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All That Jazz
HR-57 -- with its jam sessions, workshops, and music archives -- helps keep jazz alive.
By Ethan Goffman
As musical forms go, modern jazz is a rare bird. Neither popular
nor classical, the music mixes African-American rhythms and improvisation
with a modernist sensibility. Jazz has been called the only original
art form to develop in the United States, yet it is often overlooked
and misunderstood in the land of its birth.
In 1987, Congress passed HR-57, a resolution designating jazz as
"a rare and valuable national American treasure.” Shortly
thereafter, HR-57
Center for the Preservation of Jazz & Blues was born. The
club offers regular jam sessions for musicians to sharpen their
skills, and for audiences to immerse themselves and enjoy.
Coltrane Calling
| On a Wednesday night,
the instruments of a standard jazz quartet open with a John
Coltrane ballad -- a pure, spiritual saxophone soaring above
the big chords of a piano and grand rhythms of bass and drums.
My wife and I sit alone in the back, a bubble enshrouded in
darkness. The conversation is strictly between the musicians,
a display of how, after the big bands died, jazz became an
artists’ music at times associated with modern alienation.
With its dwindling audience, I wondered: Is jazz bound to
become the music of a committed few, an intricate conversation
misunderstood and ignored, with no impact on our larger culture?
Soon from a nearby table, a trumpeter rises, as tall and
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| thin as his instrument (what would an orchestra look
like,I wonder, if all the musicians were the same shape as their
instruments) and joinsthe group. More audience members trickle
in. Next a flutist, a stooped old-timer, ambles up for a solo.
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The music expands, with clever soloists telling their stories in
crosscutting patterns of notes, tricky tempo changes, and instrumental
exchanges. The basic song-forms are elongated, individual styles
merging into a greater story; the music is not a trickling stream,
but a raging river, joining together many smaller tributaries or,
to change metaphors, not a clear-cut story, but a grand and sprawling
novel. Audience members now fill the room, many swaying to the music.
By the second set, the band has expanded, threatening to swell off
the stage. The atmosphere has changed utterly, to that of a bubbling,
communal celebration.
During the break, I hang out in the back, drawn by the chess sets
and the comfortable couches. Tony Puesan, the manager (and a large
friendly guy), chats with patrons and musicians.
Puesan discusses the fund-raising necessary to keep HR-57 afloat.
Despite a large payment due, the venue is in good shape for the
long-term because they’re not far from owning the building
outright. If they make this final payment, they will have dodged
the rising costs of gentrification, a danger that will undoubtedly
snatch many other struggling businesses away from the changing 14
& U St. neighborhood where the club is located.
Big Band Detonations
On Thursdays, the Thad Wilson big band plays. I arrive early to
take in the ambience. The HR-57 building is a brick loft with high
ceilings and whirling fans. On the walls are pictures of the always
jolly Dizzy Gillespie, a smiling Abbey Lincoln, a frowning Miles
Davis, and the legendary face of Billie Holiday, complete with her
signature white gardenia. Most striking are two large, bright paintings
of barefoot dancers swinging to live music; one can almost hear
the strains of boogie-woogie emanating from the glowing paint.
The performance opens with a piano trio, from which thunderous
waves of rhythm crescendo. Soon a shining horn section joins in
the action. While blowing his trumpet, Thad Wilson simultaneously
conducts the band with dramatic sweeps of his left hand. The rhythm
section and the soloists are king here, with pianist Benito Gonzalez
especially notable for his swooping attacks. The music is relentlessly
modern, grand shards of sound, with not an old swing-era standard
to be heard. Leading up to the break humor intrudes, with the whole
band singing in harmony, “Let’s have a break and a meal.”
I study two patrons engaged in a game of chess. Puesan discusses
chess strategy with them. It turns out that they help to underwrite
HR-57. Puesan says that speed chess is his favorite, since his life
is spent in rapid movement between customers, musicians, and money
people. He compares himself to Atlas, with the whole world on his
back. I briefly wonder whether jazz is more like basketball -- to
which it is often compared, due to its emphasis on individual ability
within a team structure -- or chess, with its cerebral cleverness.
Nurturing the Bird
Antonio Parker, a saxophonist
who shares more than a last name with Charlie Parker, leads
the Friday night set. Fast, noisy, and exciting, his solos
are nevertheless impeccably planned and fit perfectly into
the varied techniques of the rhythm section. More musicians
clamber onto the stage, slightly eroding the harmony, but
enhancing the spirit and camaraderie.
Afterward I ask Parker a few questions. With the glory days
of Miles Davis and John Coltrane long gone, and jazz occupying
a dwindling portion of the marketplace, what is the state
of young |
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| musicians today? Parker says that even since he began
playing, the music has expanded into more diverse styles, an
“amalgamation of all that went before.” Yet the
life of the typical jazz musician is difficult. With limited
audiences, Parker says, musicians need to explore a variety
of avenues, not only learning different styles, but writing
and teaching, as well as taking advantage of new technology
to produce their own music. |
Jazz, then, is in a state precariously balanced between those
clinging to a mythical past and those moving toward an uncertain
future. As a rare bird on a planet of dying species, it will likely
never quite die, but will maintain a small audience. Meanwhile,
it continues to influence musicians of all stripes, as well as a
variety of genres. And HR-57, with its jam sessions, workshops,
and music archives, will continue to cultivate those musicians called
to this precarious passion.
Listen
to the likes of Art Blakely and Betty Carter on HR-57's radio station
| HR-57
1610 14th St.
Jazz Jam Sessions:
Wednesday 8:00pm-12:30 am Cover is $6, $4 for musicians.
Friday and Saturday 9:00 p.m. to1:00 a.m. Cover is $8, $4
for musicians.
Thad Wilson Big Band
Thursday 8:00 p.m. to11:00 p.m. Cover is $8, $4 for musicians.
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A diasporic figure exiled from the great state of Indiana, Ethan
Goffman works a motley collection of jobs in freelance writing,
teaching, and Internet indexing.
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