[78-L] A bit early for April Fool's Day
David Lennick
dlennick at sympatico.ca
Thu Mar 7 08:57:33 PST 2013
http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2013/03/nicholas_payton_jazz_black_american_music.php
Time to Do Away With the Word "Jazz"?
By Sean J. O'Connell
Published Wed., Mar. 6 2013 at 8:40 AM
payton.jpg
Michael Wilson
In person, the bearded and bald-headed Nicholas Payton does not look like one
of the most polarizing figures in modern jazz. The 39-year-old trumpeter is a
calm and quiet presence. Whether he intended to or not, however, after posting
a blog entry in late 2011 entitled "On Why Jazz Isn't Cool Anymore," a blizzard
of controversy descended upon him, inciting late night, off-the-record
conversations that prompted twice as many questions as answers.
The rub? Payton's determination to do away with the term "jazz" in favor of the
phrase "Black American Music" or as his tweets have fashionably reduced it, "#BAM."
Payton is the New Orleans-born son of bassist Walter Payton, and appeared on
the scene in the early 1990s as a brash young lion, releasing a string of
records on Verve and winning a Grammy at the age of 23. Right now he's in town
teaching private lessons at the Monk Institute at UCLA, and hosts a master
class (a lecture and discussion) this Thursday at Schoenberg Hall.
"I wasn't trying to start anything," Payton says of the incendiary post. "It
wasn't even fully conceived. I was tweeting off the dome and after a certain
amount of time I took all the tweets and put them in order."
Here are some examples from the piece:
Playing Jazz is like using the rear-view mirror to drive your car on the
freeway.
People are too afraid to let go of a name that is killing the spirit of
the music.
Payton followed by responding to detractors with open letters, addressing
fellow musicians like saxophonist Marcus Strickland, trumpeter Jeremy Pelt,
bassist Christian McBride and saxophonist Branford Marsalis. Through them he
outlined his disappointment, and strengthened his argument.
"People always try to use European ideology to tear down Black music, to try
and make the claim that Black people appropriated European harmony," says
Payton. "Europeans didn't create harmony. It exists first of all in nature. We
are all harmonic beings. Blacks haven't appropriated European harmony as much
as those rules that govern Western thought have been used as a way of
legitimatizing or discrediting the Black American aesthetic."
His only other post for November 2011 is entitled "On Meditation and Taking a
Shit," while his tweets are frequently dedicated to sex or tagged with the
hashtag #MFCOMN which stands for "Motherfuckers chillin' on my nutz." Perhaps
that's why he's drawn so much controversy: It's not so much the message as the
messenger.
He is not lacking in confidence. however, and is happy to take on those that
don't agree. "What are you gonna really say?" says Payton of his critics. "You
can disagree with me but it doesn't make it any less true."
He's a bit weary of speaking on the subject, but also aware of his need to
continue the discussion. "I'm going to have to stand by what I said."
Of course, Payton is not just sitting at home tweeting. He is an active
performer and recently released #BAM - Live at Bohemian Caverns on his BMF
imprint. The album is a raucous set that features Payton not only on trumpet
but grinding out a vicious electric keyboard sound -- simultaneously. The man
can clearly play, and he felt it was important to remind people of that.
"I've been blacklisted to some degree. I have some promoters who won't fool
with me now, but do I really want to play those venues anyway? I'm working. I
don't say nearly the things cats like Miles Davis and Mingus said. Sometimes
you have to deliver a message a certain way and people will hear it. That blog
post for some reason -- the wording, the flow, the pace, the timing -- was
meant to happen that way and for it to have the impact that it had in that
moment. If I had tried to create the response, I couldn't do it."
Payton will host a master class this Thursday at UCLA's Schoenberg Hall as part
of the Monk Institute of Jazz. it is open to the public.
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