"Coltrane had a black following while most of the avant-garde didn’t because Elvin Jones had orchestrated the triplet blues beat into a sophisticated style that pivoted on the boody-butt sway of black dance.
2 "In tandem, Coltrane and Jones created a saxophone and drum team that reached way back to the saxophone of the sanctified church shouting over the clicking of those sisters’ heels on the floor and the jingling, slapping pulsation of tambourines.
3 "The sound was lifted even higher by the antiphonal chants of the piano and bass played by McCoy Tyner and Jimmy Garrison, whose percussive phrasing helped extend Jones’s drumming into tonal areas.
4 "In fact, one could say that both Coltrane and Coleman were the most sophisticated of blues shouters.
5 "Yet Coltrane’s fascination with African music gave him an edge, for he was to discover in his own way the relationship between harmonic simplicity and rhythmic complexity held together by repeated figures played on the bass and piano.
6 "In fact, one could say that the actual time or the central pulsation was marked by the piano and bass while the complex variations were made by saxophone and drums.
7 "What made Coltrane’s conception so significant was that it coincided with the interest in African or African-related dance rhythms and percussion that has been revived at the end of each decade for the last 40 years.
8 "One saxophone player even told me that the first time he heard Coltrane, around 1961, he thought that a new kind of Latin jazz was being invented. I recall, too, that during those high school years the mambo and the cha-cha were gauntlets of elegance.
9 "Norman Whitfield’s writing at Motown for the Temptations and Marvin Gaye leaned on congas and bongos, and the dance power of the drums came to the fore, sometimes lightly and elegantly, as in the bossa nova.
10 "The very nature of most black African music, which is layers of rhythm in timbral and melodic counterpoint, and the exploration of the blues were the sources of the dominant aesthetic directions in jazz, rhythm and blues, and rock.
11 "For the jazz players those reinvestigations of roots called for the kinds of virtuosity developed by Elvin Jones and Tony Williams if another level of polyrhythm was to be achieved;
12 "James Brown’s big band, while alluding to Gillespie and Basie, evolved a style in which guitars became percussive tonal instruments staggered against chanting bass lines, two drummers, and arrangements that were riffish, percussive, antiphonal;
13 "rock players began to investigate the electronic textures and contrapuntal possibilities of Point overdubbing.
14 "Point of fact: all of the musics became more complex in one way or another. And they all influenced each other in one way or another. Percussion, multi-layered structures, modality, social consciousness, and mysticism traveled through them all."
🧵 Happy Birthday, Herbie! Maestro @herbiehancock turns 84 today. Saw him in Detroit 2 weeks ago and he was as brilliantly spontaneous as ever. As great a soloist & composer as Herbie is, never forget that he's also one of the best accompanists in jazz history. Some favorites:
2. "Stella by Starlight" w/Miles, 1964. What an intro! 4 rubato bars of perfection. Telepathy w/Miles is off the charts; Herbie playing in the cracks. Harmony, touch, melodies & rhythms link Miles phrases in ballad or swing time. Same thing behind George.
3. "Feelin’ the Spirit" w/Grant Green, Warren, Higgins. 1962. One of the heaviest piano vamps I know. Talk about the blues! Talk about defining a pocket! Check out how Herbie expands the figure during the guitar solo without abandoning the groove. Magic.
Freddie Hubbard would have turned 86 today. Here's a countdown of 20 favorite solos I've toyed with for a few years. Don't have time to tweak for 2024, so it's a repeat from last year. Hope folks don't mind.
20. “Straight Life” (Paris, 1973). Hello! Freddie’s best working band: Cook/Cables/ Brinkley/Carvin. Freddie plays a short solo, a warm-up, but it’s potent--stronger than most cats at full force. Some trademark lip slurs in the blowing over the coda.
19. “The Intrepid Fox” (“Red Clay”) 1970. Joe/Herbie/@RonCarterBass /Lenny. One of Freddie’s strongest originals. Pentatonic melody, sus chords, challenging, 22-bar solo form of revolving modal changes. Freddie's exciting solo catalogs signature licks.
🧵Greatly saddened by the death of Tony Bennett at 96. While he wasn't a jazz singer, he spent his life exploring the sometimes porous borders of jazz & pop in the context of the Great American Songbook. He told me in 1991: “I’m not a jazz singer; I’m a singer who likes jazz.”
In his honor, here's a Playlist of some of his best jazz-oriented performances. "Cloud 7” (1954) marked a departure from his early pop hits. Still, his uneven diction & overripe vibrato here mark him as a work-in-progress. With guitarist Chuck Wayne. /2
"The Beat of My Heart" (1957). A gaggle of percussionists—Chico Hamilton/Jo Jones/Billy Exiner/Art Blakey/Candido etc—contribute to this corker of an LP, arranged by Ralph Sharon. Horns include Nat Adderley/Winding/Cohn/Mann. "Just One of Those Things." /3
🧵In honor of what would have been his 97th birthday today, here's a Miles Davis Top 10 comprised of my favorite recordings. Rules: No compilations or posthumous box sets. Only releases that appeared during his life or live performances issued after his death (bootlegs allowed).
I've allowed myself two individual bonus tracks at the end (house rules). And since it will likely come up in responses, if you want the Plugged Nickel recordings — I didn’t — you can’t take the whole box; it has to be either the Japanese LP (1976) or the American twofer (1982).
These are not necessarily my picks for the “greatest” or “most influential” records, though everything here is in fact great and influential. These are my desert island Miles records, presented in reverse order.
🧵Thrilled that @nytimesarts has devoted a "5 Minutes That Will Make You Love" feature to Mary Lou Williams, but disappointed, and a little alarmed, that not one panelist chose one of her widely if quietly influential big band arrangements, arguably her most important work.
2. So, by all means, celebrate all of her middle and late-period work as a pianist, small and small-group music, but please don't overlook her large ensemble writing during the swing era and early modern period. It's definitive. Here are some choice examples.
3. "Mary's Idea" (1938). Andy Kirk & His 12 Clouds of Joy. Swinging melody, call/response, interesting motivic development. Great pacing; new ideas keep flowing. Great contrast in texture and color, Dig the muted brass behind the clarinet solo.
🧵Today marks the centenary of one of my greatest heroes: Thad Jones, composer, arranger, trumpeter, bandleader. As I wrote in Jazz from Detroit: "When you take the scores apart, you see the craftwork, but there's a soulful resonance beyond technique. Jones tells stories.
2. "He gets under your skin where your emotions live. He excites the imagination, elevates the spirit."
The opening ensemble choruses, the trading between sections. Whew!