-
I am struggling to see the relevance of this discussion of the status of the musician in post-mediaeval Europe to jazz. The conditions in which jazz emerged, in America in the early decades of the twentieth century, were entirely different.
-
04-23-2023 05:32 PM
-
Originally Posted by Litterick
Music industry, publishers and maybe some instructors (even if they want the opposite) are also responsible.
-
Originally Posted by Litterick
-
Originally Posted by Lionelsax
-
Originally Posted by LankyTunes
Originally Posted by Litterick
-
Originally Posted by Lionelsax
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
-
Originally Posted by m_d
the problem is the world depicted in Thinking in Jazz no longer exists, even in NYC. Wynton’s project is presumably to transplant as much of that tradition as he can into the academy. I think this is something he shares with the majority of jazz educators actually (at least the ones who are real jazz musicians).
It seems to me that Wynton’s way of doing is more historically oriented than others and because of this, the comparisons with classical music are natural especially as he’s been somewhat successful in moving jazz into these same cultural spaces - Lincoln Centre, Julliard etc. I get the feeling that Wynton would be comfortable with the classification of jazz as African American Classical Music. In this I think he represents quite an old fashioned view of the music perhaps more typical of his father’s generation. (Which is not to say I entirely disagree with it)
would it be unfair to say part of Wynton’s project is to make jazz fundable? As David Byrne points out in his book, the majority of funding from private sources such as wealthy philanthropists has always been focussed on prestige recipients - the opera, the symphony etc. Perhaps jazz can attain some of this cultural prestige. That too will change its social aspects, as much as the academy.
I don’t think any of this is a bad thing, or really a good thing. I see Wynton as doing what he thinks is the best course of action, and this approach may be inevitable. However artistically, Wynton tends towards traditionalism compared to a lot the current scene.
-
I want to say something : rootless music.
-
Originally Posted by Litterick
More generally, you could talk about the Gola tailors tradition of West Africa (detailed in the book Situated Learning) which has similar properties. Or meat cutters. Or Navy Surveyers. Or my dads apprenticeship in bookbinding. Apprenticeship systems are pretty universal and predate the liberal arts education model by centuries, possibly thousands of years. These learning environments all have certain characteristics in common.
‘Thinking in Jazz’ is the best source I know for detailing how this worked in the jazz community, including hilarious stories about the tension between the Community of Practice and institutions such as Berklee. And as Jimmy Blue Note points out Berklee itself used to be more of a trade school - a finishing school for young pros.
Incidentally Conservatoires were not always LA institutions. They began as charitable institutions mostly for waifs and strays. Robert O Gjerdingens books (music in the Gallant Style and Child Composers) go into them in some detail. Naples in C17-18 was a pretty poverty ridden place. These conservatoires made Naples the most musically influential place in Europe for decades. Later the Paris Conservatoire used a similar model for the C19-early C20. Eventually they morphed into what they are today, less distinguishable from LA institutions and bound by the same criteria for accreditation.Last edited by Christian Miller; 04-24-2023 at 04:34 AM.
-
Originally Posted by Lionelsax
in some ways it’s quite a capitalist viewpoint; there has to be an organic demand for the art. Well, capitalist, maybe the wrong word as I am talking about a pattern of human artisanship that predates feudalism, let alone the Industrial Revolution, and I certainly don’t see an artisan model of music learning as alien to a worker owned cooperative for instance (perhaps the opposite!)… but what I mean is that Communities of practice are fundamentally situated in commercial activity. That’s one of their fundamental characteristics. They are not supported by state funding or the donations of the wealthy. The wealthy - the ruling class - may well be patrons but their interactions are transactional in this case. Carnegie may enjoy having his name on the concert hall, but the Duke wants his harpsichord sonata by Tuesday.
it is not clear to me that art can be socially engineered because the criteria for state funding is subject to ideological pressure. One example was the tying of generous funding for arts to outreach and social uplift goals during the Blair government. While a laudable goal, these projects have been a failure by every metric.
We instead got some nice concert halls patronised by the middle classes and gentrification of the surrounding neighbourhoods.
A more grandiose failure is the Venezuelan El Sistema model which was briefly fashionable in the UK. It’s an interesting story!
There’s been some really interesting and quite controversial manifestations of this in the UK recently, for example English National Opera losing funding via the arts council. Some see this cultural vandalism, but the decision was made not due to the small government conservatism of the Sunak administration many suspected but in fact due to cultural diversity argument made by the Arts Council that many jazzers might agree with and have echoed for several decades (ie why should classical music receive the lions share of state funding? Why should these institutions expect to have their funding applications rubber stamped each year?)
So those are some things I learned from my Masters haha…
No matter what, if any side, you identify with these arguments are bound to rage back and forth. Big societal question for sure, of value, but to me they represent something other than the kind of straightforward ‘getting on with it’ in art that I respect and admire. How can anyone do art if they are concerned with filling out their funding proposal to please the (non music) criteria of a third party? And yet somehow my friends and colleagues deal with this all the time.
(Some of the most prominent artists we have - I’m thinking of Boulez, Wynton and a few others - have obviously been effective in making these types of ideological arguments.)
im not against state funding of the arts btw; but I think there’s a lot to think about and these things tend to attract extramusical arguments as they do in music education because they are perceived as less ‘subjective.’Last edited by Christian Miller; 04-24-2023 at 05:26 AM.
-
Btw I’m not simply ‘stanning’ for apprenticeships over LA education. There are things about the former that are profoundly iniquitous. Otoh it strikes me that over time our modern education system has become in part a quest for accountability and checks and balances in education. This has manifested in all sorts of ways I would support as expressions of democracy, and I wouldn’t actually want to go back to the 1730s or 1950s or whatever.
It’s complicated and there’s a lot to learn.Last edited by Christian Miller; 04-24-2023 at 05:22 AM.
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
I could be mistaken but weren't jazz musicians (including the originators of bebop) aided in no small part by New Deal schemes? Which ended up being cut decades later in the 80s...
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
-
I don't think Duke Ellington is that far from Classical and the comparisons of the two fields are fine.
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
It happens over and over in the marching band world. Antiquated, dead music still exists because a few people, the educators, have a nice little racket happening for themselves and get that state gov cash to keep flowing. Music that can't stand on it's own two legs and generate an audience should die, not rob other people of the tax dollars to keep the wheels greased. I see it like high school and college sports, the teachers and coaches get a nice check while the boots on the ground work without compensation. I guess they get a loaner horn out the deal. What cultural benefits are gained by pumping other people's money into a musical corpse? The money suck gets larger and larger and larger. All so a football team can have some brass on the field.
The best guitar pickers I knew never pursued regular gigging beyond about 25 years old because the benefits racket of the educational system is too comfortable to turn down. So once the partying/getting laid M.O is done with it's time to jump ship for something cozy. Jazz is in real danger of becoming a dead music like classical where the only thing turned out by it's educators is more educators because there is little to no opportunity to earn a living there. There is no scene to support jazz, or maybe rathe it's that there is little to no jazz music that can stand on it's own legs. No vocals, no dance tunes, just some very cerebral dudes blowing a horn that sounds out of key to the average listener or some ding dong using a harmonizer during his leads, blech.
Jazz went from working class music to music of upper middle and upper class people. Via educational systems this means the players are also now upper middle class and upper class people so no real need to hustle gigs or change the music model for expanded audiences because financially most of it's practicioners are well off. This is why I don't see a couple jazz type groups in my area with non grey hair aka college age people aggressively pursuing gigs. Because anyone hard core about it WOULD be able to gig regularly playing jazz around here but it ain't gonna be a guitar and a tenor soloing all night without end. Old guys don't need to gig, they already have money. Trust fund babies don't need to gig, they can use social connections to get a nice job teaching or scrape by on inherited cash or mom's generous nature. As the saying goes, those that can't do, teach. Those that can't teach, teach gym.
-
Originally Posted by ruger9
-
Originally Posted by James W
And I for one do consider the loss of funding for ENO as vandalism - and I dislike the fact that jazz and classical music has to essentially argue over peanuts while the really commercial music rakes it in; in such a situation I would expect the state to cough up.
The problem is that it’s a hard argument to answer actually. I don’t feel comfortable answering ‘yes’ for myself and yet I have received funding for tours. I am more comfortable going through a third party funding body where I feel at least they like my music.
Maybe you think as I do music is beautiful and life changing without need of further justification, but that is not how the argument has been made for a long time. Maybe it was more the case before Thatcher… but then assuming finite funding, who gets it and who doesn’t? Do we deliver this decision making into the hands of a clique of paternalistic mandarin figures? (Tbf it seemed to work pretty well in the 60s haha)
in Chavez’s Venezuela for instance the argument was made that classical music was inherently improving and would have positive social outcomes. This argument has a long history, for example we need only look at the Clockwork Orange as a satirical response to that argument from the 1960s…. So people have clearly been making it for a long time. Was it Aristotle who believed certain modes should be withheld from the lower castes to encourage social harmony?
So if that’s your view it makes sense to find the opera, and maybe the Lincoln centre jazz orchestra but not hip hop projects. If it’s not your view, it’s hard to know what to preference. Does London need more culture at the expense of the regions, and so on.
Fund everything? If that were a reality as opposed to an ideal, if there’s a state body we’d still have to write grant applications. In fact there is funding out there for jazz, but the application process is not a dead cert even for those who have been successful in the past. Ask Ant for instance.
I could be mistaken but weren't jazz musicians (including the originators of bebop) aided in no small part by New Deal schemes? Which ended up being cut decades later in the 80s...
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
But on the matter of funding of music and the training therefore: Who plays, who listens, who pays? Dawgbone's free-market reading of music environment suggests an end-game in which live-music activities would be dominated by industrial-scale production complexes: big-ticket concert tours by mass-appeal figures who are in turn supported and promoted by mass-media-based organizations--the arena-event model.
Where I live--a mid-size metro area of a bit under 100K--music gets presented in the following ways: Some bars still book bands, but I see more singles and duos than classic rock/country outfits. Tribute-band concerts are mounted by some of the most skilled rock outfits and play commercial houses of 100+ seats here and in the Twin Cities suburbs. One bar--which fronts a 100-seat auditorium that features tribute-band concerts--hosts open mikes, small-time singles and combos, and a weekly jazz session run by the guys I've mentioned here before--skilled and enthusiastic players who make their livings elsewhere. Most Thursdays, the audience outnumbers the band.
The rest of the music scene is dependent on various subsidies. The Chamber Music Society (40 years of first-rate concerts) needs a whole raft of state and private grant money to keep bringing in string quartets and such. The Folk Music Society gets a very modest grant (which I write) to ensure our solvency. For both organizations, venues are very low-cost--churches for the Chamber Music Society and a church and a restaurant for us folkies. Even touring commercial shows benefit from subsidies, since they book the biggest non-university space, our restored vaudeville theatre, which is also supported by arts grants.
So--what would the St. Cloud music scene be like without subsidies? My suspicion is that it would be tribute bands, touring pop acts, and pass-the-hat scale players. The overhead costs of presenting music require subsidies or high ticket prices/cover charges.
BTW, I'm not sure what "dead music" is. I do know something about the demographics of audiences and the costs of training and maintaining artists capable of presenting demanding work. And I've been able to see a bit into the sausage-making machinery of arts-board funding, so it's not like I'm some starry-eyed idealist.
What, I wonder, would our cultural landscape look like if we left the culture biz entirely in the hands of the free market? (As though the free market actually exists as something other than an ideal-gas-law concept.)
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
-
Originally Posted by RLetson
Otoh I love Peter Bernstein’s characterisation of jazz as ‘too small to fail’ - as long as you have a nutter who can rent a sports hall who can get a few hundred people in and you sell tickets you have a jazz gig. It’s a micro economy. Otoh it seems like what I would think of as the rentier class are squeezing out microeconomic activity. Cf the demise of the 55 Bar. But that’s a separate flamewar lol.
As a musician the bottom line is I think most of us attach some value on our capacity to earn income through making music. I think professional
musicians place quite a lot of value on their ability to earn money this way as it reflects their ability and skill. I was talking about this over dinner with a friend the other day actually, she basically this. It’s not that they want to be rich, it’s that they want to earn a living from doing something they love and are good at. Would something like UBI affect this? I don’t know.
Joe Boyd credits the creativity of the late 60s London music scene to the availability of ample social security with few questions asked, for instance. Maybe something UBI would stimulate the music scene. Give musicians money to live and let them work on their art.
otoh I wonder if I would simply find it demotivating. Or go down a ‘Cones of Dunshire’ style rabbit hole.
I think that reflects the thing quite a lot for me. I have to feel there’s a reason for music to exist beyond exercising my private obsessions. That said I may seek funding to record a new album haha.
-
Originally Posted by RLetson
So Dawgbone's ideas are the truly elitist ones. Like I say, it's that price of everything/value of nothing idea. I firmly believe everyone should be able to access and indeed have exposure to quality art irrespective of how much money they have.
-
Originally Posted by DawgBone
Here's the real problem. To the average person, jazz is purposely awful music that doesn't make sense or sound good. Because of the cerebral horn guy and ding dong with a harmonizer.
$8500 - 2010 Moffa Maestro Virtuoso Archtop Black...
Today, 03:35 AM in For Sale