poetrylover3 Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 After a lifetime of listening to jazz I still don't get it. Help with good entry points will be greatly appreciated. I love Hard bop-especially the Blue Note 60s sessions, if that helps. Thanks in advance. Peace, Jeff T Quote
DMP Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 "Out To Lunch?" Maybe some of the Pharoah Sanders' Impulse titles, which can be free and groovy at the same time? Quote
Dan Gould Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Aric can tell you a lot about "free" jazz. Quote
John Tapscott Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 One free jazz date that works for me is Cecil Taylor's "Conquistador". It seems to have some structure to it (though not in a formal way, obviously). It is not easy listening by any means, but it has some ebb and flow, some "moods", some degree of logic to it. It might be a place to start. Quote
Tom Storer Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Blue Trane, if you've tried repeatedly over a lifetime of listening to jazz and it hasn't grabbed you yet, what makes you think there's a magic entry point that will change the way you hear it? If I were you, I'd just accept that it's not my cup of tea and live happily ever after! Quote
sidewinder Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 I find Andrew Hill's 'Compulsion' and Grachan Moncur III 'Some Other Stuff' to be very listenable transitional albums. It took me ages to get into this stuff at all too. Quote
JohnS Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Not quite free jazz but inline with some of the suggestions above - I'd recommned Cecil Taylor's 'The World of Cecil Taylor' on Candid. Just avbput the most exciting piano jazz I've heard. Archie Shepp's 'Four For Trane' is suberb. Similarly the New York Contemporay Five is a fine intro too - the only available music is on a Storyville cd. Quote
Niko Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 i found Marion Brown's ESP albums and the two Prince Lasha / Sonny Simmons albums on Contemporary rather accessible... Quote
Guy Berger Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Blue Trane, do you like Coltrane's A Love Supreme? If so I would start listening to Coltrane's '65 quartet recordings chronologically. Other accessible avant-garde or semi-avant-garde dates: Miles Davis, Miles Smiles, ESP, Filles de Kilimanjaro Sonny Simmons & Prince Lasha, The Cry, Firebirds Eric Dolphy, Out to Lunch, Far Cry, Out There, Live at the Five Spot 1 & 2, Outward Bound Mingus, a bunch of stuff Andrew Hill, Point of Departure, Black Fire, Judgment, a bunch of other stuff Bobby Hutcherson, Dialogue, Components Archie Shepp, Four for Trane Guy Quote
Guy Berger Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Ornette Coleman Good call -- The Shape of Jazz to Come, Turn of the Century, This Is Our Music would be the three to start with Quote
J.A.W. Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Blue Trane, if you've tried repeatedly over a lifetime of listening to jazz and it hasn't grabbed you yet, what makes you think there's a magic entry point that will change the way you hear it? If I were you, I'd just accept that it's not my cup of tea and live happily ever after! My thoughts exactly. Quote
king ubu Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Cecil Taylor's music around the time he did his two Blue Notes was *very* structured. Not "not in a formal way", but in a much more complex way! Quote
Niko Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Blue Trane, if you've tried repeatedly over a lifetime of listening to jazz and it hasn't grabbed you yet, what makes you think there's a magic entry point that will change the way you hear it? If I were you, I'd just accept that it's not my cup of tea and live happily ever after! My thoughts exactly. thought this too sometimes but am glad actually that i didn't give up and tried out different things from time to time; still remember very well when i got my first charlie parker compilation at 14 and after 4 or 5 listens had this moment of "so this is how this is supposed to be meant" and have enjoyed the music a lot ever since (not that i'd believe anymore to really have figured out how Charlie Parker meant Yardbird Suite ) with free jazz it took me longer and of course there is something ridiculous in listening to music you don't really like just because you have read that it is excellent but after all i would have missed so many great listening experiences had i given up [and now you may say i am still not REALLY getting it but am just telling myself that i do because i don't want to feel stupid or uneducated or whatever; but that's not how i am perceiving it, so even if it were the case that i am just pretending - i don't think it would matter] Quote
Quincy Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 Ornette Coleman Good call -- The Shape of Jazz to Come, Turn of the Century, This Is Our Music would be the three to start with Strangley enough these were the first 3 I started with. I owned Shape for at least a year, played it 1/2 a dozen times and didn't get it. Like the origianl poster, I wasn't going to give up. This Is Our Music had just entered the CD market (outside of the box) so I tried it. There were some brief moments where I thought it might be clicking, but not really. But I'd put it on every month or so anyway. Came across a used Turn Of The Century and figured I might as well invest another $7 in this mystery. BAM! Not sure if it was the playing of the other 2 over a period of time that laid the ground work for "getting it" & loving it with Turn Of The Century, or if it was finally hearing the right entry point. I suspect some it is due to the lead song "Ramblin.'" Some things take time. Sometimes time doesn't help. Keep trying till you're sure. Quote
paul secor Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 (edited) After a lifetime of listening to jazz I still don't get it. Help with good entry points will be greatly appreciated. I love Hard bop-especially the Blue Note 60s sessions, if that helps. Thanks in advance. Peace, Jeff T It might help if you'd tell us what free jazz you've listened to (and not gotten). Edited May 28, 2007 by paul secor Quote
BruceH Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 It's just jazz with everything you like about jazz subtracted. Either that or the giveaway bin at your local flea-market. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted May 28, 2007 Report Posted May 28, 2007 It's just jazz with everything you like about jazz subtracted. Either that or the giveaway bin at your local flea-market. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted May 29, 2007 Report Posted May 29, 2007 Blue Trane: I made a mix-CD of this type of music for someone who had the same question as you. Sam Rivers, Eric Dolphy, Stanley Cowell, a bunch of stuff. PM me if you'd like a copy. Quote
MoGrubb Posted May 29, 2007 Report Posted May 29, 2007 re: Free Jazz ...haven't gotten there yet. -_- Quote
Morganized Posted May 29, 2007 Report Posted May 29, 2007 Aric can tell you a lot about "free" jazz. Quote
Aggie87 Posted May 29, 2007 Report Posted May 29, 2007 Try the Clusone 3, or some Jimmy Giuffre - Free Fall or the '61 material. Quote
Guy Berger Posted May 29, 2007 Report Posted May 29, 2007 Jimmy Giuffre - Free Fall I think this is pretty extreme for someone who's not into free jazz. Guy Quote
Guy Berger Posted May 29, 2007 Report Posted May 29, 2007 Walter Davis wrote a fantastic primer on avant-garde jazz for fans of straight-ahead jazz about 10 years ago and posted it to rec.music.bluenote. I am reproducing it here: hi all, this is for folks who are looking for an introduction to the avant garde. I'm writing this from the perspective of a straight-ahead jazz fan who began exploring this branch of jazz about 5 years ago. Folks from other perspectives may not find this very useful and there's no guarantee that straight-ahead folks will either. Remember, it's not really important that you like all or any of this stuff. The various recordings I'll be mentioning are not meant to necessarily be representative of or classics within a given type of music. They're things I like and that either helped me get into the music or that I think will help others. Obviously, strictly following my advice is no better than strictly following anyone else's. When I say "if you don't like X, you probably won't like Y" that's just my opinion - don't reject Y just because I said so. One thing to be clear about from the beginning is that there really is no avant garde jazz. This term usually loosely refers to an array of distinct musical styles, many of which are 30 or more years old. This is important to remember because disliking one outside style does not mean that you'll dislike them all (and vice versa). There was an article by Kevin Whitehead in the Village Voice about a year ago where he tries to more precisely categorize various styles of the avant garde, and I'm going to try to follow his categories here. You might find it easier if you explore one 'style' at a time rather than sampling a little from each one (although that's not how I've gone about it). In general, I think it's hard to immediately grasp this stuff because it can be very different. It'll be even harder to grasp 5 or 6 different things simultaneously. You also might prefer seeing some of these folks live if you get the chance. It's been my experience that a lot of straight-ahead fans have a hard time connecting to avant-garde jazz on record - maybe because the off switch is so handy. :-) But I've seen some of these same people really connect to live performances, where I think they get a better sense of how everything goes together and realize that it's not as chaotic as it sometimes sounds. Hopefully other folks will add on and improve this list. And before anyone gets worked up, I'm not wed to any of these categories, they were just the most convenient way for me to organize this. Other caveats include my lack of exposure to European jazz and that I generally prefer more energetic music (but not too much so!). And the big caveat is that I have virtually no technical knowledge of music. I will use terms like "structure" or "musical elements" and these should be treated as nothing more than vague terms (not unlike "avant garde"). However, since the categories in part distinguish among pieces of music or musicians based on whether they rely on "tradtional" or "non-traditional" structures, I've tried to make some judgments that I'm not really qualified to make. I've tried to use two criteria - whether a piece sounds significantly "different" from "standard" jazz to me and whether I've seen critics, rmb posters, etc. refer to this musician or album as one displaying "non-traditional" structures. If a piece meets both criteria, I've categorized as I saw fit. Of course, since you can almost always find some critic or rmb poster who will say that about a musician, it really comes down to the first criterion (big surprise!). Hopefully those with more musical knowledge will correct some of my mistakes. I've organized this article into three parts. Part 1 presents a list of classic albums and musicians which I think form the primary starting point for avant-garde jazz - sort of prerequisite listening. Part 2 explores the categories and tries to give some more detail on how I went about classifying things. Part 3 (in the next post) gives lists of albums, some with comments, categorized as best I can. Just so nobody feels left out, I've also included a list of straight-ahead albums released in the last 20 years or so that I've enjoyed. Part 1: The background You'll often hear comments about how the avant-garde doesn't honor (or play in, isn't part of, etc.) ‘the tradition'. Nothing could be further from the truth. The Association for the Advancement of Creative Music (AACM), probably the single most important group within the US avant garde scene, was founded with the express purpose of celebrating and extending the tradition of African-American music. Their motto (if memory serves) is: great black music, ancient to the future. The avant-garde draws heavily on the work of the classics, sometimes reaching back to the very beginnings of jazz, and they were doing so long before the current crop of traditionalists came along (but with a rather different purpose in mind). Anyway, I think it's important to have some knowledge of the artists who most strongly influenced the a.g. These are folks who meet any definition of jazz - Coleman (pre-Prime Time), Monk, Mingus, Ellington, Coltrane (esp. the pre-ALS Impulses), Davis (esp. the 5tet with Shorter), and early Taylor. It's probably not necessary to explore each of these (although I highly recommend it) and other names could easily be added to this list. But my point is that if this music still sounds somewhat foreign, strange, dissonant to you, you may not want to push farther in. You can't really go wrong with any of these folks, but some personal favorites: COLEMAN - Shape of Jazz to Come and Change of the Century (Atl), the 2 live BN's; MONK - Genius of Modern Music 1 & 2 (BN), Monk's Music (OJC), Brilliant Corners (OJC), Big Band/Quartet (Columbia) and Alone in SF (OJC); MINGUS - Black Saint and the Sinner Lady (Imp), Mingus Presents Mingus (Candid), New Tijuana Moods (BMG), Changes 1&2 (Rhino), Mingus Ah Um (Columbia); ELLINGTON - Far East Suite (BMG), and His Mother Called Him Bill (BMG), Afro-Eurasian Eclipse (OJC), Blanton-Webster Years (RCA); Coltrane - Giant Steps (Atl), Crescent, At Birdland, A Love Supreme (all Imp - I get to the later stuff below); Davis - Plugged Nickel, Miles Smiles, ESP, Complete Concert 1964 (incl. Four and More) (all Columbia, the last has G. Coleman rather than Shorter); early Taylor - Jazz Advance (BN), Jumpin' Pumpkins (Candid) (someone else should jump in here, this is not my forte) Additionally, there's a trio of 60's Blue Note discs which are central to the development of my jazz tastes and really my whole conception of what the best jazz achieves - Eric Dolphy's _Out to Lunch_, Bobby Hutcherson's _Dialogue_, and Andrew Hill's _Point of Departure_. Others will no doubt disagree, but I think understanding these albums is an important step towards avant garde jazz. These aren't strictly ‘background' but I think they're fairly introductory. There are a number of other Blue Note albums from the same period which would probably also work - in addition to other albums by those artists, look for Sam Rivers, Tony Williams, Grachan Moncur, Jackie McLean (some of it), etc. I do prefer more energetic stuff, but I'm starting to get into the more contemplative side of jazz. I think some important early recordings of this type would include Lennie Tristano (_New Tristano_ on Rhino), MJQ (_Dedicated to Connie_ on Atlantic is very nice), and the Jimmy Giuffre 3 (a nice 2-disc set on ECM, also a budget-priced Atlantic, a couple of nice Hat Arts). I still haven't gotten around to them, but I would think that Mulligan's pianoless quartet goes here. These albums are important not just for introducing a certain introspection to jazz, but also for being some of the earliest examples I know of which avoid strict head-solo-head formats and challenge some other jazz conventions. Finally, there's late period Coltrane. These aren't necessarily easy to get into, but they open the door to a huge portion of avant-garde music. These are highly energetic, emotional, somewhat dissonant and unstructured performances. The emphasis is not so much on the compositions and only somewhat on the group interaction. The main emphasis is on the soloist and where he or she wants to take himself and the listener. (I don't mean to denigrate the importance of the ensemble). My faves so far are _Major Works_ ("Ascension" really), _Interstellar Space_, _Meditations_, and parts of _Live in Japan_. Check out _Sun Ship_ and _Stellar Regions_ which have recently been (re-) released. If you like ALS but find yourself not liking these, you might try _Transition_ and _JC Quartet Plays..._ which are closer to the classic quartet sound. Part 2: The Categories As I said, I'm taking these categories from Kevin Whitehead's article "Death to the Avant Garde" from the Village Voice (March 21, 1995). This piece argues against the use of a single term to describe this music, because the term is not only contradictory (this "style" of jazz is over 35 years old, how avant garde can it be?) but also because there are in fact many styles of "avant garde" jazz. This quotes sums up the article best: Assuming jazz evolved out of its own historical roots around 1900, the historical avant-garde surfaced more than a third of the music's lifetime ago. Even the most squeamish should be able to place it in context by now. I think there are some problems with his categories, which I'll get to in a bit, and neither he nor I believe that any artist should be pigeonholed into a category. In fact, many (most?) of the musicians fall into more than one category. I think you could legitimately put David Murray into all four. Hell, Sun Ra may have created all four (in one album!) and, as always, it took everyone at least 10 years to catch on :-). But it is a handy framework and at least gives us a place to start beyond the single term. There's really no way to decide which of the categories to plop a borderline artist into, so I've done it by emphasizing the way that I most strongly relate to the music or by the way that I first reacted to the music. For example, although I read about Cecil Taylor imposing non-traditional structures on his music (which would suggest he belongs in "restructuralism"), I primarily react to the emotion and energy of what I've heard of his later music so I put this music into "expressionism". FREEBOP is the first category, which Whitehead describes as: "the music of Ornette Coleman and its offshoots: boppy/melodic heads followed by linear free improvising or, as in Ornette's case, blowing which permits spontaneous deviation from or supension of the head's chords or chorus structures." This category may be a bit narrow for my purposes because of the emphasis on the head-solo-head format. If we changed that part of the definition to something like "the basic tune contains easily recognizable jazz elements" while still allowing for the "linear free improvising ... " we'd have a working definition for a lot of the "in-out" stuff on my 90's list. (That might help save the ‘restructuralism' category below) Following Whitehead's strict definition, we would almost be limited to Coleman's direct disciples - Cherry, Haden, some of Redman's work, Ulmer, etc. And, of course, the Davis-Shorter quintet whose music I find to relate more closely to this category than any of the others. There are a ton of tracks from numerous artists that would fit into this category, but on albums that might not otherwise fit. As such, I'm going to expand the definition along the lines that I suggested above, and use this as a sort of catch-all category for music which has a strong (and I mean _strong_) "traditional" jazz content and doesn't screw around too much with structure and instrumentation. Unfortunately, that means that pretty much everyone you can think of falls in this category from time to time. It also means that "freebop" is no longer a good descriptive term for this category, but I'm not overly fond of Joe Germuska's suggestion of "neo-classical" because I've seen that term used too often to describe "straight ahead" jazz. But I intend this category to serve as the primary starting point for most folks - if you like the Coleman, Davis, Mingus, early Coltrane Impulse stuff I've listed above, I think you'll be comfortable with the items in this category. Included in this category are some albums that I consider to be straight-ahead but are by musicians who, rightly or wrongly, are considered avant-garde or at least esoteric. EXPRESSIONISM is what I think most people think of when they hear the term ‘free jazz'. This is the wild, wooly, honking, squeaking, high energy, take no prisoners, sounds like chaos (or tortured cats) kind of jazz. However, it's hardly the predominant style of avant garde jazz. This is the category that late Coltrane prepares you for, so if you can't dig _Interstellar Space_ or _Meditations_ or something similar, there may not be much point in you further exploring this category. My tastes run heavily to saxophonists and it's the instrument I identify with this category, but I'm sure there are non-saxophonists in this category. As I noted above, I'd put the later Cecil Taylor that I've heard (and it's not much) in this category. This music is not nearly as chaotic or freeform as the description might suggest. When I listen to a Charles Gayle or David S. Ware, I hear clear references to Coltrane, Ayler, even Rollins (in Ware's case). There is a certain structure, or regularity perhaps, to much of this music. In fact, I often find that it sounds too much alike, hardly what it would be like if it didn't reference _a_ tradition (even if not _the_ tradition). I think one source of difficulty for many folks is that, moreso than any other form of music, it is about the personal, emotional expression of the artist - and either you go along for the ride or you don't. When it takes you, there's no better musical experience (IMHO); but when it doesn't, you're left with little besides marvelling at the musician's technique, energy, and stamina. (In case you can't tell, I think the idea that these musicians are playing expressionistically to cover up a lack of technique is ludicrous). My guess is that fans of alternative rock or other loud, dissonant music would be most comfortable jumping in here. RESTRUCTURALISM is an ugly term with a vague definition, but it's the best I've heard. Whitehead states that restructuralism "posits alternatives to theme-solo-theme and/or soloist + rhythm section, or other standard practices." Well, when you get right down to it, that just about covers all of avant-garde jazz. When we briefly discussed how to describe the type of music on my list of jazz in the 90's, some folks suggested this term, which I would consider to be accurate for some of it but not most. I am going to take Whitehead's definition a little further and create two sub-categories. The first will contain music that is essentially freebop with odd instrumentation - i.e. music with easily identifiable jazz elements mixed with "free" improvisation but which distinguishes itself with voicings created by odd instrumentation. In other words, music that's not too strange except that there might be a tuba playing the bass line or the band consists entirely of saxophones. I'm a little wary, but I'm going to stick jazz which borrows heavily from music of another culture here. Something like Zorn's Masada is essentially Colemanesque freebop with some klezmer thrown in which strikes me as not being much different in spirit from freebop played by a sax quartet. The second is for music that sounds sufficiently different that I assume that non-traditional musical elements are at work (see my note above about my lack of technical knowledge) and which may or may not also use non-traditional instrumentation. For better or worse, I think I end up putting most of the contemplative, introspective avant-garde stuff that I've heard in this category. This is an incredibly broad category - a lot of it isn't vastly different, just different enough that I wasn't comfortable calling it freebop. Obviously there's a very thin line between these two sub-categories as well as between restructuralism and freebop. Does Braxton's piano quartet playing standards belong in freebop (it's not that weird) or the ‘different structures' subcategory of restructuralism? Or do we note that it's not that weird except that Ehrlich's reeds are sometimes playing the traditional piano role while Braxton plays the sax on piano (as suggested by Whitehead) and decide that this is really more in tune with the ‘odd instrumentation' subcategory? And do bands like Masada belong here or down in the "post-modernism" category? Both sub-categories would make a "logical" next step after freebop. Also, fans of brass bands or big bands might find the first sub-category appealing. Fans of classical music might find that some of the more introspective music in the second sub-category would be a good place to start. If you really enjoy Mingus, Sun Ra, and Ellington, both of these categories might appeal to you, but especially the first one. And if you like the Hill, Hutcherson, Dolphy and/or Tristano, Giuffre, MJQ albums I mentioned earlier, I think you'll like a lot of the stuff in the second sub-category. POST-MODERNISM is unfortunately just as anachronistic a term as "avant-garde" at this point, but it seems to have a fairly well-recognized definition. Don't be intimidated or think that I'm trying to impress you. Post-modernism, in this context, simply refers to music which juxtaposes numerous styles of music, or "parody and pastiche" as Whitehead says. Wynton Marsalis's recent long-form compositions are post-modernist, juxtaposing New Orleans with swing with blues with bop with Shorteresque post-bop. Some of John Zorn's stuff is also postmodernist. As Whitehead points out, this category more than any other points out how pointless it can be to differentiate between avant and non-avant. I think it also highlights just how old and traditional some forms of the avant-garde are - Ellington, Mingus and Sun Ra were doing this sort of thing 40 years ago. A lot of this material is big-band or large ensemble, so fans of that type of music might find this a good entry point to the avant-garde. Similarly, if you really dig Ellington, Mingus, or early Sun Ra, you should give some of this stuff a try. Unfortunately, there's a lot of grey area in post-modernism as well. Bill Frisell's _Have a Little Faith_, which juxtaposes Copland and Ives with Dylan and Madonna, is clearly postmodernist. But what about Clusone 3 who do something similar to Irving Berlin as Frisell does to those composers, but they're not "juxtaposing" anyone else in there? Or Muhal Richard Abrams's _Blu Blu Blu_ or Air's _Air Lore_, which are freeform explorations of blues and rags respectively. What about Joe Henderson's tribute albums to Strayhorn, Davis, and Jobim. If those were juxtaposed on one album, we could certainly argue that it was post-modernist. I can't say that I'm consistent on this one. Quote
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