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[Interesting perspective. Not posting this because I agree---or disagree---but because it may prompt a worthwhile discussion.]
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10-23-2024 05:10 PM
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They don't at all lol. Anyone who thinks that doesn't listen to current players.
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Originally Posted by Bobby Timmons
Since I think the premise of the video is false, I'm not likely to watch it.
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Originally Posted by James W
He's not listening to the right stuff, or more accurately, he's not doing the work of listening to a lot of stuff to find the good stuff.
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"Something between Metheny, Scofield, and Holdsworth."
That's like saying this restaurant will be something between Per Se, Olive Garden, and the M&M store.
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Originally Posted by Bobby Timmons
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I’m pretty sure we had a big thread on this video a year ago.
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
As for the thing about the top guys … that’s been true forever all time. The stuff that stinks has just been lost to time. For every Beatles there were a thousand bands doing the bowl cuts and trying to get on local access tv. We just don’t remember them anymore.
With the recent musicians, there just hasn’t been enough time for them to be forgotten.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
I was at a jam before I left for Florida and one guitarist kept asking me "what chords, what chords" when I told him "slow blues in A". I should've told him to get ireal but I doubt it would've helped him. He asked me what I thought afterwards and I asked him if he wanted the truth. He said yeah so I told him that he was absolutely terrible, lol..
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To reply to this seriously. :P
Originally Posted by DawgBone
IMO thanks to university programs teaching the same shit
and jazz heads mostly not knowing how to play blues anymore because they think it's below them.
Once something is institutionalized it's usually a downhill run. Jazz went from being street music to music of the elites in society.
Therefore rap is the new jazz.
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Originally Posted by Bobby Timmons
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Originally Posted by Bobby Timmons
Jazz education became a thing as jazz was on the way out in popularity. It's no longer street music and it lost the blues because young dudes mostly don't respect blues and most of the educators can't play it well either cause they are post-boomer gen. Maybe in New Orleans it still is a street music I suppose but that's an exception. Jazz is no longer popular because you can't dance to most of it. It became musician's music, not anything most people want to listen to. Most people aren't adept listeners so overly complex or heavy improvisation probably won't keep listeners or sell drinks.
I don't think rap is the new jazz but it has definitely replaced it as THE street music.
Maybe I'm wrong but that's what I see locally and there are good jazz programs here. Maybe I need to get out more but I don't know anyone who is die hard jazz only. They play what pays and that means rock, country, or faking their way through a night of blues, lol.
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
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Originally Posted by Bobby Timmons
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
And that's certainly part of it. When you look at the top guys, they all sound cool and interesting compared to each other or what everyone else was doing when they came around, but then everyone wants to be them and starts copying them. So ten years down the line you get a bunch of people claiming that Kreisberg isn't interesting but it's just because he was so interesting in 2008 that we're now inundated with little Kreisberg clones.
And of course amongst the top guys, there will be similarities too ... some meaningful, some superficial ... time and place, maybe common teachers in the past. That sort of thing.
(and of course, Kreisberg and some of these other frequently cloned guys are the real ones, so they do stay interesting and fresh. But superficially, you could see how someone showing up in New York might jump to the wrong conclusion before they knew their a** from their elbow.)
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
I think a lot of guys see someone like that as a way up the ladder and so kind of mimic the approach cause it's what's popular at the time. If you can't provide a genre or some names of people you sound similar to it can be hard to get gigs. I learned that it's easier to say "blues" than "well I play sort of a mixture of blues, rock, soul and r n b and funk. No one knows what the hell you mean and they tune you out before you finish explaining it. In a way it's easier to pigeonhole yourself. "ONLY BLUES". People don't even know what the hell that means either. "Will you play TN whiskey?" LOL
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All the guy has to do is watch a few episodes of the daily live podcast from Smalls or Mezzrow in NYC. to see how different most are...
Doug
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Originally Posted by Doug B
Of course, So Cal and NYC are major metropolitan areas. Maybe that explains the difference experiences?
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What-ya mean they don't play jazz in Helena Montana? I thought all the cows loved it? (Or something...
Doug
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Originally Posted by Doug B
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Originally Posted by jameslovestal
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I was shocked that at a session recently that Theo Kollross, a very gifted young university-studied pianist who is technically great and has a great bluesy hard bop feeling (I saw him when he played with Ida Koch and Elias Prinz whom I mentioned elsewhere as a new upcoming jazz guitar talent to remember in a Wes Montgomery project) told me he did not know the old African American spiritual Go Down Moses and told me he did not know much music beyond jazz. But he does not even know one of Pops' greatest hits! Louis Armstrong is one of the founding fathers of Jazz! Holy Moses! This is what's wrong with jazz education. Many jazz musicians who can play Donna Lee as 7/8 at 3000 bpm also falter when Summertime is played in the tempo of the lullaby it was composed as or as an even slower 12/8 shuffle. Barry Harris playing Isn't She Lovely on the radio means that he must have listened to that guy on the label of his old schoolmate Berry Gordy. And his old buddy Pepper Adams describes in his memoirs how he talked to Bird about the modern classical composer Arthur Honegger. (Bird was also happy having found someone in the states who knew Honegger.) Being confined to the jazz bubble doesn't exactly stimulate creativity.
Last edited by Boss Man Zwiebelsohn; 10-24-2024 at 02:30 AM.
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