FW: Ken Burns' 144-hour Extremely Important documentary, "Jazz."

From: Mark Turner (nugroove@pacbell.net)
Date: Thu Jan 25 2001 - 19:16:01 CET

  • Next message: Leslie N. Shill: "Re: Ken Burns' 144-hour Extremely Important documentary, "Jazz.""

    written by John Grabowski <jgrab@earthlink.net>
    and he first posted it to rec.music.bluenote
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    -----

    >>Presenting Ken Burns' 144-hour Extremely Important documentary, "Jazz."
    >>
    >>Fade up on a grainy old photograph of a man in a three-piece suit,
    >>holding a cornet. Or a bicycle horn, it's hard to tell.
    >>
    >>Narrator: Skunkbucket LeFunke was born in 1876 and died in 1901. No
    >>one who heard him is alive today. The grandchildren of the people who
    >>heard him are not alive today. The great-grandchildren of the people
    >>who heard him are not alive today. He was never recorded.
    >>
    >>Wynton Marsalis: I'll tell you what Skunkbucket LeFunke sounded like.
    >>He had this big rippling sound, and he always phrased off the beat, and
    >>he slurred his notes. And when the Creole bands were still playing
    >>De-bah-de-bah-ta-da-tah, he was already playing
    >>Bo-dap-da-lete-do-do-do-bah! He was just like gumbo, ahead of his time.
    >>
    >>Announcer: LeFunke was a cornet player, gambler, card shark, pool
    >>hustler, pimp, male prostitute, Kelly Girl, computer programmer, brain
    >>surgeon and he invented the internet.
    >>
    >>Stanley Crouch: When people listened to Skunkbucket LeFunke, they heard
    >>Do-do-dee-bwap-da-dee-dee-de-da-da-doop-doop-dap. And they knew even
    >>then how deeply profound that was.
    >>
    >>Announcer: It didn't take LeFunke long to advance the art of jazz past
    >>its humble beginnings in New Orleans whoredom with the addition of a
    >>bold and sassy beat.
    >>
    >>Wynton: Let me tell you about the Big Four. Before the Big Four, jazz
    >>drumming sounded like BOOM-chick-BOOM-chick-BOOM-chick. But now they
    >>had the Big Four, which was so powerful some said it felt like a Six. A
    >>few visiting musicians even swore they were in an Eight.
    >>
    >>Stanley: It was smooth and responsive, and there was no knocking and
    >>pinging, even on 87 octane.
    >>
    >>Wynton: Even on gumbo.
    >>
    >>Announcer: When any musician in the world heard Louis Armstrong for the
    >>first time, they gnawed their arm off with envy, then said the angels
    >>probably wanted to sound like Louis. When you consider a bunch of
    >>angels talking in gruff voices and singing "Hello Dolly," you realize
    >>what a stupid aspiration that is.
    >>
    >>Gary Giddy: Louis changed jazz because he was the only cat going
    >>Do-da-dep-do-wah-be-be, while everyone else was doing
    >>Do-de-dap-dit-dit-dee.
    >>
    >>Stanley: And that was very profound.
    >>
    >>Marsalis: Like gumbo.
    >>
    >>Stanley: Uh-huh.
    >>
    >>Matt Glaser: I always have this fantasy that when Louis performed in
    >>Belgium, Heisenberg was in the audience and he was blown away and that's
    >>where he got the idea for his Uncertainty Principle.
    >>
    >>Marsalis: Because the Uncertainty Principle, applied to jazz, means you
    >>never know if a cat is going to go Dap-da-de-do-ba-ta-bah or
    >>Dap-da-de-do-bip-de-beep.
    >>
    >>Wynton: Louis was the first one to realize that.
    >>
    >>Stanley: And that can be very profound.
    >>
    >>Stanley: I thought it was a box of chocolates...
    >>
    >>Announcer: The Savoy Ballroom brought people of all races colors and
    >>political persuasions together to get sweaty as Europe moved closer and
    >>closer to the brink of World War II.
    >>
    >>Savoy Dancer: We didn't care what color you were at the Savoy. We only
    >>cared if you were wearing deodorant.
    >>
    >>Stanley: Wynton always wears deodorant.
    >>
    >>Glaser: I'll bet Arthur Murray was on the dance floor and he was
    >>thinking about Louis and that's where he got the idea to open a bunch of
    >>dance schools.
    >>
    >>Stanley: And that was very profound.
    >>
    >>Giddy: Let's talk about Louis some more. We've wasted three minutes of
    >>this 57-part documentary not talking about Louis.
    >>
    >>Wynton: He was an angel, a genius, much better than Cats.
    >>
    >>Stanley: He invented the word "Cats."
    >>
    >>Wynton: He invented swing, he invented jazz, he invented the telephone,
    >>the automobile and the polio vaccine.
    >>
    >>Stanley: And the internet.
    >>
    >>Wynton: Very profound.
    >>
    >>Announcer: Louis Armstrong turned commercial in the 1930s and didn't
    >>make any more breakthrough contributions to jazz. But it's not PC to
    >>point that out, so we'll be showing him in every segment of this series
    >>to come, even if he's just doing the same things as the last time you
    >>saw him.
    >>
    >>Glaser: I'll bet Chuck Yeager was in the audience when Louis was hitting
    >>those high Cs at the Earle Theater in Philadelphia, and that's what made
    >>him decide to break the sound barrier.
    >>
    >>Stanley: And from there go to Pluto.
    >>
    >>Wynton: I'm going to make some gumbo-
    >>
    >>Stanley: BOOM-chick-BOOM-chick-BOOM-chickSS
    >>
    >>Giddy: Do-yap-do-wee-bah-scoot-scoot-dap-dap...That's what all the cats
    >>were saying back then.
    >>
    >>Announcer: In 1964, John Coltrane was at his peak, Eric Doolphy was in
    >>Europe, where he would eventually die, the Modern Jazz Quartet was
    >>making breakthrough recordings in the field of Third Stream Music, Miles
    >>Davis was breaking new barrier with his second great quintet, and
    >>Charlie Mingus was extending jazz composition to new levels of
    >>complexity. But we're going to talk about Louis singing "Hello Dolly"
    >>instead.
    >>
    >>Stanley: Louis went,
    >>Ba-ba-yaba-do-do-dee-da-bebin-doo-wap-deet-deet-do-da-da.
    >>
    >>Wynton: Sweets went,
    >>Scoop-doop-shalaba-yaba-mokey-hokey-bwap-bwap-tee-tee-dee.
    >>
    >>Giddy: I go, Da-da-shoobie-doobie-det-det-det-bap-bap-baaaaa...
    >>
    >>Announcer: The rest of the history of jazz will be shown in fast forward
    >>and will occupy exactly seven seconds. --There, that was it. Now here
    >>are some scenes from Ken Burns' next documentary, a 97-part epic about
    >>the Empire State Building, titled "The Empire State Building."
    >>
    >>"It is tall and majestic. It is America's building. It is the Empire
    >>State Building. Dozens of workers gave their lives in the construction
    >>of this building."
    >>
    >>Matt Glaser: I'll bet that they were thinking of Louis as they were
    >>falling to their deaths. I have this fantasy that his high notes
    >>inspired the immenseness of the Empire State Building.
    >>
    >>Wynton Marsalis: I'll bet most people who'd fall off the Empire State
    >>Building would go "Aaaaaahhhh!" But these cats went
    >>"Dee-dee-daba-da-da-bop-bop-de-dop-shewap-splat!"
    >>
    >>"That's next time on PBSS"

    written by John Grabowski <jgrab@earthlink.net>
    and he first posted it to rec.music.bluenote



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Thu Jan 25 2001 - 19:38:18 CET