ellington, Musiker wie Art Blakey, Dizzy Gillespie oder Randy Weston versuchten immer wieder, musikalischen Kontakt zu stiften zwischen den afro-amerikanischen Spielarten des Jazz, seinen mythischen Ursprüngen und der Musik des heutigen Afrikas. Bei den Komponisten handelte es sich dabei meist um eine historische Sichtweise: die Herleitung des Jazz aus afrikanischen Quellen. Blakey, Gillespie und Weston versuchten den direkten Kontakt: zum Teil mit afrikanischen Musikern, zum Teil mit musikalischen Derivaten aus Kuba und der Karibik, in denen afrikanische Wurzeln stärker präsent waren als im amerikanischen Jazz. Grundidee bei alledem: Der Jazz und die afrikanische Musik haben gemeinsame Wurzeln, sollten sich also nicht gar zu fremd sein. 

In Joachim Ernst Berendts Schallplattenreihe „Jazz Meets the World“ aus den 60er Jahren war Afrika mit zwei Produktionen vertreten. Beide stehen für durchaus unterschiedliche Seiten des Zusammentreffens der Kulturen: Billy Brooks „El Babaku“ stellt vor allem die perkussiven, rituell-beschwörenden Seiten afrikanischer Musik heraus, George Gruntz’s „Noon in Tunesia“ dokumentiert ein Treffen europäischer und amerikanischer Jazzmusiker mit stark melodisch geprägter arabischer/nordafrikanischer Beduinenmusik. 

Die Idee zu „Jazz Meets Arabia“, wie der Untertitel zu „Noon in Tunesia“ lautete, trug Gruntz seit einem Besuch in Tunesien im Jahre 1964 mit sich herum, bei dem er etliche Beispiele von Beduinenmusik aufgenommen und aufgezeichnet hatte. Die Musik Nordafrikas hat über die Jahrtausende viele Einflüsse in sich aufgenommen: Asiatische, europäische, schwarzafrikanische Momente fanden ihren Niederschlag in einer Musiktradition, die geographisch durch die Ausbreitung des Islam im Mittelmeerraum umschrieben werden könnte. George Gruntz und Joachim Ernst Berendt waren einige Wochen durch Tunesien gereist, um die besten Beduinen-Musiker ausfindig zu machen. Berendt wollte die Jazzer ursprünglich nach Tunis fliegen und die Aufnahmen dort einspielen. Doch fand sich in ganz Tunesien kein Tonstudio, das den Ansprüchen der MPS-Techniker genügt hätte, so daß stattdessen die arabischen Musiker nach Villingen kamen. Sie wurden angeführt von Salah El Mahdi, dem damaligen Musikdirektor im Kultusministerium zu Tunis, außerdem dem Verfasser der tunesischen Nationalhymne. Die Musiker spielen die Zoukra (eine Art kurze, ausgesprochen laute Oboe), das Mezoued (eine Sackpfeife und damit letztlich ein Vorläufer des schottischen Dudelsacks), die Nai (eine einfache Bambusflöte) sowie die Perkussionsinstrumente Bendire, Tabla und Darbouka. Eines der Charakteristika arabischer Musik sind ihre scheinbar endlos langen Takte, eine rhythmische Regelmäßigkeit außerhalb der uns vertrauten Taktschemata, die europäischen Ohren fremd erscheint und die Exotik auch der vorliegenden Musik kräftig unterstreicht. Arabische Musik läuft meist nach ähnlichem formalem Muster ab: Am Anfang stehen oft Unisono-Phrasen der Bläser – so wie dies auch im Bebop der Fall ist. Musikalische Abschnitte stoßen aufeinander, lösen einander ab. Es gibt keine musikalische Entwicklung, wie wir sie aus europäischer Musik oder auch dem Jazz kennen: Es gibt kein Ziel; das Wesen der Musik erklärt sich aus ihrer reichen Ornamentierung, aus den betörend wirkenden Wiederholungen. Und schließlich kennt arabische Musik, genau wie der Jazz, die Improvisation. 

Aus der Jazzwelt stammen neben George Gruntz, dessen Klavier das europäischste der anwesenden Instrumente war, Sahib Shihab, seit den frühen 60er Jahren in Europa ansässig, Jean-Luc Ponty, der die Geige für den modernen Jazz wiederentdeckte, Eberhard Weber und Daniel Humair.

Die Kompositionen von George Gruntz basieren auf traditionellen Beduinen-Melodien. Die Jazzmusiker passen sich bei ihren Interpretationen meist der Atmosphäre der Beduinenmusiker an. Die Araber geben die Stimmung vor, die Jazzmusiker reagieren. Die Begegnung beginnt in Gruntz’s „Maghreb Cantata“ mit „Is Tikhbar“, dem gegenseitigen Kennenlernen der Musiker. Am deutlichsten wird Kontrast und Vermittlung zwischen den Welten von Beduinen- und Jazzmusikern vielleicht in „Buanuara“, in dem die Mezoued die Melodie beginnt – die Pfeifen reibungsvoll ungenau aufeinander abgestimmt –, abgelöst durch ein swingendes Jazzthema, auf das Improvisationen von Klavier und Geige folgen. Jelloul Osmans Mezoued-Solo paßt sich ohne Bruch ins musikalische Geschehen ein, die musikalischen Welten wechseln unmerklich, nehmen aufeinander Bezug, gehen ineinander über. Am Schluß erklingt „Nemeit“, das „Lied der Einsamkeit“, das auf die in der nordafrikanischen Welt als „musique andalouse“ bezeichnete klassische Musik Tunesiens Bezug nimmt, die üblicherweise von großen Chören und Orchestern interpretiert wird. 

Joachim Ernst Berendts Plattentext zur Originalveröffentlichung dieser Aufnahmen schließt so eindringlich mit einer Beschwörung kultureller Begegnung, daß man ihn am besten wortwörtlich zitieren sollte: „Es war ‚Night in Tunesia‘, in jedem Sinn, als Dizzy Gillespie in der Mitte der 40er Jahre sein berühmtes Jazzthema komponierte – ‚Nacht in Tunesien‘, in dem von Rommels Afrika-Korps eroberten und von den Alliierten rückeroberten Land, das einer kolonialen Zukunft entgegensah und dessen Freiheitskämpfer in französische Gefängnisse gesteckt wurden. Jetzt ist es ‚Noon‘!“

***

„El Babaku“ betrachtet Afrika von einer anderen Seite. Der wichtigste Unterschied zum Zusammentreffen von George Gruntz und Beduinenmusikern besteht vielleicht darin, daß der Schlagzeuger Billy Brooks keine Begegnung amerikanischer mit afrikanischen Musikern auf die Bühne bringt. Seine Musik ist vielmehr der Versuch einer Rückbesinnung auf Elemente afrikanischer Musik, die Brooks in Nordamerika verloren glaubt. 

Billy Brooks stammt aus New Jersey und nennt als Einflüsse die afro-kubanische Musik eines Machito, den Blues und Soul eines Ray Charles oder Otis Redding, den Jazz eines Charlie Parker. Brooks selbst arbeitete unter anderem mit Woody Shaw, Larry Young und Eddie Harris. An der afrikanischen Musik fasziniert ihn die kollektive Perkussion. In ihr sieht Brooks musikalische und geistige Ekstase, Religiosität, menschliche Solidarität. Und die repetitiven Momente des afrikanischen Schlagzeugspiels sind für Brooks zugleich Zeichen eines anderen Denksystems: „Wiederholung meint niemals dieselbe Sache. Die Zeit geht weiter – 2 Sekunden oder 15 Sekunden oder eine Minute oder zwei Stunden später, also kann es nicht mehr dasselbe sein. Wiederholung macht eine Sache wahr.“

Wiederholung spielt denn auch in der Musik von „El Babaku“ eine wichtige Rolle. Für das Konzert in der Berliner Jazz Galerie hat Billy Brooks traditionelle nigerianische Stücke gemischt mit kubanischen Elementen und eigenen Nummern. Die Synthese wird vielleicht in „Al Hajj Malik Al Shabbazz“ am deutlichsten, einer Art Totengesang für Malcolm X – der Titel des Stücks ist zugleich der islamische Name des 1965 ermordeten schwarzen Führers. Über dem Bourdon des Kontrabasses erklingt die Klage über den Tod Malcolm X’s mit dem beschwörenden Refrain „Now he’s gone, gone, gone…“. Beantwortet wird diese Klage vom Chor der Mitmusiker, von Trommeleinwürfen, dazwischen eine einfache Flötenmelodie gespielt von Billy Brooks – kein virtuoses Solo, sondern Melodieführung der Perkussion. Der traditionelle nigerianische „Lament“ ist ein Trauerlied, in dem Formen ritueller Beschwörung afrikanischer wie religiöser afro-amerikanischer Traditionen durchscheinen. Die karibisch-kubanische Seite kommt im mitreißenden „El Lupe Changó“ zum Tragen, einem Lied über den „guten Changó“, den Gottvater schwarzer Kulturen in Brasilien, der Karibik oder Westafrika. „El Lupe Changó“ wird übrigens von Carlos Santa Cruz gesungen, einem persönlichen Schüler des großen Chano Pozo, der in den 40er Jahren Dizzy Gillespie auf den rechten kubanischen Weg brachte. Auch im Titelsong „El Babaku“ schließlich stehen sich vokale Ruf- und Antwortphrasen und sich miteinander verwebende rhythmische Linien gegenüber, sorgen die beschwörende Wiederholung der rhythmischen Formeln und der entspannte Drive für eine Musik, bei der weniger die Herkunft der Musiker aus Jazz, Blues, kubanischer oder afrikanischer Musik im Vordergrund stehen als vielmehr ein rituell-heilendes Gemeinschaftsgefühl, das Billy Brooks als den Kern afrikanischer Musik ansieht.Fazit beider auf dieser CD dokumentierten Produktionen ist die Erkenntnis, das beim Aufeinandertreffen Europas/Amerikas und Afrikas durchaus Begegnungen mit einem hohen Verschmelzungsgrad der unterschiedlichen musikalischen Traditionen möglich sind. Afrikanische Musik fasziniert jeden, der sie einmal gehört hat, durch ihre der westlichen Welt so fremd gewordene mitreißende Kraft. Kraft und Hingabe, sagt Billy Brooks, seien die Charaktereigenschaften Afrikas, Fortschrittsgläubigkeit die Europas und der westlichen Welt. George Gruntz und Billy Brooks zeigen auf ganz unterschiedliche Weise, wie die beiden Welten voneinander lernen können.

Categories
book reviews

Books 2024

Jazz Radio America
von Aaron J. Johnson 
Urbana/IL 2024 (University of Illinois Press)
312 Seiten, 29,95 US-Dollar
ISBN: 978-0-252-08830-8

In Jazz Radio America Aaron J. Johnson examines the history of jazz programming on both commercial and non-commercial radio in the United States. He sheds light on the period between 1926 and 1952, when the major radio networks dominated, reaching a huge national audience, but especially on the period after that, when local or targeted stations dominated the picture. His work is about the relationship between artists, promoters, institutions, listeners and others who contribute to jazz being presented on the radio. It examines what types of jazz are broadcast and the impact of radio exposure on the work of musicians. 

He describes the different types of jazz programming on non-commercial US radio and discusses why the genre is receiving less and less support from stations that are financially supported by their listeners. He explains how the counterpart to European public broadcasting, the US public radio stations founded in the early 1970s, became so successful due to the quality of their reporting and cultural programming that they had to generate more and more programming, which led them to seek out consultants who ultimately recommended that they follow the programming decisions of commercial radio. 

Johnson also asks about the people behind the stations, the owners, managers and editors. Numerous public radio stations emerged in the environment of educational or cultural institutions and reflect their expectations or cultural attitude. In addition, there are stations that grew out of the community and thus often from a progressive political stance. Using concrete examples, Johnson explains the extent to which this attitude is also reflected in the program philosophy of the broadcasters. He also discusses the role and influence of jazz DJs over the years, presenters who on the one hand reported on current developments and on the other were clearly guided by their own personal preferences. 

For European readers, Johnson's study would often need sort of a cultural translation assistance - the structures and tasks of public broadcasting in Germany and other Western European countries in particular are too different from those of a privately or member-funded system such as in the USA. In fact, the only fully state-funded US broadcaster, the Voice of America, is only mentioned in passing in Johnson's book, no doubt also because it mainly broadcast abroad and could hardly be heard at home. 

Johnson ends with an outlook on the future. Apart from a few exceptions, jazz can no longer be heard on commercial radio. In fact, the digitalization of life has also changed the listening habits of the public, who in principle do not care what source the music they listen to comes from. Johnson writes that he knows from his own students that, in view of Spotify, Deezer, Apple Music and Tidal, hardly anyone in the younger generation still has a clear idea of what “radio” actually means. The future of jazz on the internet, he speculates, depends on how the internet develops. Basically, the web offers musicians the opportunity to reach a wider audience, even to address them directly. It remains to be seen to what extent the existing power structures in relation to music (Spotify, Apple Music, etc.) will develop programs other than the existing album or playlist-based programs or whether niche genres such as jazz will be able to find their own ways to curate an exciting program.

Wolfram Knauer (January 2025)


The Jazz Omnibus. 21st-Century Photos and Writings by Members of the Jazz Journalists Association
Herausgegeben von David R. Adler (ed.): 
Torrance/CA 2024 (Cymbal Press)
586 Seiten, 39,95 US-Dollar
ISBN: 978-1-955604-18-5

Essay collections are not necessarily among my favorite reads. When I pick up a book, I prefer to read a story, written from one perspective, about a specific topic. If at all, then I pick up anthologies by individual authors (Whitney Balliett, for example, or Dan Morgenstern), anthologies about a single musician (with essays on Duke Ellington or Charlie Parker, for example), anthologies in which perspectives on one specific topic are developed (there are various Oxford or Cambridge Companions, but the Darmstadt Studies in Jazz Research belong also among to these, although I would like to point out that as a former editor of this series I am somewhat biased). 

That's why my first reaction to the “Jazz Omnibus" was a little defensive. Who wants to read / look at contributions from around 90 authors and photographers, each of whom stands alone and barely refers to each other? But then David R. Adler (who, by the way, will be publishing the resurrected magazine Jazz Times as editor) made the clever move of placing an outstanding essay right at the beginning: Ted Panken's feature and interview with Sonny Rollins, which introduces the saxophonist as a musician and colleague, bandleader and eye witness to an era, originally published in Down Beat This brings us straight to the concept. On behalf of the Jazz Journalists' Association, Adler had asked members of the association to submit up to three proposals for their own articles, from which the editorial team then selected one each. The only requirement was that the original publication had to have taken place in the 2000s. So none of the chapters are *new*, they are from the years 2004 to 2023, were first published in the major jazz magazines (Down BeatJazz Times), in daily newspapers such as the New York Times or the Wall Street Journal, in books or on web blogs. Adler warns in the foreword that this is not a comprehensive look at 20th century jazz. And in his introduction, Howard Mandel points out the many topics that are not addressed here at all and immediately makes a list for possible future follow-up volumes. 

Of course, I also immediately had a “list of shortcomings” in mind. From the table of contents, it quickly became clear that jazz outside the USA is hardly mentioned (apart from a chapter on teaching jazz at a Japanese high school). 14 out of 70 authors and 4 out of 19 photographers are women, which is probably a realistic reflection of the current situation in American jazz journalism. And 17 of the contributions deal with female musicians or issues of gender equality in jazz. 

The editors have divided the book into six subject areas. “Legends” includes the aforementioned feature on Sonny Rollins, a conversation Michael Jackson had with Keith Jarrett in 2023, Jordannah Elizabeth's portrait of pianist Amina Claudine Myers, Nate Chinen's tribute to Sun Ra, Bob Blumenthal's liner notes for the re-release of Wayne Shorter's “Night Dreamer”, a chapter from Stephanie Stein Crease's book on Chick Webb, Bill Milkowski's article on John Zorn for the saxophonist's 60th birthday, and Doug Hall's conversation with Wynton Marsalis. 

Under “Seekers” we read Andy Senior's review of a concert by Cécile McLorin Salvant, Andrea Canter's review of the album “Smash” by Patricia Barber, David Adler's portrait of the singer and bassist Meshell Ndegeocello, Debbie Burke's conversation with Jewish singer Hadar Orshalimy, Matty Bannond's feature on saxophonist Zoh Amba, Martin Johnson's review of “The Last Quiet Place” by Ingrid Laubrock, Sanford Josephson's conversation with pianist Isaiah J. Thompson, Rick Mitchell's review of Kendrick Scott's “The Sugarland 95” project, and Rob Shepherd's interview with Mary Halvorson. 

Under “Scenes”, Tom Ineck reports on a jazz cruise to the Caribbean and Rahsaan Clark Morris on the multitude of concerts on a weekend in Chicago, Dan Bilawsky recalls the legendary New York club Bradley's and Con Chapman the Boston restaurant “Mother's Lunch”, David Keller documents the women in the black musicians' union in Seattle in the first half of the 20th century, Dee Dee McNeil listens to a live album by organist Shirley Scott, Jason Berry emphasizes the importance of Henry Butler for the tradition of New Orleans piano playing, Paul de Barros recalls the New Orleans Jazz Festival in the year after Hurricane Katrina, Lynn Darroch refers to the lively jazz scene in Portland, Oregon, Paul Rauch introduces the Seattle Jazz Fellowship, Howard Mandel remembers a birthday party for Ornette Coleman, and Willard Jenkins refers to African-American journalists in the jazz business in the introduction to his book on the same subject.

In “Sounds”, Hrayr Attarian reminisces about Blind Tom, Greg Masters listens to Miles Davis' “Cellar Door Sessions” from 1970 and Chuck Koton to Marcus Miller's “Live in Monte Carlo”, pianist Leslie Pintchik remembers the magic of his own gig, Marcela Breton reads Paul Haines' book “Secret Carnival Workers”, Mike Longo shares memories of his time with Dizzy Gillespie, Mike Shanley describes a visit to the ESP-Disk' label office, Greg Burk refers to the relationship between music and video games, Philip Booth talks to John Pattitucci and Jeff Berlin about the electric bass in acoustic jazz, Geoffrey Himes discovers the diversity of the bass clarinet and Ellen Johnson the vocal music of Charles Mingus, while Michael Ambrosino shares his liner notes to John Santos' album “Art of the Descarga”.

“The World” is the title of the section in which Michael Pronko reports on the jazz program at Hitorizawa High School in Kanagawa, Japan, Virginia A. Schaefer listens to Satoko Fujii and Natsuki Tamura in concert, Larry Blumenfeld talks to Arturo O'Farrill about his father, the Cuban composer Chico O'Farrill, Mirian Arbalejo reflects on her own role as a jazz journalist in Spain, Jeff Cebulski follows the career of Romanian pianist Ramona Horvath, Ashley Kahn talks to American musicians living in Europe, Andrew Gilbert interviews Israeli musicians in New York, Vid Jeraj visits a festival in Kanjiža, Serbia, Dan Ouellette examines the activities of Shabaka Hutchings, and Don Palmer explores the music scene in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. 

The last section is entitled "Remembered". Art Lange listens to the box set "Albert Ayler: Holy Ghost", Peter Gerler reads Stanley Crouch's "Kansas City Lightning. The Rise and Times of Charlie Parker", Suzanne Lorge talks to Steve Swallow about Carla Bley, Ted Gioia asks whether Amy Winehouse was a jazz singer, Neil Tesser remembers Von Freeman, Deanna Witkowski writes about Mary Lou Williams' liturgical music, Eugene Marlow remembers Bill Evans, who lived next door to him in the 1960s, James Hale pays tribute to Andrew Hill, Michael J. West talks about guitarist Emily Remler, Tomás Peña introduces early violinist and singer Angelina Rivera, Mark Stryker pays tribute to Barry Harris' influence on the Detroit jazz scene, John Edward Hasse contributes his obituary of David Baker, John Murph tells the story of producer Dr. George Butler and Devra Hall Levy that of pianist Gerald Wiggins, Corey Hall visits an exhibition in honor of bassist Harrison Bankhead, and Peter Keepnews remembers George Wein.

So it really is a smorgasbord, an “omnibus” full of stories, memories, interviews and reflections. If you want to know what exactly makes up the current scene, you should either go to concerts yourself or at least leaf through the latest jazz magazines. If you want to know what the topics of the last 20 years in jazz have been, David R. Adler's “Jazz Omnibus” will help you, because this is exactly how it looks back on the last twenty years, with a selective look at the (American) magazines. Most of the authors are good writers, so the reading is thoroughly entertaining. At the end of almost 500 pages, there may still be one story, one perspective, one topic missing, but the variety of perspectives allows for a kind of curated look at American jazz journalism at the time. 

Wolfram Knauer (December 2024)


Early Jazz. A Concise Introduction from Its Beginnings through 1929
Fumi Tomato
Albany 2024 (State University of New York Press)
232 Seiten, 33,95 US-$
ISBN: 978-1-4384-9637-5

Early jazz, writes Fumi Tomita in his foreword, is perhaps the most unfamiliar style in jazz history for today's listeners, but at the same time it is fascinating precisely because you can follow how the music and its aesthetic context changed, recording by recording. In his foreword, Tomita explains the concept of his book: he wanted to update Gunther Schuller's 1968 Early Jazz complementing it and adding some of the research discourse of the last 50 years. Where Schuller's interest was in interpreting early jazz as a valid modern art form, Tomita writes, his own concern is broader, taking into account both the artistic and the commercial side of the music. This approach, he implies, allows him to consider artists who otherwise are rarely in the focus of jazz historiography. Many renowned musicians had always supplemented their income with commercial gigs, which rarely were considered jazz. 

Tomita structures his book into large and small chapters. The large chapters deal with "Ragtime and Traveling Shows", "The Blues", "New Orleans and Early White Bands", King Oliver and Jelly Roll Morton", "The New York Scene: The Small Groups"; "Stride Piano"; "The New York Dance Band Sound: From James Reese Europe to Duke Ellington"; "Louis Armstrong"; "The Chicagoans and Bix Beiderbecke"; "Other Pioneering Soloists"; "Territory and Other Bands"; "Vocal Jazz"; "Jazz around the World". The small chapters comprise between one and three pages and attempt to highlight various aspects. 

While Schuller's book was some sort of academic reappraisal of early jazz history in its entirety, including technical references to musical peculiarities or conjectures about aesthetic choices, Tomita's Early Jazz is more of a "text book", a book for students, in which the development of the genre is contextualized and diverse influences are pointed out. He does so succinctly and concisely, with references to specific recordings that can be searched for on the Internet. Instead of musical examples, as favored by Schuller, Tomita has opted for audio charts, i.e. tabular descriptions of the course of the music, which are intended to direct the reader's ear to the form or to particular musical events in the recordings. He highlights individual artists in short chapters, focussing less on biographical and more on the musical aspects of their careers. Whereas Schuller attempted to illuminate as many perspectives of the musical personality as possible, Tomita limits himself to selected pieces, one or at most two titles per musician, which he describes in detail. 

Perhaps one of the more unusual sub-chapters is the one on "'Gaspipe' Clarinet", novelty clarinetists who produced strange, chirpy sounds on their instruments and who were barely recognized by most jazz writers. Novelty playing styles and novelty instruments were quite common in the early days of jazz, Tomita explains, and believes it is just as important to be aware of such aspects as, for example, the discourse on jazz as "serious" art music, as reflected in Paul Whiteman's "Experiment in Modern Music" concert. Tomita also points out the importance of female musicians, naming blues singers, well-known female artists such as Lil Hardin or Lovie Austin, but also the all-female bands that were popular at the beginning of the 20th century but barely present in the recording history of jazz. He titles a concluding chapter "Jazz around the World", but in it only refers to US musicians traveling to Europe and Asia.

All in all, Tomita's book is well suited as a "text book", as an accompaniment to a course on early jazz, for example. In the short space available, Tomita succeeds in explaining connections and drawing attention to different perspectives. An appendix or website that invites his readers to delve deeper into specific perspectives might have been a nice asset. Tomita would not have needed to compare his book to Schuller's Early Jazz ; Schuller's book, for all its shortcomings, remains a standard work on the subject. Tomita's book, however, offers more accessible explanations of the contexts of the musical development and is therefore better suited for a quick overview.

Wolfram Knauer (August 2024)

Categories
book reviews

Books 2025

A Tone Parallel to Duke Ellington. The Man in the Music
von Jack Chambers

Jackson, Mississippi 2025 (University Press of Mississippi)
274 Seiten, 30 US-Dollar
ISBN: 9781496855749

Another book about Duke Ellington? Well, Jack Chambers, known as the author of a two-volume work on Miles Davis, approaches the jazz legend from a different angle than usual. Rather than writing a biography, he identifies specific “themes”, as he calls them, which he then follows through Ellington's entire œuvre. And he actually succeeds in offering Ellington connoisseurs new perspectives as well as making Ellington novices curious about the music. 

The very first keyword, “Harlem”, makes the approach clear. Chambers discusses the various pieces that Ellington dedicated to the New York neighborhood between 1927 and 1970, explaining in passing the significance of Harlem for African-American culture and Ellington's own roots there since his Cotton Club days. His discussions of titles such as “A Night in Harlem”, “Harlem River Quiver”, “Jungle Nights in Harlem”, “Drop Me Off in Harlem”, “The Boys from Harlem”, “Echoes of Harlem”, “Harlem Flat Blues”, “Harlem Air Shaft” and “A Tone Parallel to Harlem” are not analytical descriptions, but provide context and also convey the musical atmosphere of the pieces.

The second keyword is also one that winds its way through Ellington's recordings: the train metaphor. From 1923 to around 1948, the Duke made most of his journeys by train, explains Chambers, he enjoyed this kind of travel, where "‘Folks can’t rush you until you get of". And he wrote numerous songs in which the sound of the trains can be found and of which Chambers takes a closer look at “Choo Choo (Gotta Hurry Home)”, “Lightnin'”, “Daybreak Express”, Billy Strayhorn's “Take the A Train” and “Happy-Go-Lucky Local” – the latter became a hit for Jimmy Forrest under the title “Night Train”.

The first part concludes with statements by authors from the USA, England, Senegal and India about their first encounters with Ellington's music. 

The second block deals with instrumental skills, and here Chambers first devotes himself to Ellington's importance as a pianist. He describes his mastery of stride piano, the stylistic change in the swing era when he had a congenial double bass player at his side in Jimmie Blanton, his features for the piano, the influence of impressionist composers, his love of experimentation in “Money Jungle”, his rare solo and trio appearances. What he does not describe, for example, is how Ellington tickles overtones out of the piano, lets them resonate and thus creates his own piano sound.

Another chapter is dedicated to the use of the textless voice in Ellington's œuvre, from “Creole Love Call” with Adelaide Hall to “Transblucency” with Kay Davis, “Blue Rose” with Rosemary Clooney and “T.G.T.T.” from the second Sacred Concert with Alice Babs. Chambers also describes the role of songs with words in Ellington's music, discussing singers such as Ivie Anderson, Joya Sherrill and Herb Jeffries, and finally singles out one of the Duke's song hits, “Solitude”, which he listens to in Ellington's interpretation, but also in recordings by Louis Armstrong or Billie Holiday. And he tells the story of Strayhorn's “Lush Life” as well as the background to an album that Ellington recorded with Mahalia Jackson in 1958.

The second part of the book concludes with statements by Percy Grainger, Hoagy Carmichael, Constant Lambert, André Previn, Miles Davis, Gunther Schuller and Wynton Marsalis.

Among the musicians in his orchestra, Chambers focuses on two in particular: Billy Strayhorn and Johnny Hodges, whose respective musical specialties he discusses on recordings such as “Day Dream”, “Passion Flower” and “The Star-Crossed Lovers” from “Such Sweet Thunder”.

Ellington appeared regularly in films from 1927 onwards, sometimes on-screen, sometimes as a film composer (often in both roles). Chambers' chapter “Accidental Suites” focuses primarily on later films, “Anatomy of a Murder” (1959), “Paris Blues” (1961), “Assault on a Queen” (1966) and “Change of Mind” (1969), and concludes that some of these film scores are not so different from the suites that Ellington composed regularly from the 1930s onwards.

Over the years, the Duke traveled to all continents and drew inspiration for his own music from what he experienced and heard. Chambers discusses individual movements from the “Far East Suite”, with which Ellington reacted to his trip for the State Department through the Near and Middle East, and emphasizes that the Duke was never interested in a direct influence, i.e. in reproducing sounds he heard on his travels, but always in what Ellington himself jokingly called a “genuine original synthetic hybrid”. Chambers also sheds light on “Afro-Eurasian Eclipse”, a suite influenced by Marshall McLuhan's writings, and the “Togo Brava Suite”, which Ellington wrote in gratitude for a stamp with which the Republic of Togo had honored him. He also makes a detour here to Ellington's fascination with new sounds, telling how Norris Turney replaced Johnny Hodges in the saxophone section in 1969, a musician who could play all the woodwind instruments, so that the Duke sometimes put him in the trombone section with the tenor when a voice was missing there. Above all, however, Turney encouraged him to use the sound of the flute as an additional timbre.

This block is also followed by statements on Ellington, this time by poets such as Blaise Cendrars, Boris Vian, Philip Larkin, Judy Collins and Maya Angelou. 

The last – and weightiest – block is devoted to Ellington, the composer of extended works. Chambers begins with a chapter on “Such Sweet Thunder”, Ellington's twelve-movement approach to the work of William Shakespeare, which Chambers first heard in 1957, but in which he only discovered later, when he was studying literature, how closely the mood of the music corresponds to the characters portrayed. Ellington had studied Shakespeare's plays and sonnets at length, writes Chambers, and Billy Strayhorn, the co-composer of the suite, was also able to talk to connoisseurs of the Bard at eye level at the Stratford Shakespearean Festival, for which the work was written. Chambers discusses the critical reception after the release of the record, addresses reviews that accused Ellington of perhaps having gone a little over the top, only to go on to show in detail which scenes and sonnets the twelve movements refer to and how the music relates to them. Finally, he discusses the different order in which the band played the individual movements in Stratford, at another concert in New York's Town Hall and on the published record; after that, by the way, never again, at least not in the full context. 

In 1970, Ellington accepted a commission to write a composition for a choreography by Alvin Ailey, “The River”, which was to musically recreate the course of a river from source to sea. Most of the sketches were written while Ellington was on tour; from time to time he sent them to the Canadian composer Ron Collier, whom he gave a relatively free hand in arranging them for symphony orchestra. The chapter on “The River” is perhaps the cheeriest in the book, detailing the hectic pace of touring life and the difficulty of balancing Ellington's unusual daily schedule with the organization of such a large-scale project. It began with the fact that Ailey had concrete ideas when he first spoke to the Duke about the ballet after a concert, but that the Duke had completely different ideas, which he played to Ailey on an electric piano in his hotel room. Weeks later, Ailey met him again in Toronto, where he found Ellington in a room "full of sixty-year-old ladies, probably Canadian, whom he called girls. They just adored him.” After a while, Ailey complained that the sketches, ideas, themes Ellington sent him were not enough, that he needed a complete score, to which the Duke replied: “Listen, if you’d stop worrying about this music and do more choreography, we’d be a whole lot better of.” In fact, not all movements were completed in time, so that only seven of the originally planned eleven (plus reprise) were performed. Symptomatically, the Duke missed the premiere, which was celebrated by audiences and critics alike, because he was playing a one-nighter in Chicago. 

The suites, especially those of the late Ellington, are obviously Chambers' main focus in this book. In the last chapter, he complains that despite all his success, Ellington never received the artistic recognition he deserved during his lifetime. The reason: he may have been eloquent, but at the same time he was far too modest an advocate for his own cause. And then Chambers discusses the subject from various angles: the success of his popular songs, the misunderstanding of the suites, the role of the showman who gives the audience what it wants. He recounts an incident in Paris that sheds light on how Ellington may have perceived himself and his success with the public: after a concert in 1950, which included his “Liberian Suite”, a fan commented: "Mr. Ellington, we came here to hear Ellington. This is not Ellington!” After that, the Duke recalls, “we had to tear up all the programs and go back to before 1939, to “Black and Tan Fantasy” and that kind of thing.” You could say: there are diehards. A single voice from the audience, however, intensified Ellington's frustration, which had already been triggered by critics, John Hammond, for example, who accused the Duke after his “Creole Rhapsody” of moving too far away from the “simplicity and charm” of 1931, which actually characterized African-American music. Ellington loved his audience, but, according to Chambers, he did not trust them to understand his demanding longer compositions. The reference to the Pulitzer Prize he was not awarded in 1965 fits into this context. 

One could intervene critically here and question whether it really makes sense to differentiate so sharply between songs, dance music and his large-scale compositions, when neither the suites would be conceivable without his experience with the song form, nor his dance pieces without an awareness of form, nor the great hits without the knowledge of the aesthetic and commercial constraints to which he was subject as an African-American musician in the USA in the 20th century. But what better thing can happen to an author than for the reader to disagree with everything and enter into a dialog in which the book's arguments are taken seriously.

And so Chambers' book is neither a classic biography nor does it contain a scholarly analysis, but it is a successful approach to the music, to the man, to the musician, to the composer, to the recordings, to the circumstances to which Ellington was subjected. Chambers' focus on specific themes allows for a shift in perspective. Certainly he could have chosen other themes and made other observations, but that is not the point. His approach allows him to show the multi-perspectivity in Ellington's music. And with his clear – and thoroughly subjective – focus in the final chapters on Ellington's large-scale œuvre, he virtually invites the reader to question their own perspective on Ellington's work. He achieves all this in an entertainingly written and therefore easily readable style, with references after each chapter to the recordings discussed. 

Wolfram Knauer (April 2025)


Sax Expat. Don Byas
von Con Chapman
Jackson/Mississippi 2025
235 Seiten, 30 US-Dollar
ISBN: 9-781-4968560-74

Don Byas shares a fate with Lucky Thompson: stylistically, both moved between of swing and bebop; above all, they decided to live in Europe after the war and thus disappeared from the American jazz scene. Byas was not Coleman Hawkins, whom nearly every tenor player of his time used as a role model; nor was he counted among the most advanced beboppers. He left the USA in the 1940s to settle in Europe, where he felt at home but lacked the American rhythm sections. In jazz history books, he is usually only mentioned in passing, a fact that this biography, written by Con Chapman, who has already published books on Kansas City Jazz and Johnny Hodges, aims to change.

Carlos Wesley Byas was born in Muskogee, Oklahoma, in 1913 as the eldest of three boys. He received his first piano lessons from his mother, also learned the clarinet and viola, and was already performing in concerts at the age of seven or eight. His enthusiasm for jazz did not meet with his parents' approval, but he bought an alto saxophone at the age of 13 and was soon playing with classmates, such as Jay McShann, who was three years younger. In 1930, he left high school and played in Andy Kirk's band for a year. At college, he adopted the name “Don”; his band was called “Don Carlos and his Collegiate Ramblers”. At some point during these years he switched to tenor saxophone, possibly because he was so impressed by Coleman Hawkins' solo on “It's the Talk of the Town” with the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra. In 1934, Byas moved to Los Angeles with bandleader Bert Johnson, where he joined the Lionel Hampton Orchestra two years later – something we know about mainly from contemporary reviews in which Byas is explicitly mentioned. He performed with saxophonist Eddie Barefield and Buck Clayton in L.A.'s Central Avenue district. 

Coleman Hawkins was his first influence, Byas later recounted; he had first met him at a jam session in Kansas City in 1933. Another influence was Art Tatum, with whom he had already played before Tatum went to New York in 1932 and became famous. Ben Webster, Johnny Hodges, Herschel Evans and Benny Carter were also influential. Around the mid-1930s, Byas himself moved to New York, where he made his first recordings in May 1938, organized by the Danish baron and jazz fan Timme Rosenkrantz. He became a member of Lucky Millinder's orchestra, then sat in with Andy Kirk's saxophone section, played with Eddie Hayes and replaced Lester Young with Count Basie, with whom he recorded an outstanding solo on “Harvard Blues”. At the same time, Byas regularly appeared at after-hours jam sessions at Minton's Playhouse in Harlem. For the time being, Basie was to be the last major big band in whose saxophone section Byas sat; after that he tended to work in smaller combos, could be heard a lot on 52nd Street, with Erroll Garner, Coleman Hawkins, Eddie Heywood, and went into the studio with Mary Lou Williams, with whom he had not only worked with Andy Kirk, but with whom he also had an apparently somewhat toxic relationship. Further recordings followed, with Benny Goodman, with Hot Lips Page, but also under his own name. Byas was part of the transition from swing to bebop, and in addition to those already mentioned, he also played with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. 

On June 9, 1945, Rosenkrantz had rented New York's Town Hall for a concert by more advanced swing musicians, Red Norvo, Teddy Wilson, Don Byas and Slam Stewart. The latter two played an unaccompanied duet on “Indiana” and “I Got Rhythm”, which was released shortly afterwards on Commodore, a prime example of spontaneous improvisation despite prior arrangements. Byas' recording of the standard “Laura” soon became a kind of signature song of his career, a piece that was associated with him in a similar way to “Body and Soul” with Hawkins. Byas was busy, playing for a Broadway show, at jam sessions all over the city, on 52nd Street, with musicians of the swing era as well as with the young beboppers. In 1946, Rosenkrantz returned to his native Denmark and organized a tour for a line-up led by saxophonist and arranger Don Redman who hired Byas for the band and had arrangements of the new sound in his luggage, such as Tadd Dameron's “For Europeans Only”. At the end of the tour, which took them through Scandinavia, Belgium and Switzerland, some of the musicians, Byas among them, stayed in Paris.

He played with other American expatriates such as Tyree Glenn, Peanuts Holland and Bill Coleman, had regular gigs in Brussels and the Netherlands and worked in Barcelona for quite a while. Back in Paris, he went on tour, played in Switzerland and Germany, or accompanied Duke Ellington's orchestra as a guest soloist in 1950. From the beginning of the 1950s, he could usually be found in Saint Tropez in the summer. In Amsterdam, he fell in love with 26-year-old Jopie Eksteen, who soon accompanied him on his travels and whom he married in February 1955 - the second marriage after his first wife, who had died in 1951. Byas became a European, an Amsterdammer to be precise; he soon spoke Dutch as well as English. On the one hand, four children obliged him to earn money; at the same time, however, he did not want to accept every job. He had principles concerning the fee, but also the quality of the music. In the 1960s, Byas worked with Kurt Edelhagen in Cologne, then with Kenny Clarke and Oscar Pettiford in Paris, then played in a club in Monte Carlo, then with Norwegian musicians in Oslo, then went on a tour for Norman Granz with Jazz at the Philharmonic, in which Coleman Hawkins was also involved. He performed with Buck Clayton and recorded with Bud Powell. He didn't think much of free jazz, but the sound of Albert Ayler, whom he had met at a jam session in Copenhagen, appealed to him. Jazz had ceased to be popular music, and he complained about the Beatles, saying that they had stolen everything from R&B. Byas kept taking on tour gigs with traveling Americans like Ben Webster, Tony Scott, Earl Hines. 

Webster gets his own chapter in Chapman's book. He and Byas were friends and rivals at the same time; they were stubborn and not necessarily more tolerable when they had been drinking. Chapman knows about Webster's visits to Byas's Amsterdam apartment when his colleague was not there and his wife found it difficult to get the bulky American out. And he traces the musical encounters between the tenor giants, at the Berliner Jazztage in 1965, for example, or during a record production in 1968. In that year, Byas began to think about a temporary return to the United States. In 1970, the time had come: he played in well-known clubs in the USA for six months and then went on a tour of Japan with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. After his return to Amsterdam, he was diagnosed with lung cancer, which eventually led to his death in August 1972. 

Con Chapman did extensive research for his book. He has read newspaper reports from all over the world and contacted archives, for example to view birth and marriage certificates. He has pored over discographies and has certainly listened to every recording Don Byas has ever been involved in. He knows and tells anecdotes and rumors about the saxophonist, and he tries to place his life and musical career in its time as well as in music history. 

Unfortunately, he too often gets bogged down with this multitude of information. One source says this, another says that, the line-up looked like this or that, Byas came to New York in 1935 or 1936... yes, but Chapman is the specialist; what is his assessment of the situation? Then he tries to bundle topics, for example by summarizing all (well, almost all) encounters between Byas and Hawkins or those with other important saxophonists or his various visits to Spain or Portugal, but in doing so he gets out of the actual chronological sequence of his narrative and leaves at least this reader slightly confused: are we still in the 1930s or already in the 1940s? Something similar happens to him in the narrative of his private life, Byas' relationships with and his dealings with women, his apparently not unproblematic relationship with Mary Lou Williams, the effects of his alcohol consumption and the like. Chapman has a lot to say about all of this, mind you; he simply gets the narrative mixed up. 

Here and elsewhere, there is a lack of careful editing to weight and summarize the various topics. Especially as Chapman succeeds in some places in allowing all this knowledge to flow into highly readable paragraphs: in chapter 9 (Don, Sam, Carlos), for example, in which he gets to the bottom of Byas' personality and his contradictions. In Byas' estate, Chapman writes, there are oil paintings and drawings, he loved poetry and literature, spoke Dutch, French, Spanish, a little Portuguese and Italian. He listened to jazz, but also to modern European classical music. He played checkers, cards and table tennis. He went fishing and ice skating. He played billiards and rode a motorcycle. He swam, lifted weights and was an amateur cook. He soaked his reeds in cognac, but refrained from drinking since he was married to a Dutch woman. When he did drink too much, he was unreliable both musically and as a person. He was a charming storyteller, especially good when it came to fishing stories. He smoked the occasional joint, but refused to have potheads in the audience because they didn't listen properly. He loved jam sessions, especially when other tenor players were present. At the time of the civil rights movement in the USA, he saw his music as political, but he rejected a direct link between music and protest. He always emphasized that his decision to live in Europe had nothing to do with the color of his skin. Many aspects of his later life suggest that the ethnic mix of his origins – black and Native American – and the social status of his family – father: jeweler, mother: piano teacher – had influenced his self-confidence. The chapter on the two expatriates Byas and Ben Webster also has a lot of potential, but Chapman loses himself in too many chronological and thematic jumps. 

The second shortcoming of his book is the fact that Chapman relies almost exclusively on other authors for musical descriptions. This may be a clever self-assessment; Chapman is neither a musician nor a musicologist. It is one thing that he introduces Mary Lou Williams as Byas' former lover at almost every mention, but nowhere refers to her significance for the discussions about the further development of jazz between swing and bebop. Of course, her avant-gardism had an influence on Byas, but when he describes her playing in one of his few own evaluations primarily as “adding dissonant tones to conventional harmonic progressions”, one understands why he prefers to rely on the assessment of others – although he hardly discusses their classification any further. 

All in all, despite the aforementioned shortcomings, Chapman's book offers plenty of welcome material on Don Byas, a musician who has often been overlooked by jazz historians precisely because he moved to Europe early on and was virtually absent from the American scene. The collection of sources in the book's appendix alone facilitates further research into this outstanding expatriate. And for those who feel somewhat overwhelmed by the sometimes slightly exhaustive list of names of recordings, tours and concerts, there are enough suggestions to listen to recordings with Don Byas, this great link between swing and bebop. 

Wolfram Knauer (März 2025)


Stomp Off, Let’s Go. The Early Years of Louis Armstrong
von Ricky Riccardi
New York 2025
466 Seiten, 34,99 US-Dollar
ISBN: 978-0-19-761448-8

Ricky Riccardi is director of research collections at the Louis Armstrong House Museum in Queens, New York. “Stomp Off, Let's Go” is his third book about Louis Armstrong, after “What a Wonderful World: The Magic of Louis Armstrong's Later Years” and “Heart Full of Rhythm: The Big Band Years of Louis Armstrong”. Armstrong has actually told enough about New Orleans himself, he writes in the foreword to his latest book. His main task as author was to put Armstrong's memories into context. 

He sheds light on these contexts from the very first page. Throughout his life, Satchmo gave his date of birth as July 4, 1900, a date that was valid until the 1980s, when a researcher rummaged through the baptismal registers and found August 4, 1901, which has since been generally regarded as the correct date. Riccardi is not so sure: You can take Armstrong's word for it, at least as far as the month is concerned. Well, he did make himself a year older. But he always celebrated on July 4th, his sister even testifies to this for her childhood. Perhaps the priest had made a mistake with the month in the baptism register – there is an entry above Armstrong's, for example, which also states August, although later documents about the person listed testify to June. "In the end", Riccardi writes, "it’s all irrelevant; the bottom line is Louis Armstrong was born and that alone is something to celebrate." 

While on the subject, Riccardi continues to tell us everything we should know about Armstrong's ancestors: about Daniel Walker, who was born in Africa in 1792 and sold as a slave from Richmond, Virginia, to New Orleans in 1818, about his son of the same name, his daughter Josephine and Satchmo's father William Armstrong. Less is known about his mother's ancestors, but enough to fill a page and a half. Armstrong himself described the area around his birthplace as a “battlefield”, Riccardi researches who lived there and instead discovers that they were people from the lower and middle classes, most of whom owned their homes and had jobs. Louis' parents separated shortly after his birth, so Armstrong spent the first few years of his life with his grandmother, while his mother earned her living as a prostitute and was arrested several times by the authorities for alcohol-related and violent offenses. 

Riccardi uses the resources of the Louis Armstrong House Museum for his research, including unpublished manuscripts for Armstrong's autobiography “My Life in New Orleans”, various letters and other written memoirs that Armstrong wrote throughout his life. His grandmother taught him to cleanse his bowels once a week with a laxative, we learn, which he kept on doing until old age. He learned to defend himself on the street; at the same time, he enjoyed the colorful, ethnically mixed city life. There was a band playing in every saloon; at the age of 5 he was already listening to Buddy Bolden when he played in front of the Funky Butt Hall to attract customers. But he also heard many other styles of music, ragtime, waltzes, tangos, mazurkas, influences that would later be reflected in his music. For a while he lived with his uncle, then again with his mother and her changing lovers. He went to school, but because his mother could not provide for him and his sister on her own, he had to go out to work. His grandmother also made sure that he attended church regularly.

His youth was not without its problems. In October 1910, he was mentioned by name in the local press for the first time because together with some other boys the nine-year-old had helped with looting after a fire. The judge sent him to an educational institution for black youths, the Colored Waif's Home. He was released after eighteen days and was soon back on the streets and working. After a job as a paperboy, he was soon helping out at the Karnofsky family's junk and coal business. Riccardi weighs up the various dates floating around for the start of this work and explains why 1911 is the most likely for him. For the rest of his life, Armstrong would remember the Karnofskys, Yiddish food, Yiddish songs, working on the coal cart, and his first trips to Storyville. The city's red light district had been located there since 1897, which he would not have been allowed to visit on his own as a black boy, but he was allowed to do so on behalf of his white employer. Armstrong always remembered this time with gratitude, but in fact, Riccardi clarifies, it was nothing more than child labor that he did in order to survive for himself and support his family. 

During his lifetime, Bunk Johnson liked to boast that he had been Armstrong's teacher on the cornet; after Johnson's death, Armstrong made it clear: “Bunk didn't teach me shit.” But in fact, Riccardi explains, young Louis had copied some things from Johnson, such as his tone or his melodic inventiveness. A second influence was the cornet player Joe Oliver. Riccardi describes how Oliver had developed from being a rather mediocre musician to one whose tone and melodic invention impressed not only Armstrong. However, Armstrong did not yet play an instrument at this time; if anything, the influence of the two could be heard in his singing, in church or in a vocal quartet that he had formed with friends and with which he performed on the street. Here Armstrong took on the second tenor part, but also entertained the audience with jokes and dancing. He also whistled back then, in exactly the same way that he was later to play the trumpet, recalls Richard M. Jones. Riccardi supplements all of this with information about the history of the formation of the barbershop quartet and emphasizes the importance of this experience for the future musician. Virtually without lessons, he learned improvisation, voice training, how to listen to each other, play lead and invent new melodies as a second voice. He earned money with music for the first time, and at the same time other musicians became aware of the young singer. Riccardi dissects rumors that Armstrong had already made his first attempts on the cornet at this time just as thoroughly as the various versions as to why Armstrong ended up in the Colored Waif's Home again at the beginning of 1912 because he had fired a pistol on New Year's Eve. 

As a repeat offender, Armstrong was committed for six months this time. In the meantime, the home had established a music program initiated by Peter Davis. Armstrong put together a vocal quartet with other boys until Davis offered him the opportunity to play in the band, first tambourine, then drum, then alto horn, then bugle, and finally cornet. By May 1913, Armstrong was already the leader of this band and probably not unhappy, Riccardi argues, when the judge extended his placement. Here he found structure, attended school, received three meals a day and clean clothes. “The place seemed more like a health center, or a boarding school, than a boys jail.” However, it may not have been quite boarding school after all, Riccardi suggests, for example when he discusses the rumour that all the boys in the home were sterilized. In June 1914, Armstrong was released, this time into the care of his father, with whom he only stayed for a short time before returning to his mother and sister. He continued to work for the Karnofskys and as a paperboy. The two most popular cornet players, Bunk Johnson and Freddie Keppard, had left the city in 1914/15; Armstrong now mainly followed King Oliver, carrying his instrument at parades, and occasionally played as a guest with the Colored Waif's Home Band. Together with former inmates from the home, he also formed his own band, in which he played an instrument that the Karnofskis had bought for him. More and more, music became a serious source of income, even if the scene in which he was active was anything but harmless, as Riccardi describes. Many of the saloon owners were also pimps; there were regular shoot-outs. His buddies from the Waif's Home were not necessarily the best influence either. Despite all this, Armstrong was fascinated by the demimonde of his youth throughout his life and liked to talk about the petty criminals and prostitutes, especially Black Benny, a musician who played the bass drum in some of the brass bands, but also never avoided a brawl and to whom Riccardi dedicates a chapter of his own.

Oliver let him play with his band a few times and Armstrong gained his first experience of using his comedy routines, singing and cornet playing in this context. Riccardi briefly discusses the importance of numerous white musicians in the development of early jazz, especially the recordings of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band. In 1917, Armstrong played with a trio (piano, drums) in Mantraga's Saloon, where there were repeated scuffles with the police and he learned for the first time how important some kind of white sponsor was in such cases. He made an unsuccessful foray into pimping with the result that his girl gave him a stab wound. An influence alongside Oliver had been the cornet player Kid Rena, who was known for his high-note playing. When the police raided the Winter Garden in 1918 and arrested Kid Ory, Johnny Dodds and King Oliver, among others, Oliver had had enough. Other musicians had already left for Chicago the year before, and now he was also drawn north. Louis Armstrong replaced him in Kid Ory's band. When Storyville closed after the USA entered World War I, Satchmo still played the odd gig, but earned most of his money in non-musical jobs. 

The war was over, the saloons opened, Armstrong played with Ory again and became more and more popular not only among his fellow musicians but also among the dancers. In Gretna, six miles outside the city, he met Daisy Parker, “the biggest whore in Gretna”, as he once called her. At first it was just sex, then they fell in love, he remembers, then they got married. For their new home, he bought a gramophone and records, the ODJB, Caruso, Henry Burr, Halli-Curci, Tetrazzini, McCormack – jazz and opera arias that were to influence his melodic development. From spring 1919 he played in Fate Marable's Riverboat Band. Riccardi tells the story behind the Mississippi pleasure boats and the musical entertainment on them. The owners of the Streckfus company, which owned the main boats, were based in St. Louis, and Marable himself was from Kentucky, but both knew that there was something special about the music from New Orleans and that if they wanted to offer jazz on the boats, they needed musicians from there. Riccardi follows the course of the musical excursions, quoting from various local newspapers and from Armstrong's (and Streckfus') memoirs. For the trumpeter, the gig was also a theory course during which band colleagues taught him how to sight-read the arrangements that the band received directly from the publishers. When he left the Marable Band in September 1921, he felt as if he had spent three summers at the conservatory. 

In his home town, the scene for Armstrong's kind of music had thinned out considerably in the meantime because so many musicians had left the city. Satchmo himself turned down all offers to go north, but when his idol King Oliver sent him a telegram, he immediately packed his bags. Riccardi knows details about Satchmo's landlady during his time in Chicago, describes the first performance with Oliver's band, and the audience, which included numerous young white musicians. They, like young black musicians, were inspired by the Creole Jazz Band, but were particularly enthusiastic about the young cornet player, who had a completely different dynamic on the instrument than Oliver. Armstrong kept a low profile on stage, though: after all, this was Oliver's band and he didn't want to steal the show. Riccardi devotes a separate chapter to the romance with Lil Hardin, which he pieces together from various sources as an exciting love story. On April 5, 1923, King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band made their first recordings at Gennett Studios in Richmond, Indiana, a five-hour train ride from Chicago. Riccardi describes the technical limitations of the early recording equipment, which couldn't capture the double bass or the full drum set, so Bill Johnson played the bass notes on a banjo and Baby Dodds used wooden blocks instead of the drum set. The musicians were nervous – none of them had ever been in a recording studio before. Riccardi describes the unheard of recordings that were immediately successful, so that by October Oliver was already recording for three record companies, records that were to write jazz history. Oliver was overwhelmed by the success; when he negotiated a pay rise but did not pass it on to the musicians, the band disbanded. Armstrong stayed on until June 1924, when Lil, whom he had married in the meantime, made sure that he not only changed employers, but also the city.

In New York, Fletcher Henderson had recruited Armstrong as a third trumpeter. He was an immediate sensation with his band members, the New York musicians and the public. Around the same time, Armstrong began recording as a studio sideman, for blues singers and in instrumental recordings under the direction of Clarence Williams. Riccardi describes Armstrong's instrumental voice, his frustration that no one would let him sing, the competition between him and Sidney Bechet. He recorded several sides with Bessie Smith, a pairing that complemented each other almost perfectly artistically. Armstrong was involved in numerous successful recordings, but his name was nowhere to be found on the label and was often not even mentioned. Lil, who had returned to Chicago in the meantime, made sure that this would change. She got him a job at the Dreamland Café and finally arranged for him to record with his own band, the Hot Five, which featured two of his New Orleans buddies, Johnny Dodds and Kid Ory. "We just played music the same as we did in New Orleans,” Satchmo remembers the first recordings. “The Hot Five would become a brand,” explains Riccardi, ”and from the beginning, Louis ensured that listeners would get to know the entire cast by name.” However, the Hot Five was primarily a studio ensemble; in real life, Armstrong performed with Lil's band at Dreamland and with Erskine Tate's orchestra at the Vendome Theatre. In the latter, he accompanied silent films; but above all, he blew hot solos in the concert sections between the film screenings. People sometimes watched the movies five times just to hear his high F's in the last number. 

In February 1926, Armstrong recorded “Heebie Jeebies”, the first piece in which he sang extensively, and with improvised scat singing at that. His whole vocal approach had a huge influence on pop music, explains Riccardi, not unlike his way of playing the trumpet. In “Cornet Shop Suey” he describes Armstrong's “clarinet style”, a virtuoso technique reminiscent of the famous solo in "High Society" (in a solo concept which, as the author proves, was not improvised at all, but completely pre-planned). For a while Armstrong toyed with the idea of playing with King Oliver again, but then decided on a younger band, led by Carroll Dickerson, with a more modern sound, with a rhythmic four-beat instead of two-beat foundation. In July 1928, he went into the studio with a younger edition of the Hot Five as well, which included Earl Hines and Zutty Singleton. Classics such as “Skip the Gutter”, Hines' “A Monday Date” and above all the “West End Blues” were created – the latter in particular was an instant hit and an influence on musicians of all instruments all over the world. Riccardi traces the triumph of the recording and its influence on Billie Holiday, Teddy Wilson, Leonard Feather, Artie Shaw, George Wettling and fellow trumpeter Jabbo Smith, who liked to challenge Armstrong in those years. The success convinced his label that this music could also be heard outside the "race records" market, which was primarily aimed at an African-American audience. The result was recordings as diverse as “Weather Bird”, an unaccompanied duet by Armstrong and Hines, and Don Redman's modern arrangement of “No One Else But You”, or “Tight Like This” with the longest Armstrong solo to date, which seems to tell a story from beginning to end. As a result, his producer urged him to go to New York and change his repertoire in favor of popular songs. He turned pieces written by Broadway composers into hits, “I Can't Give You Anything But Love”, “When You're Smiling”, “After You've Gone”, “I'm Confessin'” and many others. 

And then Riccardi ends his book with a kind of summary: Armstrong "spent the first 28 years of his life soaking up music like a sponge. Growing up in poverty, a generation removed from slavery, he grew up hearing the blues and ragtime and the nascent sounds of jazz and quickly internalized the vernacular sounds of his race. But he also hummed Yiddish lullabies with the Karnofsky family, harmonized on pop tunes with his vocal quartet, sang in church, and bought records by superstars such as Enrico Caruso and John McCormack. He transitioned from Kid Ory’s swinging small group to the dance band of Fate Marable, studying the records of Art Hickman and Paul Whiteman as he developed his style. He played hymns and second line specialties in the brass bands, but also read scores and learned the marches of John Philip Sousa. Minstrelsy was in the air, in&uencing Armstrong’s comedic sensibilities through the recordings of Bert Williams, yet he also absorbed a new style of Black comedy pioneered by Bill Robinson, adapting accordingly to inspire laughter in audiences both Black and white. He tangled with Sidney Bechet and perfected the art of the obligato behind the blues singers in New York, while simultaneously getting food for thought from dance band musicians B. A. Rolfe and Vic D’Ippolito while serving as a sideman in Fletcher Henderson’s orchestra. When his 'Heebie Jeebies' put scat singing on the map, he was accompanying silent movies with a symphony orchestra, trying to not get distracted by Moby-Dick biting into John Barrymore’s leg. He played music for dancing and became a dancer himself, demonstrating the Charleston, the Mess Around, and other terpsichorean feats on the Chicago stage. His 'West End Blues' changed the sound of jazz at a time when he and his bandmates raced to the radio to hear Guy Lombardo broadcast each night. He idolized pioneers like Joe Oliver and Bunk Johnson, yet made time to encourage his young disciples on and on the bandstand to seek their own original voices. All of this music – and more – was rumbling inside of his soul every time he hit the stage, summarizing all that came before him and making possible all that would follow."

Riccardi uses his final chapter to trace the lives of the most important figures in Armstrong's life: his wives Lil and Alpha, King Oliver, Bunk Johnson, Captain Joseph Jones, Peter Davis, his sister Mama Lucy. At the end, he discusses why Armstrong was buried in New York and not New Orleans. “You know, I never did leave New Orleans,” Satchmo had said in 1950 about the city where he no longer lived after 1922. “Right now I keep the essence of New Orleans every time I play.”

Ricky Ricccardi's book is the last in a trilogy of Armstrong biographies. The first dealt with Armstrong's late years, the second with the swing era and his recordings with big bands. The third now deals with his beginnings – and of the three it is probably the most fascinating. As archivist at the Louis Armstrong House Museum, Riccardi not only has all the sources at his fingertips; he is also an excellent and critical researcher. He looks behind even minor details, questions previous knowledge, but also allows different stories to stand side by side, suggesting which of them is the most likely, quotes from contemporary sources and knows biographical details even about minor figures – insofar as they were important for Armstrong's development. Riccardi writes briskly, in a style that brings the atmosphere of the time to life. At the same time, he manages to explain the musical peculiarities of the trumpeter and singer's music without lapsing into technical terms. And he is a sympathetic author – to his subject, his readers, but also to earlier contemporary witnesses or authors, whom he, unlike is often the case in the profession of jazz writing, reads as from a different time and takes their position seriously instead of condemning them with the knowledge of today. “Stomp Off, Let's Go” is definitively a standard work within the not exactly small Armstrong literature, and is also recommended to anyone who is interested in the early history of jazz. It is his last book about Armstrong's story, says Riccardi in the foreword. After reading it, at least this reviewer thinks: We sincerely hope not!

Wolfram Knauer (März 2025)


Peter Brötzmann. Free Jazz, Revolution and the Politics of Improvisation
von Daniel Spicer
London 2025 (Repeater Books)
338 Seiten, 14,99 Britische Pfund
ISBN: 978-1915672407

Peter Brötzmann was always proud to be one of the very few German jazz musicians who was able to organize numerous international tours without state support. He lived in Wuppertal, traveled around the world and his concerts in the USA, for example, were always well attended. Even Bill Clinton once replied to the question of which musician he liked to listen to, whose name would probably surprise people the most: “Brötzmann, one of the greatest alive”. It is therefore surprising that there is no biography of Brötzmann in English, apart from Gérard Rouy's conversations with the saxophonist (Wolke Verlag, 2014). Now the British journalist Daniel Spicer has produced one, as an expansion of a “primer” published in 2012 for the magazine The Wire. In the foreword, Spicer explains that he deliberately refrained from including the history of German jazz because Brötzmann's sphere of influence was so much wider. Brötzmann's art is a political manifesto, even if the saxophonist later distanced himself from the left-wing slogans of his youth. His readers should not expect a personal biography, he says, tempering any expectations; he is primarily concerned with the musician's art. In fact, Spicer writes about more than just the music; in the course of reading the book, you also get to know Peter Brötzmann as a person.

Right at the beginning of the first chapter, Spicer points out the extreme reactions to Brötzmann's music: Some revered him, to others - talk show host Jimmy Fallon, for example - he and his music were just a bad joke. Fellow musicians were impressed by the sheer power he drew from his instrument, so much power that he allegedly had no octave key for a while because he could reach the higher notes solely through the overtones he tickled out of the horn. Spicer counters this power with the fact that Brötzmann never used it just for the sake of volume. He compares his sound to the human cry, to the blues, and refers to moments of lyricism and tenderness in his playing. Brötzmann says that what has always interested him about jazz is that this music could only be created together. Sun Ra, Duke Ellington ... they were his role models when he joined forces with others in the 1960s to create something new, something of his own.

In the second chapter, things do become biographical. Spicer tells of Brötzmann's childhood and youth, of his fascination with visual art (the making aspect of it), of Ellington, Armstrong and blues records and of a Sidney Bechet concert. His first band is a swing trio in which he plays the clarinet. He works in a print shop, produces drawings, paintings and collages, enrolls at the Werkkunstschule Wuppertal and has his first exhibitions in Remscheid, Nijmegen and Bremen. He becomes more and more interested in modern jazz and at the same time becomes friends with Peter Kowald, who played tuba in a student Dixieland band, and hangs out in the current Fluxus scene. He becomes assistant to the Korean artist Nam June Paik, whom he accompanies on a series of exhibitions and through whom he comes into contact with the music of John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen. He marries, starts a family, takes on graphic design jobs to earn a living and plays more or less “on the side”. Spicer explains the state of modern jazz in West Germany at the time: Albert Mangelsdorff in Frankfurt, Gunther Hampel in Cologne, and Brötzmann / Kowald in Wuppertal. Brötzmann himself tells how Steve Lacy heard and encouraged them, but above all how he introduced him to Don Cherry. Cherry hears something in Brötzmann's tone and invites him to join him in Paris. German Jazz Festival 1966 (Trio with Kowald and Pierre Courbois), a tour with Carla Bley's band, an acquaintance with Sven-Åke Johansson, the founding of the New Jazz Artists' Guild and Sounds Magazine together with Rainer Blome, participation in Alexander von Schlippenbach's Globe Unity Orchestra, and finally “For Adolphe Sax”, his first album and, as Spicer notes, the first example of European free improvisation, released on his own label BRÖ.

The 1960s, writes Spicer in the third chapter of his book, was the decade in which an entire generation of young Germans questioned their parents and their involvement in the atrocities of Nazi Germany. There were similar youth movements elsewhere in the world, but in Germany, where Kurt Georg Kiesinger, a former member of the Nazi party, had just been elected chancellor, the rebellion had a different flavor. Spicer talks about the Shah's visit to West Berlin, the death of Benno Ohnesorg and the beginnings of an increasingly violent extra-parliamentary opposition. In the USA, too, the free jazz of the early 1960s was political music, at least music that felt political in its radicalism. In West Germany at the same time, however, the word “free” alone had completely different meanings. Brötzmann says that he certainly sympathized with the left-wing movement at the time, but rejected its over-ideologization. The fact that the left-wing groups at the universities devalued his kind of free jazz as “elitist” and preferred to listen to music like that of Joan Baez instead did the rest. He tells how in 1968, the year Brötzmann recorded “Machine Gun”, three other musicians he was involved with went in completely different directions: Jaki Liebezeit with the group Can, Mani Neumeier with Guru Guru, and Paul Lovens with an early, still acoustic incarnation of Kraftwerk. He was familiar with bands like Tangerine Dream, but his idea of how music can change the world was different. Brötzmann and Kowald now had international contacts with colleagues from the Netherlands, England and Belgium. In 1968, Brötzmann was invited to play with a larger formation at the German Jazz Festival in Frankfurt, marking the birth of “Machine Gun”. This was clearly political music, say both Evan Parker and Brötzmann, a kind of protest that was part of all the discourses taking place at the same time. The most astonishing thing about the album was probably its success, writes Spicer, which immediately turned Brötzmann into a kind of underground star. In any case, his influence extends far beyond the sphere of jazz into rock, punk rock and electronic music.

Politics also play a role in the fourth chapter, which begins with Brötzmann's anti-capitalist stance, which Spicer describes on the basis of Joachim Ernst Berendt's invitation to the Berlin Jazztage, an invitation that Brötzmann declines in order to establish a kind of counter-festival instead, the Total Music Meeting, together with Jost Gebers in 1968. A year later, also with Gebers, he founded Free Music Production, a label that would soon document the lively free improvisation scene in Europe. Brötzmann is active in all kinds of formations, but above all he focuses more and more on the trio with Han Bennink and Fred van Hove, which is expanded into a quartet on occasion by Albert Mangelsdorff. Spicer describes how Bennink's often clownish interludes differ from Brötzmann's serious habitus; he also mentions that Bennink's jokes always had a musical core. He describes the effect of this music behind the Iron Curtain, for example at the festival in Warsaw in 1974 or at performances in the GDR. After Van Hove left the trio because Bennink's stage jokes were too much for him (and the pianos in the clubs were too bad), Brötzmann discovered that there was even more freedom in the duo with Bennink alone. This line-up lasted until 1977, after which the two met up from time to time, but no longer played together regularly. 

In chapter 5, Spicer sheds light on Brötzmann's collaboration with the bassist Harry Miller and the drummer Louis Moholo as well as his first contacts in the avant-garde scene in Japan. In Hungary he discovered the tarogato as an additional instrument; in the Netherlands he played with Misha Mengelberg's Instant Composers Pool. Through Don Cherry he met the guitarist Sonny Sharrock; he also took part in other projects of the Globe Unity Orchestra. In Hamburg, with the help of NDR, he is able to produce “Alarm”, another international and large ensemble piece.

After Miller's death, Brötzmann founded the quartet Last Exit in 1986 together with Sonny Sharrock, Ronald Shannon Jackson and Bill Laswell, and Spicer links this band in the sixth chapter of his book with the simultaneous rise of the Young Lions around Wynton Marsalis. Last Exit was also intended as a “Fuck You” and an antidote to the new conservatism in jazz, he writes. The band combines the spirit of free jazz with that of punk rock and reaches a primarily young audience. Herbie Hancock even plays on one track on their second album. It was not Hancock, however, but the punk, almost metal spirit of the music that made Last Exit so influential, beyond the jazz scene, but also into jazz, as Spicer notes, referring to John Zorn and his band Naked City.

At the beginning of chapter 7, Spicer asks whether Brötzmann is still playing jazz at all. Bill Laswell places the energetic power music more in the vicinity of punk rock; Brötzmann himself, however, always referred to jazz as a role model. Spicer recounts the (probably exotic-sounding to non-German readers) episode of the hour-long television panel in which several critics compared Brötzmann's aesthetics with Klaus Doldinger's in 1967 and most of them reacted to his attitude with incomprehension. Brötzmann himself commented that if he had learned anything from his American friends, it was stylistic openness. Spicer discusses the idea of an emancipation of European jazz from its (Afro)American role models. In the course of their work, Brötzmann and Kowald realized that African-American colleagues paid them respect precisely because they had developed their own personal style. In the 1980s and 1990s, Brötzmann recorded an album with Rashied Ali and Fred Hopkins, and another with William Parker and Milford Graves. Parker was also involved in Brötzmann's Albert Ayler tribute project Die Like a Dog Quartet. Brötzmann remembers that Ayler heard him several times at the Cave in Heidelberg, and Spicer asks: If Ayler copied something from you and the late John Coltrane listened attentively to Ayler, couldn't it be that you, Brötzmann, were somehow involved? Brötzmann reacts brusquely: “That's going a bit too far! 

Spicer begins his eighth chapter with a description of the Chicago jazz scene, where Brötzmann plays a concert with seven local improvisers in January 1997, an ensemble that expands into a tentet in the fall of the same year. In this chapter, Spicer also talks about the reality of the musician's life, who had always consumed alcohol throughout his life. One evening in 1999, when he could hardly move his fingers and a doctor diagnosed gout and made a direct connection between the disease and his alcohol consumption, Brötzmann gave up drinking from one day to the next. With Michael Wertmüller and Marino Pliakas, he forms his next trio, whose first album title does justice to the music: “Full Blast”. Spicer goes through other bands of the early 2000s. And he tells how Brötzmann said goodbye to the Chicago Tentet in 2012 with a statement in which he lamented the routine that had set in with the band, which was perhaps necessary but detrimental to the art. It is also the money: there have always been financial hurdles, says Brötzmann; who could afford to pay such a large band?

In the last chapter, Spicer approaches the last bands in which Brötzmann was active, a trio with pianist Masahiko Satoh and drummer Takeo Moriyama, another with bassist John Edwards and drummer Steve Noble. In Chicago, he met vibraphonist Jason Adasiewicz, and then steel guitarist Heather Leigh in 2015. In the last decade of his life, Brötzmann also made a name for himself again as a visual artist, with catalogs and solo shows in Chicago and Wuppertal. Spicer addresses the saxophonist's state of health, weak lungs and the hardships of the coronavirus crisis. With “I Surrender Dear”, Brötzmann presents an album on which he interprets standards from the Great American Songbook for the first time. When the coronavirus crisis subsided, the saxophonist was booked for concerts again, but the strength, the power, the ability to maintain an energy level over a long period of time was no longer there. After two concerts in Warsaw and London in February 2023, Brötzmann was hospitalized and had to admit to himself that he could no longer play. “I can't complain,” he says. “I'm 82 now, I've had an eventful life. If blowing doesn't work anymore then I have to concentrate on the fine arts again. Just stopping is out of the question.” On June 22, 2023, Peter Brötzmann died peacefully in his sleep at home in Wuppertal.

Daniel Spicer's biography is an exciting read at every point. He takes on the role of a partisan reporter, devoted to the person and the music of Brötzmann, and he does not make the mistake of wanting to include every, but really every album on which the saxophonist ever played. He spans the arc of an artistic career and provides sufficient insight into the sensitive musician, whose strong aesthetic attitude shines through in his music, but who is also driven by a constant desire for new challenges. In his research, Spicer largely limits himself to English-language literature, which, on the other hand, does not leave many gaps in view of Brötzmann's international personality. A selective discography concludes the book.

Wolfram Knauer (März 2025)

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