Ae7. What makes different jazz styles valuable
Revision as of 02:53, 10 November 2017 by Dr.davidcring (Talk | contribs)
Relaxing on his couch in a sky-blue shirt, khakis and brown suede shoes, [David] Sanborn insists that [Hank] Crawford’s early Atlantic albums mean as much to him as Ornette Coleman’s early Atlantic releases, also personal favorites. But how can that be? How can Crawford’s R&B instrumentals mean as much as Coleman’s precedent-shattering free-jazz breakthrough? How can the first alto saxophonist’s simply constructed blues live up to the second’s leap beyond conventional chord changes? Sanborn has to stop and think about that for a few minutes.
“I want to hear a story from a musician,” he says finally, tentatively, “but there are different ways of telling a story. You can tell a story by deconstructing a song’s harmony and showing another side to it, as Ornette did. But you can also tell a story by sticking to the original harmony and making an emotional connection through your timbre, as Hank did. Both are equally valid to me.”
DISCUSSION[edit]
Here is a new edit November 9 at 1:33 pm. Here is edit number two at 1:35 pm.
This is a Glenn edit on 9 November '17 at 1:48pm. This is another Glenn edit: 9 November '17 at 3:58pm.