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Seen and Heard Article
Jazz
and Classical:
Blue Notes at Aspen Festival 2007 (HS)
"Blue Notes," Aspen Music Festival's theme for
this year, celebrates the mutual influences of
jazz and classical music. This hits close to home
for me, as these are my two favorite forms of
music. When I was a music major in the 1960s, my
junior composition project was a concerto for jazz
trio and orchestra. So I know from personal
experience how seductive the fusion of these two
idioms can be, and how difficult it is to pull
off.
Today, most jazz and classical musicians admire
and respect each other, but that took a while to
evolve. Composers who wrote for symphony
orchestras, chamber ensembles and opera singers,
which we commonly refer to as "classical" music,
tried to imitate the syncopation and the chord
structures. They used saxophones and drum kits.
The novelty tickled some classical music
listeners, but to ears familiar with real jazz a
lot of it rang false.
Perhaps George Gershwin achieved the most perfect
synthesis of jazz and classical traditions with
"An American in Paris" (heard here June 27) and
"Rhapsody in Blue" (July 14). Gershwin showed how
it could be done. Give the jazzy stuff to the
winds and percussion, but keep it fairly straight
for the strings. Other classical composers strayed
from Gershwin's approach at their peril.
Gershwin aside, the early adopters of jazz among
classical composers succeeded best when they
didn't try to make symphonic musicians try to
swing. Ravel used jazz elements most effectively
in slow movements to his Piano Concerto in G and
the violin sonata. He let the shape of jazz
melodies and the harmonies that go with them
filter into his own style organically rather than
trying to graft on rhythms better left to Louis
Armstrong or "Kid" Ory. The jazz elements feel
like just the right thing to express what the
composer wanted.
Composers on the jazz side of the fence liked the
dense chords and soft dissonances of Ravel,
Debussy and Satie, and incorporated them into
their music. Later, the harsher dissonances of the
modernists emboldened avant-garde jazz artists
toward ever more complex and harsh-sounding music.
One thing mainstream jazz got from classical music
was its long forms. Prior to the 1920s and 1930s,
when Duke Ellington started writing extended
rhapsodies, tone poems and suites, virtually all
jazz was basically a sort of theme and variations.
Play the tune, improvise new melodies on the chord
structure, and finish by playing the tune again.
Improvisation, and the satisfaction of a return to
the original tune, are at the essence of jazz.
That holds true to this day.
Ellington developed his musical ideas into more
complex forms, as in his "Black and Tan Fantasy"
and such outsized suites such as "Black, Brown and
Beige." He also made a wonderfully witty
arrangement for his band of music from
Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker" ballet, an early
example of how jazz musicians could make classical
music swing.
Beyond Ellington, trumpeter-composer Wynton
Marsalis wrote several big pieces in recent years,
including the extraordinary "Blood on the Fields"
(1997), a virtual jazz oratorio three hours long.
Marsalis and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, in
collaboration with drummer Yacub Addy and his
Odaada! ensemble, brought the evening-long "Congo
Square" to Aspen June 26, adding vernacular
African music to the mix.
All these big works from the jazz side embraced
and celebrated improvisation, something the
classical side almost universally shunned. In a
performance several years ago of "Rhapsody in
Blue" here in Aspen by the jazz pianist Marcus
Roberts, he played Gershwin's music as if it were
real jazz, and extended the cadenzas into
full-scale jazz solos. That was impressive. And
rare.
In the 1960s, familiar pieces from the world of
classical music got jazz treatments that are
worthy of study for what it takes to make the two
genres mesh effectively.
The most famous of these, and arguably the best,
is "Sketches of Spain." Gil Evans wrote
arrangements of music by Rodrigo and de Falla and
several pieces of his own in the same vein. Miles
Davis played trumpet, mostly muted and incredibly
soulful, against Evans' evocative music. He used a
big orchestra unusual for jazz in that it included
French horns, oboes, harp and tuba.
The most memorable track, "Concierto de Aranjuez,"
faithfully renders the Adagio from Rodrigo's
familiar guitar concerto. Evans makes the
harmonies more complex, more jazz-y, than
Rodrigo's, and the musicians play the slow,
sensuous music with jazz sensibilities. Davis'
solos are heartbreaking. "Aranjuez" stands as a
jazz classic, so much so that Chick Corea used an
extended version of the main tune as an
introduction to "Spain," one of his most popular
jazz compositions.
For me, the Rosetta stone for jazz and classical
music is The Bill Evans Trio with Symphony
Orchestra (1965). Evans was a classically
trained pianist with formidable technique, which
he put in service of music of astonishing depth,
not flash. Composer-arranger Claus Ogerman, who is
still with us, writes and performs original works
that marry jazz and classical music for the
concert hall. He has a long list of credits,
including arrangements for the likes of Antonio
Carlos Jobim and Diana Krall.
On the 1965 album with Evans, Ogerman created an
amalgam that works without compromising either
aesthetic. He used a full symphony orchestra for
gorgeous arrangements of music by Fauré, Granados,
Scriabin and Bach, plus some mesmerizing pieces by
the pianist. Ogerman's modus operandi takes its
cue from Gershwin—let the classical musicians play
in their idiom and the jazz musicians in theirs.
It's the composer's responsibility to make it
mesh. Claude Bolling learned that lesson well,
which is why he achieved popularity with his
suites for flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal, cellist
Yo-Yo Ma and violinist Pinchas Zuckerman, among
others. Bolling's music relies on the jazz players
to swing, the classical musicians to provide
technical fireworks.
Too many classical composers don't understand that
it's the rare classical musician who can really
swing in jazz. It requires a different sense of
timing and emphasis. In general, jazz artists can
execute classical music well enough, although few
do it with the precision and deftness of those who
make it their life's work. The trumpeter Wynton
Marsalis, the clarinetist David Stoltzman (and
before him, Benny Goodman) and the pianist Keith
Jarrett are among the few soloists that have
scored successes in both worlds.
It's the rare violinist who can swing. Lev
Polyakin, heard here last year, may be the best of
today's jazz fiddle players, but he can also play
Prokofiev and Bach. Generally, percussionists,
brass players and bassists handle jazz better than
other string players and most woodwinds.
We have already seen some stark examples in this
year's festival performances. In recent weeks, in
terms of articulating the jazz idiom, the best
efforts of the artist faculty and students in
jazz-inflected music by Antheil, Ives, Mackey,
Hartke and Milhaud paled in comparison to those of
true jazz-steeped musicians such as the amazing
bassists Christian McBride and Edgar Meyer or the
Argentinian pianist Pablo Ziegler and bandoneón
player Héctor del Curto.
Over the years, some jazz artists have managed to
invade the concert hall and get their works
performed by symphony orchestras or chamber
ensembles. Dave Brubeck and Lalo Schifrin are two
examples. Brubeck has written oratorios, masses,
ballets and an opera based on Steinbeck's "Cannery
Row." Schifrin, who worked with Dizzy Gillespie,
Sarah Vaughan and other jazz giants as a pianist
and arranger, wrote more than 100 film and TV
scores, including the "Mission: Impossible" theme.
He also wrote a guitar concerto and other modern
classical works, and conducted symphony orchestras
around the world.
Of all the classical composers who have adopted
some jazz elements into their works, the ones
least likely to make jazz musicians cringe were
Ravel, Gershwin and Leonard Bernstein. Gershwin
and Bernstein wrote Broadway musicals with jazz
elements that fit seamlessly, and concert works
that absorbed the sound and feel of jazz. As a
composer, Bernstein threw everything he knew into
his music. "West Side Story" is part Puccini, part
jazz and part Latin music, yet all Bernstein.
"Prelude, Fugue and Riffs" fits jazz into
classical forms and requires real jazz technique
to pull off.
In a way, the same dynamic prevails in the
classical world. Some pianists play Chopin
beautifully while others can't capture the magic
no matter how hard they try. It takes the right
match between composer and performer.
For all the jazz percolating through this year's
festival, we still get only a glimpse into the
niches and corners where these musical spheres
overlap. It's a fertile area for further
exploration.
Harvey Steiman
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