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Great quotes of and about musicians.
Bill Dobbins .. we seldom suffer from taking our subject of study
too seriously, but we usually suffer when we take ourselves too seriously.
Bradford Marsalis - "My first task
is to help students reject 18 years of poor learning that teaches
them that knowledge is a product rather than a process." Benny Green - “A jazz musician is a
juggler who uses harmonies instead of oranges.”
Hank Jones - When you listen to a
pianist, each notes should have an identity, each note should have a
soul of its own.
Bill Evans -
“To the
person who uses music as a medium for the expression of ideas, feelings,
images, or what have you; anything which facilitates this expression is
properly his instrument.”
“Perhaps it is a peculiarity of mine that despite the fact
that I am a professional performer, it is true that I have always
preferred playing without an audience.”
“First of all, I never
strive for identity. That’s something that just has happened automatically
as a result, I think, of just putting things together, tearing things
apart and putting it together my own way, and somehow I guess the
individual comes through eventually.”
“My creed for art in
general is that it should enrich the soul; it should teach spirituality by
showing a person a portion of himself that he would not discover otherwise
. . . a part of yourself you never knew existed.”
“I believe in things
that are developed through hard work. I always like people who have
developed long and hard, especially through introspection and a lot of
dedication. I think what they arrive at is usually a much deeper and more
beautiful thing than the person who seems to have that ability and
fluidity from the beginning. I say this because it’s a good message to
give to young talents who feel as I used to.”
“A guy is influenced by
hundreds of people and things, and all show up in his work. To fasten on
any one or two is ridiculous. I will say one thing, though. Lennie
Tristano’s early records impressed me tremendously. Tunes like
‘Tautology,’ ‘Marshmallow,’ and ‘Fishin’ Around.’ I heard the fellows in
his group building their lines with a design and general structure that
was different from anything I’d ever heard in jazz.”
“Technique is the
ability to translate your ideas into sound through your instrument. This
is a comprehensive technique . . . a feeling for the keyboard that will
allow you to transfer any emotional utterance into it. What has to happen
is that you develop a comprehensive technique and then say, forget that.
I’m just going to be expressive through the piano.”
“When you begin to
teach jazz, the most dangerous thing is that you tend to teach style…I had
eleven piano students, and I would say eight of them didn't even want to
know about chords or anything - they didn't even want to do anything that
anybody had ever done, because they didn't want to be imitators. Well, of
course, this is pretty naive…but nevertheless it does bring to light the
fact that if you’re going to try to teach jazz…you must abstract the
principles of music which have nothing to do with style, and this is
exceedingly difficult. So there, the teaching of jazz is a very touchy
point. It ends up where the jazz player, ultimately, if he’s going to be a
serious jazz player, teaches himself.”
“It’s performing
without any really set basis for the lines and the content as such
emotionally or, specifically, musically. And if you sit down and
contemplate what you’re going to do, and take five hours to write five
minutes of music, then it’s composed music. Therefore I would put it in
the classical or serious, whatever you want to call it, written-music
category. So there’s composed music and there’s jazz. And to me anybody
that makes music using the process that we are using in Jazz, is playing
Jazz.”
“I’m using the insides
of sounds to move around in a very subtle way which, I think, ends up
being inevitable. I feel its the only solution to that particular problem
that I presented myself.”
“Especially, I want my
work–and the trios if possible–to sing.”
“It bugs me when people
try to analyze jazz as an intellectual theorem. It’s not. It’s feeling.”
“I’m believe that all
people are in possession of what might be called a ‘universal musical
mind.’”
“I’m . . . a rather
simple person with a limited talent and perhaps a limited perspective.”
Cannonball Adderley
“A young tenor player was complaining to me
that Coleman Hawkins made him nervous. Man, I told him Hawkins was
supposed to make him nervous! Hawkins has been making other sax players
nervous for forty years!”
Charlie Parker
“Master your instrument, Master the music, and then forget all that
bullshit and just play.”
“Music is your own experience, your thoughts, your wisdom. If you don’t
live it, it won’t come out of your horn. They teach you there’s a boundary
line to music. But, man, there’s no boundary line to art.”
David Dean
“Practice makes perfect, and nobody’s
perfect, so why practice?”
Dizzy Gillespie
“How do I know why Miles walks off the
stage? Why don’t you ask him? And besides, maybe we’d all like to be like
Miles, and just haven’t got the guts.”
“It’s taken me all my life to learn what not to play.”
Duke Ellington
“I’m sure critics have their purpose, and they’re supposed to do what they
do, but sometimes they get a little carried away with what they think
someone should have done, rather than concerning themselves with what he
did.”
“Playing ‘bop’ is like playing Scrabble with all the vowels missing.”
I
never had much interest in the piano until I realized that every time I
played, a girl would appear on the piano bench to my left and another to
my right.”
“A goal is a dream with a finish line.”
“If it sounds good and feels good, then it IS good!”
“Music is my mistress and she plays second fiddle to no one.”
“There is no art without intention.”
“By and large, jazz has always been like the kind of a man you wouldn’t
want your daughter to associate with.”
“I merely took the energy it takes to pout and wrote some blues.”
“The most important thing I look for in a musician is whether he knows how
to listen.”
“There are two kinds of music. Good music, and the other kind.”
Charles Mingus
“Anyone can make the simple complicated. Creativity is making the
complicated simple.”
Art Tatum
“There is no such thing as a wrong
note.”
“You have to practice improvisation, let no one kid you about it!”
Art Blakey (On the work jazz.) “There’s nothing wrong with it. It’s only a word.
What’s in a name? Nothing! Cats say, “Call me Muhammed so-and-so.” But
what’s the difference? A name doesn’t make the music. It’s just called
that to differentiate it from other types of music. Jazz is known all over
the world as an American musical art form and that’s it. No America, no
jazz. I’ve seen people try to connect it to other countries, for instance
to Africa, but it doesn’t have a damn thing to do with Africa.”
Max Roach In classical music, only two people are important, the
composer and the conductor. Everybody else is a serf. In jazz, a thing of
beauty is created collectively with everybody getting to express an idea.
And that reflects what democratic society is --- or should be.
George Russell -- and incidentally, I am not self-taught. Everybody
who has given me a moment of beauty, significance or excitement has been a
teacher. Paul Desmond
“I think I had it in the
back of my mind that I wanted to sound like a dry martini.”
“I have won several
prizes as the world’s slowest alto player, as well as a special award in
1961 for quietness.”
“I was unfashionable
before anyone knew who I was.”
“I tried practicing for
a few weeks and ended up playing too fast.”
Stan Getz
“There are four
qualities essential to a great jazzman. They are taste, courage,
individuality, and irreverence. These are the qualities I want to retain
in my music.”
“The saxophone is
actually a translation of the human voice, in my conception. All you can
do is play melody. No matter how complicated it gets, it’s still a
melody.”
“It’s like a language.
You learn the alphabet, which are the scales. You learn sentences, which
are the chords. And then you talk extemporaneously with the horn. It’s a
wonderful thing to speak extemporaneously, which is something I’ve never
gotten the hang of. But musically I love to talk just off the top of my
head. And that’s what jazz music is all about.”
“My life is music, and
in some vague, mysterious and subconscious way, I have always been driven
by a taut inner spring which has propelled me to almost compulsively reach
for perfection in music, often—in fact, mostly—at the expense of
everything else in my life.”
Steve Lacy
“In fifteen seconds the difference between composition and improvisation
is that in composition you have all the time you want to decide what to
say in fifteen seconds, while in improvisation you have fifteen seconds.”
Name Lost As a young cellist I had played to an audience that had
included Pablo Casals and reacted with poor, nervous playing. Casals
sought me out after the concert and praised me highly, somewhat easing the
pain and thinking him a very kind man.
Years later I again ran into Casals and thanked him for being kind to a
very nervous kid. Angry, he rushed to the cello. "Listen!" He played a
phrase from the Beethoven sonata. "Didn't you play this fingering? It was
novel to me. It was good. And here, didn't you attack that passage with an
upbow, like this?" He went through Schumann and Bach, emphasizing all he
liked that I had done.
"And for the rest," he said passionately, "leave it to the ignorant and
stupid, who judge by counting only the faults. I can be grateful, and so
must you be, for even one note, one wonderful phrase."
I left with the feeling of having been with a great artist and friend.
An Anthropology of Everyday Life Edward T. Hall
Good jazz is informal; church music is, as a rule, formal; symphonies are
technical. Each is taught and learned in its own way. Formal learning
shouts to the treetops that what is being learned is serious business.
Technical learning is precise and linear. Informal learning in nonlinear,
cooperative, and not controlled by anyone except the group; it is an
organic, inside-out process
Dudley Moore on the sensuality of Errol Garner's music ---- (He
has) a smooth undulating arm that floats and caresses sweetly above a
gently pulsating bass.
Eddie Condon
“The boppers flat their fifths. We consume
ours.”
“Finally Beiderbecke took out a silver cornet. He put it to his lips and
blew a phrase. The sound came out like a girl saying ‘yes.’”
Oscar Peterson
“It’s the group sound
that’s important, even when you’re playing a solo. You not only have to
know your own instrument, you must know the others and how to back them up
at all times. That’s jazz.”
“Some people try to get
very philosophical and cerebral about what they’re trying to say with
jazz. You don’t need any prologues, you just play. If you have something
to say of any worth then people will listen to you.”
“I don’t believe that a
lot of the things I hear on the air today are going to be played for as
long a time as Coleman Hawkins records or Brahms concertos.”
“Too many jazz pianists
limit themselves to a personal style, a trademark, so to speak. They
confine themselves to one type of playing. I believe in using the entire
piano as a single instrument capable of expressing every possible musical
idea. I have no one style. I play as I feel.”
“We’re not like pop
musicians who have to perform the same top ten tunes every night of a
tour.”
“Montreal was a very
active jazz center until club owners started putting in strippers instead
of music. Before long, there was nothing to hear.”
“I don’t do something
because I think it will sell 30 million albums. I couldn’t care less. If
it sells one, it sells one.”
John Coltrane
“Sometimes I’d think I was making music through the wrong end of a
magnifying glass.”
Miles Davis
“You can’t play nothing on modern trumpet that doesn’t come from him, not
even modern shit. I can’t even remember a time when he sounded bad playing
the trumpet. Never. Not even one time. He had great feeling up in his
playing and he always played on the beat. I just loved the way he played
and sang. (On Louis Armstrong)”
“I don’t like to hear someone put down Dixieland. Those people who say
there’s no music but bop are just stupid; it shows how much they don’t
know.”
“I’ll play it first and tell you what it is afterwards.”
“In Europe, they like everything you do. The mistakes and everything.
That’s a little bit too much.”
“Nothing is out of the question for me. I’m always thinking about
creating. My future starts when I wake up in the morning and see the
light…Then I’m grateful.”
“Don’t play what’s there, play what’s not there.”
Louis Armstrong
“If I don’t practice for a day, I know it. If I don’t practice for two
days, the critics know it. And if I don’t practice for three days, the
public knows it.”
“Making money ain’t nothing exciting to me. You might be able to buy a
little better booze than the wino on the corner. But you get sick just
like the next cat and when you die you’re just as graveyard dead as he
is.”
“The memory of things gone is important to a jazz musician. Things like
old folks singing in the moonlight in the back yard on a hot night or
something said long ago.”
Ornette Coleman
“Musicians tell me, if what I’m doing is
right, they should never have gone to school.”
“We in the Western world suffer from too many categories and classes;
we’ve forgotten that we all still have diapers on. We’ve separated music
from life.”
“Jazz is the only music in which the same note can be played night after
night but differently each time.”
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