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makes some points. and his followup
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12-08-2022 06:52 AM
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Originally Posted by Cunamara
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
S
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If it ain't 3 qordz'a it don't sell.
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Good jazz = good music
I don't think it's so hard, and at the same time it's really hard lol.
Musicians are often quite poor judges of music because we tend to hear the technicalities (which massively paraphrases Bill Evans), so many musicians like things that are technically accomplished.
But that doesn't mean the music is good. It just means it's well done.
Ultimately we are the worst judges of our own work too. Which is fun, because we are also expected to 'sell ourselves.'
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^ I like analyzing what is effective for youtube musicians where they try to be as catchy and impressive as possible. A lot of the time, being a good technical player is extremely important for that. My favorite youtube musician is Charles Berthoud who is a friggin bassist. But he plays like his instrument is no object and completely dominates across all aspects of music.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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There's a half-joking formula that I think applies to art in general: The Same Only Different. Which is to say, familiarity and surprise, tradition and innovation, expectations-fulfilled and expectations-denied, comfort and exploration, all in tension and in infinitely varied proportions.
"Popular" art, I suspect, is biased toward The Same, with maybe just enough Different to distinguish Work A from Work B. Dixieland/trad jazz retains its audience partly because it remains within the bounds of its historical forms and conventions. Significant segments of the bluegrass world share those attitudes and values. "Newgrass" and "dawg music" peeled off portions of the traditional audience and set up new territories which overlapped the older ones.
Bebop introduced more than one flavor of Different--it became more harmonically and rhythmically adventurous, which separated it from the social-dance culture that had supported swing, and it became more of a listening music, and more demanding of both players and audience. And that audience was smaller than the general social-dancing audience. (My mother, born in 1921, loved big-band swing and dance bands but found bop and post-bop to be just a lot of notes. But then, she wasn't much for hot dance bands, either--too darn fast, as Chuck Berry would later put it.)
The Same Only Different affects creators as well as their audiences--and traditions that encourage Different attract the most restless, innovative, ingenious creators. But those creators might find themselves outpacing even their adventurous audiences. It's an old dance, and some artists dance right over the edge of the cliff.
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The theme to the Peter Gunn television program was one chord. That sax player did a heck of a job making it sound good.
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Some predictions-
Jazz will get better in the future, as the education is more readily available than it used to be. For ex, YouTube has a guy who gives 80+ Barry Harris guitar lessons. I could sit and learn those for a year or two and sound great. In 2002 I had to take a train for 2 hours to watch Barry and get one single lesson which was pretty confusing without the other lessons that came before it.
Jazz will get more popular because the music of the past is taking over. Present day pop music has lost it's choke-hold on the music business. Most people listen to what's called "catalog music" AKA music from decades ago. Jazz is more available. You can dial it up on Spotify and you don't have to go searching for vinyl in a store that mostly sells new pop music, like it was in 1985.
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Originally Posted by JazzIsGood
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Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
These types of things play well in short Instagram or Youtube clips. Not always my thing rhythmically but very much the "in" style.
There's this other kid who's kind of popular on tiktok, Mikey Piscopo, doing a Stevie Ray / Hendrix revival thing. He seems to have fun with it. Very identifiable style.
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Yeah I think you explained it well. It isn't always my thing either, but I appreciate 'effective' music even if it's not in my wheelhouse. I like listening to it sometimes cuz its all impressive. Plus you can always learn from musicians utilizing rhythm absolutely flawlessly. Another thing I notice is they isolate each part of the music (and again, execute them flawlessly) from the rhythm part, to harmony part, to melody, to melody embellishments.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
It won't be relevant to the modern listener until we can hear a jazz rendition of "Lose Yourself" and anything by the Sex Pistols.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
It won't be relevant to the modern listener until we can hear a jazz rendition of "Lose Yourself" and anything by the Sex Pistols.
And even that would involve some old music.
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Jazz is suffering the same fate as blues only worse because it is taught in universities, the utter death knell of real development for a music form. Fewer clubs host it, and the clubs that do host it host it for the swells who have big money. Read: old people. The jazz musicians failed because they forgot that music is entertainment first, art second and most of the post-cool jazz developments were based around attempts at maintaining relevance and earning money, a sure losing bet. Artsy-fartsy doesn't sell well in any genre.
Most of the university musicians here will say they want to make jazz their career if you ask them. "So you're playing country" is my reply. Most musicians are weak willed lazy asses who won't book gigs for themselves, won't seek new venues for their art, don't network with other jazzers, or aren't willing to live in squalor level income brackets while they do it. They want someone to hand them the keys to a successful jazz career.
Take a look at the New Orleans Jazz fest lineups. Most of it is some kind of not jazz neo-soul aka Sade or elevator smooth jazz you listen to while on your yacht (rich people music). Same for the blues fests, it's mostly a rock music lineup guitar fest or a mix of rock and bands featuring white dudes wearing bowling shirts, fedoras, or news boy caps and wingtips. Cliche garbage.
Then there are the guys who are trying to combine hip hop with jazz. More let-see-if-I-can-be-relevant novelty BS.
It needs to be raw and unapologetic and carry a level of aggression that will appeal to rock music listeners. It needs to retain good melodies and swinging feel. You should be able to dance to at least some of it. And it needs to have some level of ease of access where a noob listener can grasp what's happening. It needs musicians who are willing to dues pay at the lowest income gigs. It needs people who quit dressing like corporate executives at every show. It needs to bother a good percentage of old head jazz fans and mainstream music lovers alike. It needs to be rejected at the university level. If it doesn't rebel against status quo musically/stylistically and isn't gritty enough for blue collar people it won't ever happen.
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Dude everything is taught in universities now. Want a degree in DJ’ing? It exists.
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Originally Posted by Guy In Lyon
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At the risk of making myself unpopular, and in hope that this doesn't offend anyone or make anyone angry, I'm going to be perfectly honest. Jazz is unpopular because it's boring.
Jazz has become exquisitely performed, perfectly recorded and engineered, immaculately well thought out and analyzed at the highest level, meticulously well documented and taught... pointless meandering, noodling, embellishing and rehashing of the same old stuff in the same old ways... by some of the world's finest musicians.
No amount of guitar mastery or knowledge makes up for music that has nothing more to say than, "look how much more skilled and knowledgeable I am than people who make inferior kinds of music."
I'm well aware that this attitude isn't universal in the jazz community, but it has become a de-facto standard.
Again, my only intention in saying these things is that I think they need to be said for the good of jazz, and I apologize sincerely in advance if it upsets anyone.
Humbly (and nervously),
strumcat
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Very interesting (and brave).
Is jazz too cool, even in blazing virtuosity?
I keep thinking of Rahsaan Roland Kirk; never careful.Last edited by A. Kingstone; 12-20-2022 at 08:30 PM.
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Originally Posted by strumcat
..... and played by people who are not generally "good looking". Which is another strike against huge popular market penetration. Not that "jazz" will ever acheive that but ceratin jazz artists do.
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Good looking? Has it come to that?
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Most jazz musicians of yore could play effective straight blues all night long. No one in the podunk program I attended could even growl into their damn horn. The most vaunted sax guy could play all the changes unless it became key-centric I-IV-V blues at which point he fell apart. Blues is the soul of jazz and disheartening number of jazz players can't play straight blues. Just overly clever outside licks and meaningless noodling. Blues is below them in their minds. Even some of the older jazz educators have remarked how that is a problem with many younger players.
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When answering this question I see a lot of focus on the aesthetics of jazz music (and a lot of generational broadsides both up and down) but rarely do I see a proper analysis of the economy of music production.
From what I hear it's basically impossible to make a living playing jazz nowadays unless you are a top-tier music school graduate. There is a glut of musicians with amazing chops who can't make any money whatsoever on streaming and record sales. Even touring and shows suck as far as profit margin. This is produced by a mass devaluation of music promoted by streaming services who care about anything but music (they could be selling insurance for all they care as long as the money comes in).
Jazz is usually done in combos, combos means you split the proceeds 3 4 or 5 ways, that's on top of the fact the proceeds aren't jack anyway.
If you're stuck being a pro musician (haven't skilled into Windows server administration or whatever) then probably you're going to find a better way to make money than jazz. There's jazz harmonies in popular music all over the place, I'm betting a lot of those producers and session folks are jazz-trained, there's just no money in the game.
My (sort of) educated guess.
I was listening to my library on shuffle, a Kehlani song came on, wouldn't you know it there's Masego playing some jazz-ish sax lines. Skip to 0:45-ish
Set up for recording Strat
Today, 05:21 PM in Guitar, Amps & Gizmos