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Thread started 12/06/09 3:59pm

Imago

What is JAZZ?

ok, the reason why I'm asking this is I keep hearing statements from orgers and others which are derogatory towards Prince's 'jazz' music.

I've always considered songs like HOT THING to have jazz elements in them.
I also consider xpectation and N.E.W.S to be jazz albums as well, albeit
not conventional in the normal sense. Now, I'm in no way saying these works
are good jazz. Just that they can be classified as jazz.

But I read statements all the time from people saying "It isn't jazz" or
that it's a bunch of crap being passed off as jazz.


Sooooo.... Can somebody please attempt to explain what exactly is
jazz, and why albums like NEWS, xpectation, etc. are not indeed jazz albums?

I'm not looking for confrontation here--I simply don't know enough about the
genre outside of casually enjoying it as 'background' music to understand
when someone criticizes one work as not being real jazz and another work
as being "brilliant".

I love albums like Sketches of Spain (Miles), but I like NEWS to some extent too.
I can hear aesthetic differences between the two of them, but I hear enough
similarities that without a trained ear, I would immediately identify them
as belonging to the same class of music, albeit an expansive one.


help!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 12/06/09 5:13pm

MyNameIsCally

I've always thought Jazz was mainly improvisation, with extended chords like 9s, 11ths & 13s to add that exotic "flavour" so to speak. I've never really researched Jazz though so I could be completley wrong.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 12/07/09 3:00am

Sotengro

Well you're going to get confrontation.

To really understand Jazz, you literally have to listen to all of Jazz, from its very beginnings to what Miles Davis did to it or not.

Miles to me is the word. He called it social music. But that was in the context of his time.

Eric Leeds was a Miles lover and Fusion Jazz lover as well. Hot Thing is pure FUNK. Eric Leeds solo in the extended remix is masterwork. I told him so, incredible solo.

Thus since Eric loved and knew Miles and other sax players and Jazz in general, he brought that element and most likely also expanded Prince's musical knowledge and thus Prince went with it. But Prince is not a Jazz musician.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 12/07/09 4:34am

RnBAmbassador

avatar

Jazz over the years has become many things, kind of like r&b, hip-hop and rock.
It mainly was originally musicians getting together and improvising over diminished chords, etc. It reall had no set structure like a commercial piece of pop music.
It went on to have spin-offs called swing, be-bop, avant-garde, jazz-fusion, commercial jazz, light jazz, in other words take your pick.
It has breeded many players that delve in the different favours as diverse as:
Count Basie to Shirley Smith to Cannonball Adderly to Jimmy Smith to Chick Corea to Ramsey Lewis to Herbie Hancock to John McLaughlin to George Benson to Wes Montgomery to Jaco Pastorius to Stanley Clarke to Ray Brown to Miles Davis to Eddie Harris to Kenny G and so many more.
Music Royalty in Motion
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Reply #4 posted 12/07/09 5:10am

Harlepolis

Him...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 12/07/09 5:16am

SquirrelMeat

avatar

A group of talented musicians playing in a room together. Unfortunately, they are all playing different tunes at the same time.
.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 12/07/09 11:17am

Graycap23

U mean.....besides BORING as hell?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 12/07/09 12:47pm

Sandino

avatar

Most people can't define jazz, the genre is moving so far from its origins that it's hard to distinguish what is jazz and what isn't. Similar to rock n roll now. Is Metal rock? what about 'Indie' music? they sound nothing like Chuck berry or Little richard.

Personally, jazz is a genre that rhythmically inspired by african originated music, featuring advancied harmonies & extended improv. in both the solos and the accompanying instruments.

But this is a better answer I think:

First, any definition will be approximate. It will exclude some music that is arguably jazz and/or include some music that is obviously not jazz.
Bearing this is mind I think that the most serviceable definition is Wynton Marsalis's: it is music with a specific type of more or less triplet-based swing rhythm. This would exclude, say, Bitches Brew: a desert island album for me, but one I'm quite happy to categorise as not-jazz. The definition could also embrace some hip-hop. I am agnostic on the question of whether the definition should be refined to exclude hip-hop but believe it could be easily done.

Most definitions stress the primacy of improvision but improvisation is common to a wide range of musical forms. It also seems to me that certain types of composed-through music containing little improvisation (eg Mingus's "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat") and extended works by Gil Evans, Quincy Jones, George Russell) etc are clearly jazz. Improvisation is a characteristic feature of jazz but not it's defining feature. Definitions which stress improvisation are very poor at defining where jazz stops and rock starts, unlike rhythm based defitions.
Did Prince ever deny he had sex with his sister? I believe not. So there U have it..
http://prince.org/msg/8/327790?&pg=2
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Reply #8 posted 12/07/09 1:24pm

theAudience

avatar

This is a question that scholars have written volumes on.
They generally describe its origins, major artists and off-shoots, but never end up with a definitive description.

One of the difficulties in coming up with a definitive description, is that as an evolving art form, it's a moving target.

The thing you hear most is that Jazz must have the basic element of "swing" and compositions will have some form of improvisation.

Now I will say that it is a form (i'd also include Classical) that you can't fake your way into.
I've had this fantasy that all contemporary folk that classify themselves as musicians, be transported back to the 1920-30 period and try to make it being a "musician" in Louis Armstrong's band for example. If you survive, then you could be transported back to the present and retain that title.

My guess is not only would the vast majority get this look from "Pops"...



...they'd also end up fighting for the fry-cook position at McDonald's once they were returned to the present.



Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 12/07/09 1:41pm

Sandino

avatar

theAudience said:

This is a question that scholars have written volumes on.
They generally describe its origins, major artists and off-shoots, but never end up with a definitive description.

One of the difficulties in coming up with a definitive description, is that as an evolving art form, it's a moving target.

The thing you hear most is that Jazz must have the basic element of "swing" and compositions will have some form of improvisation.

Now I will say that it is a form (i'd also include Classical) that you can't fake your way into.
I've had this fantasy that all contemporary folk that classify themselves as musicians, be transported back to the 1920-30 period and try to make it being a "musician" in Louis Armstrong's band for example. If you survive, then you could be transported back to the present and retain that title.

My guess is not only would the vast majority get this look from "Pops"...



...they'd also end up fighting for the fry-cook position at McDonald's once they were returned to the present.



Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records



Prince seems to fake it, at least well enough for his fans to say "OMG Prince is a jazz artist" no lie, my brother literally thinks prince is a jazz artist
Did Prince ever deny he had sex with his sister? I believe not. So there U have it..
http://prince.org/msg/8/327790?&pg=2
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Reply #10 posted 12/07/09 2:10pm

Sotengro

RnBAmbassador said:

Jazz over the years has become many things, kind of like r&b, hip-hop and rock.
It mainly was originally musicians getting together and improvising over diminished chords, etc. It reall had no set structure like a commercial piece of pop music.
It went on to have spin-offs called swing, be-bop, avant-garde, jazz-fusion, commercial jazz, light jazz, in other words take your pick.
It has breeded many players that delve in the different favours as diverse as:
Count Basie to Shirley Smith to Cannonball Adderly to Jimmy Smith to Chick Corea to Ramsey Lewis to Herbie Hancock to John McLaughlin to George Benson to Wes Montgomery to Jaco Pastorius to Stanley Clarke to Ray Brown to Miles Davis to Eddie Harris to Kenny G and so many more.



Excellent name drop. Prince lifted a bass line off of Stanley for a song, you'd never know which one if you really knew Stanley's work.

Rock N Roll is R&B and Country and Hillbilly, Rockabilly, Soul (forgot Soul?) and so on.
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Reply #11 posted 12/07/09 3:38pm

BlaqueKnight

avatar

If you have to ask what jazz is, you'll never know.
-- Louis Armstrong
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 12/07/09 5:16pm

theAudience

avatar

Graycap23 said:

U mean.....besides BORING as hell?

Hold up Doc.
Aren't you the same cat that posts the Foley & Chris Dave videos? confuse



Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 12/07/09 7:50pm

minneapolisFun
q

avatar

Hot thing is pure funk?
You're so glam, every time I see you I wanna slam!
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Reply #14 posted 12/07/09 9:22pm

BenaimanBawkah

avatar

Graycap23 said:

U mean.....besides BORING as hell?


That's just wrong. disbelief

let us enjoy ourselves, this rhythm is ill. i want to sit on your penis
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Reply #15 posted 12/08/09 6:19am

Graycap23

theAudience said:

Graycap23 said:

U mean.....besides BORING as hell?

Hold up Doc.
Aren't you the same cat that posts the Foley & Chris Dave videos? confuse



Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records

Lol.....FUNK jazz is legit.
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Reply #16 posted 12/08/09 7:58am

dag

avatar

SquirrelMeat said:

A group of talented musicians playing in a room together. Unfortunately, they are all playing different tunes at the same time.

lol
"When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all."
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Reply #17 posted 12/08/09 8:05am

Graycap23

My kind of Jazz:
Victor Wooten
Marcus Miller
Meshell
Prince
.....and others who like 2 FUNK it up.
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Reply #18 posted 12/08/09 8:14am

Lammastide

avatar

theAudience said:


I've had this fantasy that all contemporary folk that classify themselves as musicians, be transported back to the 1920-30 period and try to make it being a "musician" in Louis Armstrong's band for example. If you survive, then you could be transported back to the present and retain that title.

My guess is not only would the vast majority get this look from "Pops"...




lol

Or the Benny Goodman ray.

Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 12/08/09 4:10pm

Imago

theAudience said:

This is a question that scholars have written volumes on.
They generally describe its origins, major artists and off-shoots, but never end up with a definitive description.

One of the difficulties in coming up with a definitive description, is that as an evolving art form, it's a moving target.

The thing you hear most is that Jazz must have the basic element of "swing" and compositions will have some form of improvisation.

Now I will say that it is a form (i'd also include Classical) that you can't fake your way into.
I've had this fantasy that all contemporary folk that classify themselves as musicians, be transported back to the 1920-30 period and try to make it being a "musician" in Louis Armstrong's band for example. If you survive, then you could be transported back to the present and retain that title.

My guess is not only would the vast majority get this look from "Pops"...



...they'd also end up fighting for the fry-cook position at McDonald's once they were returned to the present.



Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records

Thanks.

But then again--how does Prince not satisfy the requirement for some of his music to be 'jazz'?


And if improvisation is a requirement, I don't understand how his can't be
good jazz?

This isn't a 'Prince' thread persay, but just somethign I'm trying to get
my head around. I hear a tune, and I immediately say to myself "ok, that's jazz."

But again, other than some asthetic differences I wouldn't say NEWS
or xpectation was so different from some of Mile's stuff to not classify
the former as 'Jazz'.
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Reply #20 posted 12/08/09 7:11pm

Lammastide

avatar

I'm no jazz scholar, but with regard to Prince, I dare say we can't earnestly have this discussion -- much less arrive at anything near an answer -- without calling out the elephant in the room: good ol' snobbery. By most definitions I've seen so far, there is NO question that projects like C-Note, Xpectation, etc. are jazz or, at the very least, varying sorts of jazz fusion. N.E.W.S., for example, is on par -- stylistically, if not artistically or proficiency-wise -- with any given Weather Report album. (Yeah, I said it. bringiton ) If Prince dropped these projects anonymously, there'd be ready acceptance of them by all but the most pious traditionalists a la Wynton Marsalis. Throw Prince's name on them, however -- and with it all the sordid history as pop darling -- and everybody wants to get all purist. rolleyes

Now, I'd say Prince is hardly a "jazz musician" if only by virtue of the fact the aggregate of his output is clearly not jazz. His bread and butter seems to be his own brand of rock n roll/R&B sprinkled with occasional funk and conventions from whatever musical trends are current at a given time. But the aforementioned projects are jazz by all means... and much of his overall sound in the past few years seems to be slouching toward this, largely, I suspect, because its more personally challenging at this point in his career and he understands the level of lingering highbrow respect by peers and critics that would be found in this environment.

...Now whether he's showing "good" forays into the genre is another debate altogether. whistling
[Edited 12/8/09 19:38pm]
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #21 posted 12/08/09 7:40pm

theAudience

avatar

Lammastide said:

By most definitions I've seen so far, there is NO question that projects like C-Note, Xpectation, etc. are jazz or, at the very least, varying sorts of jazz fusion. N.E.W.S., for example, is on par -- stylistically, if not artistically or proficiency-wise -- with any given Weather Report album. (Yeah, I said it. bringiton )

Oh no you di-int!

I was about to respond to Imago when I read this.
This one is gonna require a serious rebuttal so i'll do it later when I have more time.
And only because I don't mind having a serious discussion about this with someone who isn't an irrational Prince sycophant.
(Which I don't believe you are.) cool


Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 12/08/09 8:15pm

Lammastide

avatar

theAudience said:

Lammastide said:

By most definitions I've seen so far, there is NO question that projects like C-Note, Xpectation, etc. are jazz or, at the very least, varying sorts of jazz fusion. N.E.W.S., for example, is on par -- stylistically, if not artistically or proficiency-wise -- with any given Weather Report album. (Yeah, I said it. bringiton )

Oh no you di-int!

I was about to respond to Imago when I read this.
This one is gonna require a serious rebuttal so i'll do it later when I have more time.
And only because I don't mind having a serious discussion about this with someone who isn't an irrational Prince sycophant.
(Which I don't believe you are.) cool


Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records

boxed Uh oh... I'm in trouble now, aren't I? lol
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 12/09/09 5:05am

Imago

Oh my God, there's gonna two black men fighting over something I said.



Yall this is sooooo fucking gayporn HOT!!! excited



Awaiting your replies gentlemen!!! (PS, I actually loved Lammastide's response though)
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Reply #24 posted 12/09/09 8:24am

TD3

avatar

I think the best person to address and answer your question is Dr. Billy Taylor. Mr. Taylor did a lecture on this topic at John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., on February 14, 1995.

Here the link(s):

http://town.hall.org/radi...bt_l1.html
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Reply #25 posted 12/09/09 2:35pm

theAudience

avatar

This response is aimed at Imago & Lammastide as it seems that they both are asking if some of Prince's material would qualify as Jazz.

It should be obvious at this point that it's difficult (if not impossible) for any of us here to give a one sentence (or even a few paragraphs) to answer the question What is Jazz? on a technical level. It almost becomes a case of visceral recognition after having listened over the years to artists that are most closely associated with the art from from its inception through various transitional stages. You could say, much like the Supreme Court when trying to describe obscenity, "I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it...". In this case, I know it when I hear it.

Even Dr. Billy Talylor's explanations (suggested by TD3) don't contain a clear cut "nuts and bolts" answer to "the question".

To complicate matters even further when trying to answer "the question", the term JAZZ has been bastardized relatively recently by the "Smooth Jazz" (i.e. Easy Listening, what it should be called) format. I just scanned the Most Popular New WAVE Music list of the local Smooth Jazz station and found the following artists included.

Beyonce
Alicia Keys
Seal
Simply Red
Robin Thicke


So to a listener unfamiliar with any Jazz history, what do you think they could conclude from this?
By these standards, I guess Prince (along with a slew of others) could qualify as Jazz contenders.

Speaking for myself, i'm not sure what snobbery has to do with anything i've had to say on this subject. You'll have to expand on that.

As to the Prince albums you named standing up to any Weather Report album, I strongly disagree simply from the composition aspect alone.

Let's do this, give me one composition (from the albums you listed) that can stand up to this familiar piece by Weather Report.



...Birdland



Have at it. wink




Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #26 posted 12/09/09 4:29pm

TD3

avatar

I thought I could try to define or explain what Jazz is and I came to these 3 conclusions.

1) I'd go crazy

2) Get kicked and banned from prince.org for hogging up and taking over Non-Prince Forum.

3) Become a recluse and go through upteem computers and HD's trying to write a rambling explanation only to find I've written an encoherent diatribe. lol


For me, Dr.Taylor's explanation is the most thoughful and conherent answer to date.... 'What is Jazz'? There is no definitive answer, the history of Jazz really is an analogy of the American experience regardless of how we came to be here. The nations history and the stories of it's people is complex and the music represents this. I try to stay away from these types of discussions; I've been in too many where tempers have flared and folks have stopped speaking to one another.

I've reconciled to answer the question in my own way.

Duke Ellington once said, "There were only two kinds of music good and bad".

Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart once said about porn, "I know it when I see it".

What's Jazz? "I know it when I hear it". wink



=====
[Edited 12/9/09 17:35pm]
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Reply #27 posted 12/09/09 6:17pm

Lammastide

avatar

Good show, tA. You were nice to me. smile

First, I didn't mean to insinuate YOU'VE been snobbish in the things you've posted so far. But I do think there's a certain snobbery by many jazz types in denying the very genre of certain pieces of music based simply on the musical pedigree of the artist or on the fact the piece doesn't meet their own subjective artistic standards. I respect personal taste, but that gauge, by itself, is horribly uncharitable and stifling in so many cases both to performers and to various genres. And because jazz is ever-expansive, at a certain point that subjectivity can even be looked back on sometimes as downright laughable: As Sandino cited, for example, with a completely uncommitted -- and adjustable-at-will -- personal "approximation" of jazz, our boy Wynton is ultimately so given to his own personal biases that he would tell the world Bitches Brew is "not-jazz." hmm I'd be happy to hear his reasoning, but that's gonna be a darned hard sell to anyone aside from himself... and maybe Ken Burns. lol

Now, I'll repeat: Prince is hardly a "jazz musician." You'll never hear me humor that insanity. But the forays on the albums I mentioned fit (even if not in an altogether masterful sense) just about every definition I've seen given for jazz here or elsewhere. And they do satisfy the sort of visceral recognition you (correctly) mention. They aren't the sugary, sentimental easy listening/R&B trash we hear on Quiet Storm stations or even the exhaustingly repetitious stuff of some earlier Madhouse numbers. He's gotten better.

Onto Prince vs. Weather Report... (What did I get myself into? doh! ) I'll admit: Trapped in the Canadian tundra with the choice of either Heavy Weather or, say, C-Note, Prince's stuff would become kindling without a second thought. lol But while I agree no jazz efforts he's dreamed up can touch "Birdland" worship from not only a compositional standpoint, but technical, improvisational, yada yada yada.... I'd dare say a decent amount of P's stuff can easily hold a candle to things like "A Remark You Made" or "Harlequin" (both of which I love, BTW). If I consider another Heavy Weather track, "The Juggler," I'd even say I'd much rather spend time mentally unpacking things like Prince's "Nagoya," anything from N.E.W.S or even something outside his "formal" jazz repertoire like "Alexa De Paris," all of which I think are smarter written pieces.
[Edited 12/9/09 18:32pm]
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #28 posted 12/09/09 6:49pm

Imago

theAudience said:

This response is aimed at Imago & Lammastide as it seems that they both are asking if some of Prince's material would qualify as Jazz.

It should be obvious at this point that it's difficult (if not impossible) for any of us here to give a one sentence (or even a few paragraphs) to answer the question What is Jazz? on a technical level. It almost becomes a case of visceral recognition after having listened over the years to artists that are most closely associated with the art from from its inception through various transitional stages. You could say, much like the Supreme Court when trying to describe obscenity, "I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it...". In this case, I know it when I hear it.

Even Dr. Billy Talylor's explanations (suggested by TD3) don't contain a clear cut "nuts and bolts" answer to "the question".

To complicate matters even further when trying to answer "the question", the term JAZZ has been bastardized relatively recently by the "Smooth Jazz" (i.e. Easy Listening, what it should be called) format. I just scanned the Most Popular New WAVE Music list of the local Smooth Jazz station and found the following artists included.

Beyonce
Alicia Keys
Seal
Simply Red
Robin Thicke


So to a listener unfamiliar with any Jazz history, what do you think they could conclude from this?
By these standards, I guess Prince (along with a slew of others) could qualify as Jazz contenders.

Speaking for myself, i'm not sure what snobbery has to do with anything i've had to say on this subject. You'll have to expand on that.

As to the Prince albums you named standing up to any Weather Report album, I strongly disagree simply from the composition aspect alone.

Let's do this, give me one composition (from the albums you listed) that can stand up to this familiar piece by Weather Report.



...Birdland



Have at it. wink




Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records

It sounds a lot like Kamasutra to me. Anyone else agree?
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Reply #29 posted 12/09/09 6:51pm

Imago

Lammastide said:

Good show, tA. You were nice to me. smile

First, I didn't mean to insinuate YOU'VE been snobbish in the things you've posted so far. But I do think there's a certain snobbery by many jazz types in denying the very genre of certain pieces of music based simply on the musical pedigree of the artist or on the fact the piece doesn't meet their own subjective artistic standards. I respect personal taste, but that gauge, by itself, is horribly uncharitable and stifling in so many cases both to performers and to various genres. And because jazz is ever-expansive, at a certain point that subjectivity can even be looked back on sometimes as downright laughable: As Sandino cited, for example, with a completely uncommitted -- and adjustable-at-will -- personal "approximation" of jazz, our boy Wynton is ultimately so given to his own personal biases that he would tell the world Bitches Brew is "not-jazz." hmm I'd be happy to hear his reasoning, but that's gonna be a darned hard sell to anyone aside from himself... and maybe Ken Burns. lol

Now, I'll repeat: Prince is hardly a "jazz musician." You'll never hear me humor that insanity. But the forays on the albums I mentioned fit (even if not in an altogether masterful sense) just about every definition I've seen given for jazz here or elsewhere. And they do satisfy the sort of visceral recognition you (correctly) mention. They aren't the sugary, sentimental easy listening/R&B trash we hear on Quiet Storm stations or even the exhaustingly repetitious stuff of some earlier Madhouse numbers. He's gotten better.

Onto Prince vs. Weather Report... (What did I get myself into? doh! ) I'll admit: Trapped in the Canadian tundra with the choice of either Heavy Weather or, say, C-Note, Prince's stuff would become kindling without a second thought. lol But while I agree no jazz efforts he's dreamed up can touch "Birdland" worship from not only a compositional standpoint, but technical, improvisational, yada yada yada.... I'd dare say a decent amount of P's stuff can easily hold a candle to things like "A Remark You Made" or "Harlequin" (both of which I love, BTW). If I consider another Heavy Weather track, "The Juggler," I'd even say I'd much rather spend time mentally unpacking things like Prince's "Nagoya," anything from N.E.W.S or even something outside his "formal" jazz repertoire like "Alexa De Paris," all of which I think are smarter written pieces.
[Edited 12/9/09 18:32pm]


oh lawd, it's going to take me 2 days to read, re-read, then study what you and TA have written. I'll be back with some astounding insights though.... I promise you that!
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