Chapter 4: Influences do Blues in Rock, Jazz and Pop.
Structure,
as when Ellington elaborates the form in such compositions as "The Mooch"
or "Mood Indigo," or when Miles Davis substitutes scales for chords
in "All Blues." Even more frequently, what is involved is the
application of blue notes in a scale or blues phrasing to non-blues material.
Billie Holiday rarely sang traditional blues songs but performed every ballad
with blues feeling. Charlie Parker, whose performance of "Lady, Be
good" with Jazz at the philharmonic, is a textbook example of turning a
pop song blue.
These may
be the ultimate examples of improvisers steeped in an aura of the blues. Yet,
the same could be said regarding such supposed radicals as Ornate Coleman, who
retains the raw authenticity of a Robert Johnson in all of his alto saxophone
solos, or John Coltrane, who built his masterpiece "A Love supreme" on
a basic blues riff not that far removed from the one underpinning Willie
Dixon's "Seventh Son."
The
interaction between those considered blues and jazz musicians, respectively,
has also been a Constant.
Mamie
Smith, the first blues vocalist to attain popularity through recordings,
employed jazz tenor sax pioneers Coleman Hawkins in her group. Bessie Smith,
the greatest of the early blues artists, featured a young Louis Armstrong on
some of her finest recordings. Count Basie, who once defined jazz as nothing
more than swinging the blues, featured blues shouter Jimmy Rushing in his first
band, and received a major boost in his comeback 20 years later from the more
contemporary blues styling’s of Joe
Williams.
Lionel Hampton's big band of the 1940s introduced blues great Dinah Washington
and made hit records including "Hemp’s Boogie Woogie" and "Hey!
Ba-Ba-Re-Bop" that helped launches rhythm and blues. R&B then begat
rock and roll, which ultimately fed the fusion movement in jazz, just as the "soulful"
jazz of modernists such as Horace Silver and Bobby Timmons had its impact via
funk on more contemporary blues.
With the
passing of time, and as both the blues and jazz continue to evolve, the
connection remains unbroken. Two of today's leading jazz ensembles, the World
Saxophone Quartet and the Mingus Big Band, have linked the blues and politics
in recent album titles. Steve Coleman, Greg Osby, Cassandra Wilson and other
musicians associated in the M-Base Collective of the 1980s and early 1990s have
retained a blues-based focus while incorporating other elements in their
personal concepts. Diana Krall,
Joshua
Redman and other young jazz stars of the day still play the blues, as does
every young musician who studies jazz in high school and college courses
throughout the world. The bond between the blues and jazz has only been
strengthened by the many connotations beyond the musical definitions of these
two art forms. When we view the blues as an attitude of facing the
uncertainties of existence with a clear vision, a sense of humor and a spirit
of resilience, and when we view jazz as a process for ensuring meaningful and
spontaneous collective creation, it becomes even clearer that the blues and
jazz only reinforce each other.
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