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Watered Down Bop Destroying Jazz
By John S. Wilson
The efforts of such groups as the Shearing quintet and the Bird-with-strings
combo to wan the public to bop by offering it in a commercialized form
is producing the opposite effect, according to pianist Lennie Tristano.
Lennie, one of jazz's most adamant iconoclasts, says such efforts are
killing off the potential jazz audience and lousing up the musicians involved.
"If you give watered-down bop to the public," he says, "they'd rather
hear that than the real thing. Has George Shearing helped jazz by making
his bop a filling inside a sandwich of familiar melody? Obviously not,
because there are fewer places where jazz can be played today than there
were when George and his quintet started out.
"Look what happened to Charlie Parker. He made some records featuring
the melody, and they sold, and he got to be a big thing with the general
public. So they brought him into Birdland with strings to play the same
things. And he played badly. Why? Because the psychological strain of
playing in a vein which didn't interest him was too much for him. Things
like that don't help Bird and they don't help jazz.'
It is for this reason that Lennie has consistently turned a deaf ear to
suggestions that he temper his esoteric style, that he play more in a
manner that the public can understand in order to build a wider audience
for the things he wants to play.
"It would be useless for me to play something I don't feel," he says.
'I wouldn't be doing anything. If I played something that I'd have to
impose on myself, I wouldn't be playing anything good."
Because he can make enough to live on by teaching, Lennie feels he can
stick to what he wants to do even though this means he plays in public
only once every couple of months at best. He is not at all surprised that
there is a very limited market for his stuff today. This, he thinks, is
a natural result of the psychological atmosphere in which we are living.
"Everybody in this country is very neurotic now," he says. "They're afraid
to experience an intense emotion, the kind of intense emotion, for instance,
that's brought on by good jazz. There's more vitality in jazz than in
any other art form today. Vitality arises from an emotion that is free.
But the people, being neurotic, are afraid of being affected by a free
emotion and that's why they put down jazz.
"Since the last war we've been overwhelmed by a feeling of insecurity.
To try to offset that insecurity, people are reaching back toward happier
times. And we're in an era of nostalgia which is being inflicted on the
younger people who have nothing to be nostalgic about.
"Nostalgia brings on anticipation because you know what's going to happen
next. When people start to anticipate, they become intense, waiting for
what they know is going to happen. And this tension feeds their neuroses.
"That's why there's such a small audience for what I'm doing. What I play
is so unorthodox that when you first hear it, you don't try to anticipate.
You just sit there. You have to be very relaxed to start with before you
put on one of my records. Consequently, people don't want to hear my sides
as often as, say, [Erroll] Garner's, because as a rule they won't be in
a mood that's receptive to what I play.
"Personally, I make it a definite practice to listen to new music with
a blank mind. When I first hear a new piece of music, I make no attempt
to analyze it because analysis eliminates emotional reception. '
Eventually, when the atmosphere becomes more relaxed, Lennie thinks people
will pick up on jazz. But, conditions being what they are, he foresees
as much as a decade of emotional tension that will keep jazz from gaining
public acceptance again.
Meanwhile, he feels that everyone who is interested in jazz-musician,
fan, and promoter alike-will have to mend his ways if jazz is to stay
alive. One of the major factors that is driving jazz into a corner, he
thinks, is the development of hidebound jazz cliques.
"Such groups as the New Jazz Society merely continue and stress the cliquishness
that is killing jazz today. There ought to be one organization for all
jazz fans."
The ideal way to present jazz to the public, according to Lennie, is to
follow the format of the opening show at Birdland last winter. That show
exhibited the major elements of jazz and included Max Kaminsky's dixie
group, blues shouting `a la Hot Lips Page, Lester Young's combo as a bow
to the swing era, Charlie Parker's bop outfit, and Lennie and his Tristanos.
"That was a wonderful show until it got loused up by a word-happy emcee,"
Lennie recalls. 'For the first few nights I was very happy. Before we
opened I was afraid that some of the dixie fans might boo Parker or the
boppers might put down Max, but everybody was very happy.
"Nobody on the stand or in the audience put anybody down, and everybody
seemed glad to get together. I had some very good talks with Max and with
George Wettling during those nights.' I
Lennie spends very little time listening to dixie now, but that doesn't
mean that he fluffs it off or dismisses it as an inconsequential jazz
element.
"I developed with dixie," he says. "I used to buy all the records. But
it's like growing up. When you've spent 10 years with an art form, it's
time to move on. I've listened to it all, and now I'm interested in other
developments in jazz"
Many musicians, according to Lennie, are not helping jazz by their attitudes
toward their work.
"Musicians could do more for jazz than they're doing," he says. "They
could take a greater interest in what they're doing. I know that if I
were hired to play in, say, Dizzy's band, I'd play my tail off.'
(Downbeat, October 6, 1950)
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