Tag Archives: sonny rollins

The Village Vanguard turned 75 last month!

The Village Vanguard turned 75 last month. It remains an institution in jazz with over 100 live jazz albums recorded there since 1957. Here’s a sampling:

Sonny Rollins (ts); Wilbur Ware (b); Elvin Jones (d) / Village Vanguard, 1957

Bill Evans (p); Scott LaFaro (b); Paul Motion (d) / Village Vanguard, 1961

John Coltrane (ts); McCoy Tyner (p); Reginald Workman (b); Elvin Jones (d) / Village Vanguard, 1961

Woody Shaw (tp); Carter Jefferson (ss); Onaje Allan Gumbs (p); Clint Houston (b); Victor Lewis (d) / Village Vanguard, 1978

An Interview with Robin D.G. Kelley

Robin D.G. Kelley is the author of “Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original” and professor of American Studies at USC College.

What was it about Thelonious Monk that initially drew you to this project?

I’ve been fascinated with Monk’s music since I was a teenager.  As a young (self-taught) piano player, I discovered Monk by way of pianist Cecil Taylor, whom I adored.  From that point on I spent years trying to learn Monk’s music.  I’m still learning now.  But besides Monk’s work as a pianist and composer, I found the stories about his quirkiness and eccentricities quite curious.  They seemed to stand in for any serious critical engagement with his music, and in many ways stories about Monk (some apocryphal) had come to define him, to the point where the alleged “weirdness” of his music was conflated with the “weirdness” of the man.  I wanted to penetrate this veneer and figure out who the real Monk was, as a man, a husband, a father, a friend, an intellectual, an artist, etc.

Despite previous biographies and a documentary film, Monk still appeared to many to be an extremely obscure and mysterious figure. You had unprecedented access to Thelonious’s family and friends, as well as many home and personal recordings. Was it difficult to separate Monk’s public persona from his private one? How much of the public myth surrounding him was self-reinforced?

Access to the Monk family materials and, more importantly, to Monk’s family and closest friends was essential for discovering who Thelonious was as a person, his demons and charms, and what he was up against.  After years of digging, three things became very clear: first, that the media (going back to about 1947) essentially created and kept alive the public image of Monk we’ve inherited; second, that Monk himself had a bit of an investment to maintain the image of him as eccentric or “crazy” as a strategy to protect his own identity and privacy; third, that the range of behaviors Monk exhibited cannot to attributed to any one factor, and what is often called “eccentric” is often misunderstood.   His actions, as I make clear in the book, have to be understood in context; each moment is situational.  Some actions were, indeed, manifestations of his bipolar disorder, and these occurrences were episodic, not representative of his day-to-day behavior.  Some actions exhibited his sense of humor, it was calculated to get a laugh, or in some cases stagecraft.  He knew how to entertain and when he was in the mood he would do so.  Some things were cultural, such as dancing to his music.  The entire world dances, both sacred and secular expressions, yet when Monk dances it is supposed to be “eccentric.”  When he traveled with a faith healer as a teenager, he saw movements much like the one’s he did on stage.  He also danced as a way of demonstrating rhythm, accents, and tempo—most of his sidemen have said this.  Finally, some actions were acts of resistance to exploitative club owners, promoters, etc.  I cite many examples where he would show up late or play very little when he thought he was being underpaid and overworked.  And of course, like many human beings, he could be late if he did not think it would do any harm.  In some cases, he took advantage of his friendships with others (e.g., the Termini brothers who owned the Five Spot).

But what we ought to pay attention to are all the times when his behavior was “normal,” when he played the gig and did his best, bowed to the audience, did interviews, took his kids shopping, loved his wife, sat down and composed, etc. etc.  The fact that the reader is overwhelmed with a grueling itinerary that demonstrates that he played most gigs without incident is telling and ought to do more to define Monk than the stories of weirdness which are often more entertaining.

Monk is often unfairly lumped in with the innovators of be-bop. Your book does a great job of parsing out Monk’s deeper influences and interests. For me, the meeting of Coleman Hawkins and John Coltrane could only have happened within the context of Monk’s music. What is it about his compositions that makes them so uniquely eccentric yet also instantly appealing to jazz musicians of disparate generations?

As composer, no one was writing melodic lines like Monk.  He often broke with the standard 16 and 32 bar song form and created a new metric and harmonic architecture for his music: “Introspection,” for example, has 36 bars and a wandering harmonic movement chock full of whole tone harmony, which very few jazz composers were building on in those days.  Or take a song like “Brilliant Corners,” with its bizarre seven bar bridge, shifting tempos, melody with huge intervallic leaps.  Or “Boo Boo’s Birthday,” a simple, swinging melody written in 20 bars.  And of course, there is no song like “’Round Midnight,” with its insistent descending chromatic harmony, that haunting, startling melody, the sheer beauty derived from a minor tonality and rich dissonance.  He also wrote many difficult songs, twisting, swift melodies that gave even the best musicians a run for their money: “  Gallop’s Gallop,” “Trinkle Tinkle,” “Work,” “Skippy.”  These tunes proved so difficult, in fact, that they were often recorded once or twice and then dropped entirely.

Yet for all of Monk’s modernism, there was something very old fashioned about his playing.  He comes out of stride piano, his musical fathers being James P. Johnson, Willie “the Lion” Smith, Fats Waller, etc., and he appropriated many of the “tricks” these great pianists had up their sleeves—the ability to bend notes, suspend time, turn the beat around deliberately, among other things.  I think Monk simply exaggerated some of these old tricks and rather than smooth out the jagged edges, like an Art Tatum, he lived in the jagged regions of the piano.

Finally, a word about bebop.  True, Monk was decidedly not a part of the “bebop” school, per se, but I do think he made an enormous contribution to the music that was ultimately bounded by this category.   Monk’s contribution to harmonic developments were essential, even if he used his harmonic knowledge quite differently.  He taught his peers a lot about harmony, which they ended up using.  But unlike the beboppers, Monk was interested in slower tempos; in fusing older jazz ideas of improvising on the melody rather than chords; creating new architecture rather than run alternate changes over tin pan alley song form; interested more in making unique melodic statements than demonstrating virtuosity.

Thelonious strikes me as a very generous person. Musically, he gave his collaborators lots of room to grow and expand in his music. He significantly contributed to the growth of both John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, though everyone seemed to benefit from playing with Monk.  Did he see himself as a shepherd of his fellow musicians?

Perhaps less shepherd (for that implies that he has followers or a herd  to care for an influence) and more teacher.  He was not interested in musicians sounding like him or joining his school.  Rather, he wanted to help all the musicians around him become better and find their own voice.  This seemed to be the common theme of his teaching.

What role did Charlie Rouse play in stabilizing Monk’s music during his downward swing of mental and physical health? Rouse, to my ears, is one of Monk’s most sympathetic partners yet his contributions to the music feel undervalued. Do you think his decade long stint supporting Monk negatively affected his own career?

Rouse was essential from the very beginning of their collaboration.  He not only built his sound and his approach to improvisation to suit Monk (building on the theme/melody of a song to structure his solos, for example), but he became the band’s unofficial music director.  He made sure other band members understood what was happening, especially when Monk wasn’t talking much.  He also subordinated his own ambitions—though Rouse made a few LPs as a leader during his tenure with Monk, he never had a chance to play his own compositions as a member of Monk’s band.  He considered leaving several times before he finally cut out in 1970, but I think he realized he would not do much better.  Sadly, Rouse ended up taking a lot of the heat when the critics turned on Thelonious in the mid to late 1960s.

What are some of your favorite Monk recordings? Do you prefer him live or in studio? Who do you feel are some of his greatest collaborators?

This is an impossible question to answer.  I see all of his compositions as a complete body of work, each one having its own function and history and purpose.  As a player, I love exploring “Brilliant Corners,” “Introspection,” as well as tunes like “Played Twice” and his only composed waltz, “Ugly Beauty.”  These are all very different tunes, yet each tells a story.  I can hardly keep back tears when I hear “Crepuscule with Nellie” because to me it is his most personal song.

Live/studio—all depends.  He’s made so many great live recordings, like “Live at the It Club” and, of course, the lost tapes from Carnegie Hall, 1957 with Coltrane.  I adore his Five Spot recordings with Johnny Griffin—my introduction to Monk.  He has made so many great studio recordings as well, beginning with the Blue Note sides from 1947 – 1951; his gorgeous reading of “Reflections” and “More than You Know” with Sonny Rollins.  For that matter, ALL of his recording with Rollins are just outstanding, even the early Prestige records.  Finally, like so many I’m partial to his solo piano pieces.  They are all great, even the very final recordings he made in London in 1971, in which he proves that health issues had not affected his ability to play.  Finally, there are some recordings we’ve been sleeping on: his version of Ellington’s “I Didn’t Know About You” with Rouse on tenor (from Straight, No Chaser), or his hilarious trio version of “I’ll Follow You” from the Blue Note
years.  I could go on.

http://monkbook.com/

Sonny Rollins on John Coltrane

Thinking about Thelonious Monk…

thelonious monk 05

Tomorrow would’ve marked Thelonious Monk’s 92nd birthday. Without Monk so much would be different for me. I came to jazz through Miles Davis. Nothing unusual there. But my affinity for jazz beyond a casual interest came from the unusual. For no matter how mainstream and accepted Monk’s music has become, it is unusual and will forever remain so. What Monk did is still little understood. He was tight-lipped, difficult, and seemingly belligerent. An outward austerity beneath which lurked a prickly, sensitive, slightly unstable man capable for great artistic leaps and personal generosity. For Monk was generous. He gave his sidemen, those who could hang with his challenging music, near unlimited amounts of room with which to showcase and improve themselves. And those who were truly with it took advantage of it. We can thank Monk for the vast improvements in the abilities of such legends as John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins. But these were men destined to reap their many bountiful gifts.  Monk just softly pushed them along. But when I listen to the Five Spot recordings from August 7th, 1958 and I listen to Johnny Griffin just devour Monk’s music, that’s when I’m feeling the shepherding influence of Monk the most. Nearly every tenor who has come through Monk’s school of music has left their own idiosyncratic stamp on the music. The shuffling, snuffling tone of Charlie Rouse, instantly identifiable, became perhaps the most sympathetic to Monk’s cause. Rouse is continually overlooked most likely because he lingered with Monk too long. But in doing so, he became Monk’s greatest champion. Only Coleman Hawkins could be said to interpret a Monk ballad better. Listening to Harold Land tear through Monk tunes at The Blackhawk in San Francisco on a literal moment’s notice is a joy. That is baptism by fire. I knew Land was a great tenor but those recordings proved it. So many other players would’ve caved under the pressure of learning Monk’s tunes on the spot (while having to battle Rouse at the same moment). Billy Higgins sparkles on that record. I wish he’d recorded with Monk more. He could’ve been his definitive drummer (no disrespect to Art Blakey, Roy Haynes, and Shadow Wilson). I love all of Monk’s recordings, particularly those for Riverside and Columbia. When people ask me for Monk recommendations — man, that’s tough. I usually stick with my three perennial favorites: Monk’s Music (the meeting of Trane and Hawkins could only have occurred within the context of Monk’s music); Monk (the Columbia one that is so super playful with great Rouse solos); and those Five Spot Recordings with Griffin because they are exuberant.  Of course, immediately afterward, I want to thrust the Town Hall, Carnegie Hall, and early recordings into their hands, and well… it just continues forever.

Without Thelonious Monk, I would never have started down the path that brought me to jazz radio and a jazz blog. I really owe it all to him.

Bop and Beyond’s 50 Personally Indispensable Jazz Albums:

milesscaffoldmonksdreammoneyjungle

Monty challenged me to come up with my own list of 50 personally indispensable jazz albums in response to the Amazon 100 list.

The criteria was simple, name the 50 jazz albums I personally could not live without. That’s it… a list of favorite albums (not necessarily the greatest albums either). Anyone who has followed this site knows my taste so most of these albums won’t come as much of a surprise anyway.

Monty’s list is posted here: http://rightheredude.blogspot.com/2009/05/my-top-50-jazz-albums-of-all-time.html

In the meantime, here’s mine…

01. Miles Davis – Kind of Blue

02. Duke Ellington – Money Jungle

03. Clifford Brown & Max Roach – A Study In Brown

04. Thelonious Monk – Monk’s Dream

05. Billie Holiday – Lady Day: The Master Takes

06. Louis Armstrong & Duke Ellington – The Great Summit

07. Coleman Hawkins – Body and Soul

08. Ornette Coleman – At The Golden Circle

09. Miles Davis – In A Silent Way

10. Peggy Lee – Black Coffee

11. John Coltrane – Coltrane’s Sound

12. Alice Coltrane – Ptah, the El Daoud

13. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Like Someone In Love

14. Ahmad Jamal – The Legendary Okeh and Epic Recordings

15. Curtis Amy – Katanga!

16. Von Freeman – The Great Divide

17. Mary Lou Williams – Black Christ of the Andes

18. Paul Chambers – Bass on Top

19. Alice Coltrane – Journey in Satchidananda

20. Charlie Rouse – Bossa Nova Bacchanal

21. Thelonious Monk – Misterioso

22. Booker Ervin – The Freedom Book

23. Ike Quebec – Blue and Sentimental

24. Sonny Rollins – Saxophone Colossus

25. John Coltrane – A Love Supreme

26. Miles Davis – Ascenseur Pour L’echafaud (Lift to the Scaffold)

27. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Au Club St. Germain

28. Duke Ellington – Fargo, 1940

29. Coleman Hawkins – Night Hawk

30. Mal Waldron – The Seagulls of Kristiansund

31. Herbie Nichols – Love, Gloom, Cash, Love

32. Jimmy Smith – Back at the Chicken Shack

33. Pharoah Sanders – Jewels of Thought

34. The Jazz Crusaders – Freedom Sound

35. Django Reinhardt – Paris and London

36. Dexter Gordon – Our Man In Paris

37. Andrew Hill – Smokestack

38. Stanley Turrentine – Jubilee Shout!!!

39. Don Byas – Laura

40. Clifford Brown – With Strings

41. Grachan Moncur III – Evolution

42. Earl Hines – Once Upon A Time

43. Horace Parlan – Speakin’ My Piece

44. Lou Blackburn – The Complete Imperial Sessions

45. Sonny Rollins – East Broadway Run Down

46. Carmell Jones – Jay Hawk Talk

47. The Curtis Counce Group – Carl’s Blues

48. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Free For All

49. Paul Gonsalves – Boom Jackie Boom Chick

50. Kenny Burrell – Midnight Blue

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