[78-L] Lost Chords vs. different genes
Taylor Bowie
bowiebks at isomedia.com
Sun Apr 12 13:16:38 PDT 2009
Steve Thornton wrote:
It is absolutely true to say that there are a myriad of sources of jazz, but
to pretend that it is not at its heart, in its beginning, a black music is
ludicrous. Yes, white players heard what black players were doing, and added
their own creative ideas in their own playing. By the time you get to Bix,
for example, jazz was already spread quite far by, among other things, the
riverboat bands; but Bix didn't invent anything. He was a creative genius
and innovator to be sure but he certainly didn't develop independently.
Perhaps one thing we can all agree on is that no one in jazz, including
Bix, Bolden, Armstrong, etc. developed independently. And surely the sound
of the European-style orchestras and instruments had a strong effect as to
how early black players developed their sound, if not their style?
I am comfortable to say that jazz originated with black musical sources but
that many other elements came along to make it what it has become. Trying
to decide the exact percentages of black, white, or other ethnic
influences is about as difficult as figuring out how many angels can dance
on the head of a pin, as some scholars tried to do hundreds of years ago.
And no one can deny that, after a while, there was cross-polination if you
will. Lester Young famously said that his early influences included
Trumbauer and Jimmy Dorsey, and Ella Fitzgerald on one occasion cited
Connee Boswell as her first "model." Rex Stewart has written eloquently
about the influence of both Armstrong and Beiderbeck on his own
playing...and you can sure hear it on many of Rex's records.
Taylor
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