Jazz Part iv: Art Tatum

From: Steve Catanzaro (stevencatanzaro@sprintmail.com)
Date: Tue Jan 16 2001 - 20:07:28 CET

  • Next message: Nathaniel Rahav: "Re: Jazz Part iv: Art Tatum"

    OK, I'm weighing in again to say the 4th installment was not quite as slick as the second or third, imnsho.There seems to be alot of repetition between episodes, kinda like "In 1927, Louis Armstrong played sounds that had never been heard..." and 45 minutes later, "In 1929, Louis Armstrong played a music that people in his day found unbelievable..." and in the next episode "By 1931, Parisian audiences heard from Louis Armstrong a soulful music they never knew existed..." blah blah blah and so on and so forth.

    And yeah, they're laying it on awfully thick. Werner Heisenberg developed his Uncertainty Principle because of listening to Louis Armstrong in Germany? Louis' tempos aurally demonstrate Einstein's theory of General Relativity? OK, I surrender, Louis is the greatest! Now who else was out there, already?

    As for the portions on Duke Ellington; well, I just find it hard for pictures and stories about Duke to do anything but attract people to him and his music. I find it more credible to keep checking in with him, because his music underwent such a tremendous evolution over the 60 (!) + years he stayed at the jazz pinnacle. It was great to hear "Reminiscing in Tempo," a fully composed piece of "jazz," (an oxymoron?) that, along with other of his more popular songs, caught the ears of some of the esablished music cognescenti at Juiliard and the like. A lot of change going on from 1920-30.

    But the thing I liked best was the all-too brief part about Art Tatum. Damn, even in a showpiece for jazz, the "Invisible Man" remains almost invisible.

    What kind of a genius was Tatum? Well, I have the belief that if he and Charlie Parker did a jam session, and Bird laid some of that heavy shit on him, Tatum would have smiled and played it right back at him, and then some, at an even faster tempo!

    Then, I realized I didn't own any Tatum CD's. I guess I kind of felt about Tatum like Abraham Lincoln did about guns... safer not to have it around, in case you start to really doubt yourself.... Art probably turned more self-aware pianists into dentists, accountants, and and doctors then anyone in the history of music.

    So, , the moral of the story is, despite all the wankering about in "Jazz," I bought 4 Tatum CD's this morning. Viva la "Jazz!"

     



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Tue Jan 16 2001 - 20:39:33 CET