1. A Bad Romance
2. A Good Travel Agent
3. Sea Food
And some righteous alto sax playing by Phil Woods!
A classic fun tune from Ben Sidrain on the history of jazz. He breaks it down into three constituent parts:
1. A Bad Romance 2. A Good Travel Agent 3. Sea Food And some righteous alto sax playing by Phil Woods!
0 Comments
J.L. Simmons won a much deserved academy award for his performance as an abusive jazz teacher in college. I watched the movie and enjoyed it immensely. It draws the viewer in and is very dramatic and compelling. That said, Richard Brody wrote a very good critique of the movie entitled, Getting Jazz Right in the Movies. He writes that, the movie’s very idea of jazz is a grotesque and ludicrous caricature.
I am sympathetic with Brody and as powerful as the movie is, it is a poor representation of jazz and the jazz community including its characterization of Charlie Parker who the the Simmon's character Fletcher cites as justification for his abuse. Brody writes, Fletcher justifies his behavior with repeated reference to a long-repeated anecdote about Charlie Parker...In Fletcher’s telling, Parker played so badly that Jones threw a cymbal at his head, nearly decapitating him. After that humiliation and intimidation, Parker went home and practiced so long and so hard that he came back a year later and made history with his solo. What the movie gets wrong is that the musician isolates himself. As Brody correctly adds in marked contrast to the protagonist of the movie, Here’s what Parker didn’t do in the intervening year: sit alone in his room and work on making his fingers go faster. He played music, thought music, lived music. In “Whiplash,” the young musicians don’t play much music. Andrew isn’t in a band or a combo, doesn’t get together with his fellow-students and jam—not in a park, not in a subway station, not in a café, not even in a basement. He doesn’t study music theory, not alone and not (as Parker did) with his peers. Unfortunately, the popularity of Whiplash will give the viewer a skewed view of jazz. Brody concludes by writing that the movie isn’t “about” jazz; it’s “about” abuse of power. Here is a good interview with the real life Charlie Parker, the great alto sax player, who died much too young at 34. Certainly, no saint but a huge influence and in this interview sounds very warm, kind, and generous. |
My PenséesThe title of this blog is an allusion to the famous work of Blaise Pascal. This blog represents the variety of my interests and thoughts on any given day and are strung together, like Pascal's Pensees, in no particular order. I work in the field of mental health, education, and human rights. I write and am a human rights advocate. I enjoy poetry, jazz, spirituality, politics and a potpourri of other interests that you will see reflected in this blog. Archives
December 2021
|