Bob Schwartz

Tag: jazz

Music: John Coltrane and Miles Davis

You like jazz. You don’t like jazz. You are allergic to jazz. You haven’t listened to enough or any jazz to know.

Not liking jazz is like not liking fruit. So many types, so many songs, so many performers and performances.

Here are a couple of tracks and a couple of artists that might get through to you. Both are from epochal albums by epochal artists, My Favorite Things (1960) by John Coltrane and Kind of Blue (1959) by Miles Davis.

With all respect, appreciation and affection for all the other genres I’ve spent millions of hours listening to, jazz is the most liberating. It does a lot of other things, as all the other genres can, but no other genre has so many artists trying to liberate themselves, which is why listening to it is also liberating.

It is not a coincidence that following the historic horror of World War I the Jazz Age was born. In the face of existential threat—or certainty—freedom was the theme. It isn’t the only music that reflects the possibility or the imperative of breaking free. But it is one that, if you’ve missed it, you shouldn’t miss.

John Coltrane, My Favorite Things from My Favorite Things (1960).

Coltrane took the saxophone where it had never been before. On this album, accompanied by other greats McCoy Tyner on piano and Elvin Jones on drums, he plays with standards from George Gershwin, Cole Porter, and this one from a Broadway musical, Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Sound of Music.

Miles Davis, Freddie Freeloader from Kind of Blue (1959).

Kind of Blue is a jazz milestone, for Davis and for the music. Here he is with Bill Evans on piano and John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley on sax. Coltrane was for a time part of Davis’s ever-changing lineup of stars.


Must listen: A Remark You Made by Weather Report

Starting in the early 1970s, Weather Report and its virtuoso composers and players—Joe Zawinul on piano, Wayne Shorter on sax, and by the time of this track Jaco Pastorius on bass—were part of the loosely-defined jazz fusion movement. Fused with what? With whatever sounded good to master musicians, in hope that listeners would come along. Their motto might have been “listen without prejudice”. Listeners did and made Weather Report musical stars.

I’ve picked A Remark You Made from the Heavy Weather album (1977), not just because it might be more pleasing to non-jazz people, but because it is so beautiful and contemplative, as indicated by one YouTube listener commenting, “I want this played at my funeral.”

Music: Calling on John Coltrane

A Love Supreme

The last post was about Gil Scott-Heron’s Lady Day and John Coltrane. Realizing now that some (most?) readers were not familiar with Coltrane, here’s some background and suggestions.

Music fans love to debate “the best”. There is no debate here. Coltrane was the best saxophonist, and some would argue, jazz player. Along with his gifts as an artist, part of that is how spiritual his music is.

He came by that spirituality when, in the midst of his too short career, he kicked a heroin habit by finding a Higher Power. The truth is that he had always been channeling that Higher Power. He just hadn’t been aware of it.

His most overtly spiritual work is A Love Supreme. For those who are not jazz listeners, this may be a bit challenging for a first stop. But at some point, please give this a listen. Bach and centuries of holy music have nothing on Coltrane.

A good place to start gently is the album My Favorite Things, which opens with the title track. All due respect to Julie Andrews (who I do like), this is the famous Sound of Music song in a whole other cosmos. While you’re there, stick around for the next track, a slowly lyrical Every Time You Say Goodbye, a perfect piece of love’s longing, Coltrane style.

Dave Brubeck

Dave Brubeck - Time OutJazz legend Dave Brubeck is dead at the age of 91.

There is going to be a lot written, but with musicians, the best way to remember or learn is to listen. There’s plenty of Brubeck on YouTube and elsewhere. Here’s Take Five, from the Time Out album.

Right now, the VEVO Hot This Week includes a Justin Bieber song (100,701,925 views), P!nk (27,490,445) and Lana Del Rey (14,931,653). These are talented musicians, and even with the added attention that comes with passing, Brubeck is unlikely to hit numbers like that.

Take Five, one of the most recognizable jazz recordings ever, was written by Dave Brubeck Quartet saxophonist Paul Desmond and recorded in 1959. It’s still hypnotically appealing and head-noddlingly cool today. Time will tell which of the Bieber, P!nk or Del Rey records are listened to, let alone remembered, in 53 years.

In the meantime…

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