Remembering Michael

“There have been others, but never two lovers like music…music…and me.”

Michael Jackson

It has always been slightly unsettling for me to celebrate or commemorate an artist around the anniversary of his or her death.  After all, it is what a particular artist accomplished or inspired during their lifetime that is being remembered, and only logical that we therefore reflect upon them during their coming into the world, and not their departure from it.  But when it comes to Michael Jackson, it’s a different story — at least for me, and I believe, for many.  I think this is because Michael’s actual death was so profound.  The gaping hole left in the hearts of millions symbolized that losing Michael Jackson was the single most culturally impacting event of our lifetime.  I’m sure you know exactly where you were and what you felt when you learned that Michael was gone.

I was either so young, or not yet born when we tragically lost musical giants like John Lennon, Otis Redding, Sam Cooke and Lee Morgan.  Furthermore, my mom was pregnant with my older brother when both Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy were assassinated, and had already mourned the previous deaths of JFK and Malcolm X.  America has undoubtedly suffered terrible loss of artistic, cultural and political icons within the scope of our lifetimes.  But, the interesting thing about Michael’s death, which is so distinctive, is that because his career spanned over 40 years, our parents and even grand-parents loved him just the same as those of my generation, and for all intents and purposes, actually “knew” him first, as much as the Thriller generation loves to claim him as being “really” ours.  (I’m guilty).

Michael’s impact is so far beyond music, and the various contexts through which he can be intensely studied and analyzed are indicative of that.  One thing that deeply affected me upon his death was that for all who thought that Michael Jackson forgot that he was Black…well, the media had not.  But thankfully, neither did Black folks.  Michael was celebrated and memorialized most appropriately by his people; without the damper of controversy and distractions, which were exacerbated by the media.  The beautifully relentless home-going celebration at the Apollo Theater in Harlem was the most brilliant example to the world that Michael not only understood his roots, but he was the embodiment of Black culture.

That being said, Michael’s indelible influence on the world is unprecedented and I cannot even grasp the totality of what that really means.  It surpasses any sort of quantification.  In a sense, like Michael himself, his influence is not to be understood but simply appreciated and respected.  There’s nothing else to do with such an other-worldly gift we are so blessed to have experienced.  Here, some of the most prominent artists in modern jazz have taken a moment to reflect on what Michael Jackson means to them.  Besides, Michael’s musical influence reaches every corner of every genre of music; a lesser discussed topic as it relates to jazz, but perhaps one of the most important angles to look at.  Enjoy.

—————————————–

“To me, Michael Jackson is important as an artist because not only did he understand the role of the artist in society — he went far beyond it.”
Ambrose Akinmusire

“One thing that’s great about Michael, which isn’t often discussed or recognized, is that Off The Wall and Thriller are, for lack of a better word, Jazz records. The chordal structures, melodic content, string and horn arrangements, the Blues, the drive and swing of the rhythm section are all hallmarks of the so-called Jazz idiom. They represent, so far, the pinnacle of success for Black Popular Music and it is of no coincidence that those two records coincided with the return of the music otherwise referred to as straight-ahead Jazz. These records did more than just turn people on to Michael Jackson or R&B, they made people fans of music at a time when the industry was in a slump, much like so-called Jazz did around the turn of the century. ‘Thriller’ and ‘Off The Wall’ are essentially a continuum of the work first established on the ‘Hot Fives’ and ‘Hot Sevens’ by the world’s first Rock star, Louis Armstrong.”
– Nicholas Payton

“Michael Jackson proved that music and dance are probably the most powerful uniting forces in this world.  His style continues to cross genres, religious beliefs, class systems, and political and racial divides more than any other artist to date.  Everyone in every corner of the world knows his name and image.  And all of this came from this simple fact of how unique and great his music and dancing really was.  It was produced, executed, and recorded to the highest level, and it will keep on influencing peoples’ lives beyond our years.”
– Mike Moreno

“MJ is an icon. Unbelievably talented and devoted his life to his passion for art and humanity.  So hugely influential and groundbreaking, and seemed like such a beautifully gentle, caring soul.  Growing up on his music, I think we all felt a personal connection.  He makes us want to sing along, get up and dance, lay down and cry, stand up and shout, reflect upon and then actively do something.  That’s what art should do.  I will forever shake my head in amazement at his singing, his dancing; he was the greatest entertainer who ever lived and quite possibly ever will.  No one can touch that.”
– Gretchen Parlato

“The feeling I always got from MJ’s music is that he never hid or second guessed his inner voice and passion.  You undeniably feel every word and every dance move.  So overwhelmingly inspiring.”
Casey Benjamin

“I believe Michael Jackson was here to show us how small the world really is, and his vehicle was his talent as an entertainer.  No matter where one is from, when one is born, what language one speaks, what doctrine one reveres, etc… most of the world that existed during or exists post his life has been moved deeply by Michael’s talent.  This is evidence of something much larger than fame.  It is evidence of what is possible.  Genius, in my opinion, is not measured by mere talent.  It is measured by what those talents have contributed to the world.  His impact on us was so huge because he constantly had a vector, a purpose for the talents he was given.”
Marcus Strickland

“Nobody has been MEGA famous for as long as he has.  Also, with the ability to change and be a pioneer in each change.  He is a master vocalist-performer-dancer and just has a musical sound of his own.  Not to mention he has inspired everyone, and is hands down, the most famous person to walk the Earth.”
Robert Glasper

“Michael Jackson was clearly an artist of the highest order. Perhaps the quality that he possessed which stood out to me most was his ability to convey a particular message with utmost sincerity, sophistication, character and execution. His influence is seemingly infinite and his legacy will live on forever. I am truly grateful that I was born during his lifetime.
– Marcus Gilmore

“MJ was an extension in the evolution of Black entertainment.,  He pulled from James Brown, Sammy Davis Jr. and Jackie Wilson, making him the greatest in his time.”
– Jesse McB
ride

“Michael was a beacon for excellence as an artist.  He was always looking for the next level of perfection.”
– Kendrick Scott

“MJ is the epitome of timeless.  His influence on my generation is profound.  From his music to the ‘Beat It’ jacket.  You wanted to sing, dance, and be like Mike.  And that impact is just as strong on my 5-year old.”
– Keyon Harrold

“Michael Jackson was a great inspiration to me for many different reasons, but there are three that stand out.  One, he checked out and absorbed everything. If you listen to songs or look at videos of MJ when he was young, he knew James Brown, Ray Charles, and all the legends that came before him.  He knew many genres of music and appreciated them.  I even saw a video of him tap dancing to Mingus on You Tube.  The beautiful thing is that you can hear all of these influences in all the music he did.  Two, he was a true activist/humanitarian. He wasn’t afraid to speak out about the bad things that were going on in the world.  He wasn’t passive and he put his thoughts in his music. He wasn’t trying to be politically correct and didn’t care what others thought.  Three, he was all about moving forward.  If you look at MJ throughout his career, he always surrounded himself with those that were current and had something fresh to say. He reminds me of Miles Davis in that way.”
Jaleel Shaw

I loved the cartoons in the Thriller record sleeve.. The one of MJ and paul mccartney pulling the girl was particularly memorable.. Seeing that image, it was hard to hear the song and not laugh! That record and the album art were definitely a highlight of the Vasandani family record collection.
– Sachal Vasandani

“MJ for me was and still is the total package of an entertainer.  He had everything: the voice, moves and the charisma.  He was always striving to better himself as an artist.  He never took his talents for granted.  He always knew where he was going and what steps to take to get him there.”
– Johnathan Blake

Thank you, Michael.

Week #4 Alternate Takes: Album for the Week

Miles Davis’ Nefertiti

This is probably my favorite album from Miles Davis’ second classic quintet of pianist Herbie Hancock, saxophonist Wayne Shorter, bassist Ron Carter and drummer Tony Williams. Nefertiti is the fourth album from this group, and for me, the best. Before this album, the group had already recorded three ground-breaking and ridiculously killing albums: E.S.P., Miles Smiles, and Sorcerer. These albums produced some of my favorite songs like “Footprints”, “Iris”, “Pee Wee”, “Sorcerer”, and “Little One”.  But for me, Nefertiti is just IT! Tune selection, vibe and execution are all unparalleled here. Some of the tunes on this album exhibit some of my favorite solos and playing from these five musicians. Ron Carter on “Pinocchio” is some of the nastiest bass playing I’ve ever heard, for example. Herbie on “Fall” is completely entrancing. A collection of tunes written by everyone in the band (except Miles) the album has something for everybody. It swings like nothing else ever heard when it wants to, it is simply mesmerizing and moody with loop-like tunes like “Nefertiti” and “Fall”.  t’s just a splendid album that I never skip through, never gets old, and is always inspiring. A timeless, brilliant classic.

Week #3 Alternate Takes: Album for the Week

Roy Hargrove's "Family"

Aaaah, the 90s.  This was one of my favorite eras, because this was around the time that I was now old enough to buy my own records, and check out music with friends my own age.  I was a sophomore in high school (LAG, stand up!) when this album came out.  I remember going to see Roy for the first time when I was about 16 years old at the Jazz Gallery, where he was performing the music of John Coltrane. I remember thinking that he played so much “older” than his years.  If there is one jazz musician who has been here before, it’s Roy Hargrove.  His feel (especially on a ballad) for me, is unsurpassed.

On Family (Verve), the first three tunes feature Hargrove’s incredible quintet of Ron Blake, Stephen Scott, Rodney Whitaker, and Greg Hutchinson, as they play songs that are an homage to Hargrove’s own family.  On “Roy Allan” (tribute to Hargrove’s dad), Hutchinson’s feel is so infectious, you can’t help but bob (must be the Brooklyn in him).  The album also features two other awesome rhythm sections and a hell of a list of special guests including Christian McBride, Wynton Marsalis, Karriem Riggins, Lewis Nash, and David “Fathead” Newman, to name just some.  A beautiful mixture of standards and originals, young lions and masters, Hargrove has always been such an important figure in jazz not only because of the way he set the jazz scene ablaze as part of one of the most important eras in jazz, but because of this balance he always seems to be able to strike; super modern, yet steeped in tradition.  Definitely one of my favorite RH albums, and the perfect day to play it!

Have a great weekend!

“Roy Allan” with Roy’s Big Band…

Fate of Coltrane Home Is Uncertain Again…

Me and Mrs. Fulgoni at Town Hall meeting in 2004

I am so sorry to learn that the final home of John Coltrane is once again an endangered historical landmark, according to an article in today’s New York TimesThe Coltrane Home’s official website states that “A nationally significant historic site, The Coltrane Home in Dix Hills, is in danger. Listed as one of the 11 Most Endangered Historic Places by the National Trust for Historic Places, and saved from demolition following a worldwide grass roots effort several years ago, it remains in urgent need.”

thecoltranehome.org

The news has stirred up all of the emotions that I felt when I first learned of this issue back in 2004.  I remember getting a call from Steve Fulgoni, historian for the Half Hollow Historical Association in the Dix Hills area, where Coltrane’s last home is located.  He is an avid John Coltrane lover and supporter, and probably one of the nicest people I’ve ever met (his wife is quite a wonderful person as well).  Anyway, he informed me that he was heading up an effort to have a hearing of sorts at Huntington Town Hall to make the case for the home to escape demolition and rightfully be deemed a historical landmark.  He asked if I would mind attending and reading the letter I had previously written about my feelings about Coltrane and the importance of the home.  I could not have been more honored by the invitation, and I went.  It was an experience I’ll never forget.  It was the first time I met Ravi Coltrane, and Matt Garrison (son to legendary bassist and Classic Coltrane Quartet member, Jimmy Garrison).  Fairly new in my career in jazz and advocacy, this was such an impressionable moment for me; the first time I felt that rewarding feeling that comes from understanding I somehow had a personal hand in something so important.  But according to today’s Times article, “lack of funds” have stalled the efforts and put the home in danger, yet again.

John Coltrane is the single most influential artist in my life, and I look at it as no less than my duty to get back to business and do whatever I can.  Won’t you also?

To help, please visit www.thecoltranehome.org or contact sfulgoni@thecoltranehome.org.

Here is the letter I read at Huntington Town Hall in 2004.

Week #2 Alternate Takes: Album for the Week

Dianne Reeves' When You Know

Eyes closed, I reached out to my music library and picked out this little gem.  Dianne Reeves singing love songs in a tasteful array of genres.

Dianne Reeves has always been that singer that if you knew her personally, you would probably solicit her to sing all of your favorite songs.  She just has that kind of voice that makes you want to hear her interpret anything…and she actually can.  Produced by George Duke, When You Know (Blue Note) is Valentine’s Day on disc.  With arrangements from Duke and Billy Childs, it’s hard to go wrong.  The album is well composed, with R&B classics like The Temptations’ “Just My Imagination” and Minnie Ripperton’s “Loving You,” Jobim’s “Once I Loved” and American Songbook classics from Alan and Marilyn Bergman, for example.  Reeves is no stranger to singing repertoire out of the jazz box (think her 90s album, Quiet After the Storm, for example) but her robust yet sweet voice singing love songs, is especially inviting.

She is neither trying to reinvent the wheel nor is she doing a carbon-copy dealie (a pet peeve of mine. Why re-make a song exactly the way it’s already been done?).  Her re-interpretations are worthwhile.

Caution: may result in some romance ❤

Nicholas Payton on Jazz, Politics and the Courage to be Himself

“If I can’t be myself, what’s the point in saying anything?”

Photo by: Angelika Beener

This is a mantra that trumpeter Nicholas Payton lives by. Outspoken, at times shocking, at times brutally honest, at times perfectly poetic, Payton is as verbally diverse as he is musically.

At just 37 years old, Payton has the depth and breadth of experience and perspective of someone twice his age. A musical prodigy and professional musician for over twenty years, the New Orleans native is the culture, and an authoritative figure in Black music. The GRAMMY® winning musician, with nine albums to boast, is also accomplished on several instruments including piano, bass, and drums; an adeptness he was able to demonstrate on his latest album Bitches, an autobiographical musical memoir of love and heartbreak.

One of jazz music’s most vigorous provocateurs, Payton has unabashedly confronted every elephant in the room when it comes to jazz, particularly as it pertains to race, culture and politics. Payton does not shy away, instead forcing critics, fans, and fellow musicians alike to deal with the uncomfortable yet imperative subjects. If ever there was a figure in jazz today, who voices what others only ponder, it is Nicholas Payton, who has carried on the tradition of some of the most outspoken jazz musicians I can think of: Miles Davis and Wynton Marsalis. (Must be a trumpeter thing. The trumpet, after all, has always symbolized an awakening, a truth, a call to action.)

“A lot of folks have gotten really upset with me about a lot of stuff I’ve said, and that’s OK,” says Payton. “To me, you wouldn’t be getting upset really, if what I was saying didn’t have any merit, you know, and it’s affirmation to me that I need to continue to speak. I do feel like I have a gift of sorts to provoke thought, and to get people to think and to have a voice out here for what I feel is not really represented in the way that I feel that it should be. To not do that, to me is…I would feel like I’m not being responsible. I would feel a burden of guilt, perhaps, for not doing something about something I feel like I am called to do, so to speak.”

There is arguably no genre of music that reaches more points of contention when it comes to definition than jazz.  Critics, documenters and so-called historians have long used their position and power to inject their theories of what is and isn’t jazz – many times with detrimental consequence to black inventors. Moreover, black jazz musicians have experienced their share of disproportionate exposure, appreciation, and financial support.  Internally, the subject has been strained between musicians, and as the spectrum of jazz musicians broadens, so do the theories of what constitutes as credible. Payton deals with this issue head on, striking a chord with some, and a nerve with others resulting in a divide that is more often than not, a racial one. “To me you’re not furthering the so-called jazz tradition if you don’t address the fundamentals of what that thing is. To me, it has to have to have a blues sensibility… it has to have a groove sensibility. If you obscure both of those and highlight the European elements of it, then to me it ceases to be what’s known as jazz. I mean, it’s fine for what it is, but don’t call it jazz.”

In our ridiculously labeled “post-racial” era, it seems as if when someone brings up the issue of race as a matter of speaking their truth, in turn, they will automatically be looked at as some form of a racist. Currently, it is conveniently almost in poor taste to even bring up race, treated as a cop out to some, others branding one as being angry for acknowledging it. Payton refutes all of these suggestions, and challenges people to deal with what’s on the table. In a generation where an African-American tradition can be almost devoid of African-American participants in various mediums on any given day (read your average jazz blog, magazine or festival or club line-up), we have come face to face with a cultural crisis.  Post young lion era, jazz has become less of itself and more of something else: grunge, rock, country, ambient…

Photo by: Adam Weiss

“I do have a problem in general with just this whole notion that so-called jazz can be whatever you want it to be. Just this whole, like, ‘Oh, you can mix this with Indian music and not have to deal with [the tradition], you can mix it with Eastern European music…’ It’s like, why? Why is that necessary? Those [styles of] music have those traditions.  Most ethnic music… most music [styles] period, have an improvisatory aspect of it. So why is it necessary to take Black music and just kinda make it what you want, and that’s OK?  That’s really what my whole beef is. People have died to play this music. This music is our path to freedom. And now that we are able to enjoy some of the fruits of all the work that our ancestors did, you’re not just gonna take this and make it what you want to make it. Respect our tradition.”

When it comes to the passing on the tradition to Black youth, Payton is not so sure that the mark is being met, and with good reason. In fact, I can attest to this myself. When working on a radio broadcast a few years back, which featured the top five or so college jazz bands in the tri-state area, including Julliard, The New School, and SUNY Purchase, there was not one black musician among them – in ANY band. A blaring signal to me that the institutionalization of jazz may not be in the interest of serving black youth.

“When has an institution ever been a good thing?,” Payton blatantly stated to me. “In anything Black, already the connotation to me is not good.  When does that ever mean anything positive?  Prison is an institution. Institutions are funded by people who have money who want to see a certain thing. Which doesn’t necessarily serve the so-called  “people”, and doesn’t necessarily serve the so-called ‘community.’ It serves some kind of interest. It’s become an institution and that’s so not what the spirit of the music is supposed to be. A big reason why you’re not seeing Black kids matriculate into college level programs is because there aren’t high school level programs… jazz bands after school, etc. If you look at… programs… I don’t want to call them out, but a lot of institutions that have high school outreach. Which ones do they go to? They don’t really go to the ones in the ‘hood. Where are those musicians coming from? The Black church used to be a big source. Music in general is just dying in the black community. There used to be a piano is every house, didn’t matter if you was poor or not. People sang in the choir, they had some kind of musical outlet.”

Being from New Orleans, Payton is as close to the social foundation of jazz music as anyone can get, and he consistently draws clear correlation between the culture and the music, which he believes need to co-exist, unquestionably. “Jazz music has a social function, and I think the music has gotten away from that, and the more it’s sort of gotten in other arenas like the concert hall, and the performing arts centers, and the schools, it became something else. It’s life and you have to feel it, and that intuitive part of it, which is the most important part, it’s all but overlooked. You go to colleges, and you know, all these young cats, and they can read fly shit and they can play all these changes and intricate things, and then you call a medium tempo blues, and they can’t hold it together. That’s a part of the problem.”

Photo by: Ingrid Hertfelder

Photo by Ingrid Hertfelder

Payton’s protective stance has been a hot button for many. His one or two sentence observations and proclamations about jazz on Facebook can easily garner upwards of two hundred spirited response comments – a testament to his belief that while all is calm on the surface, just below is a sea of controversy. And everyone wants in. But while he may have a reputation for being a thorn in your side, depending on where you stand on the issues, he is also a staunch supporter of today’s up and coming jazz musicians, often a humbly silent hero behind significant good deeds in the jazz community. For Payton, it’s just simply the right thing to do.

“I’m not just paying lip service. I’m not just trying to be controversial or drum up controversy. I mean these things. And to me, if you gonna talk the talk, then you gotta walk the walk. I want to support that because you know, I can’t say all of this shit about well ‘such and such doesn’t do for the music’ and not contribute myself. And I feel a lot of musicians are selfish, like if someone don’t give them a CD or if they gotta pay to get in a club, they won’t go, and I don’t do that. If I show up, unless the guy [at the door] recognizes me off the bat, I’ll pay the whatever. Because this is how I make my money. How you gonna expect to get all the time and you don’t want to ever give? I feel like I’ve been blessed and given a lot, and for me just to be able to support cats who I feel have a voice, and who have done some interesting things. I’m not a rich man, I’m not Coca-Cola [laughs] but I’ll give my last dollar to someone I feel is trying to do something, because quality has to be supported. And if I don’t do it then who’s gonna do it? I don’t look to wait for somebody else to do things if I feel I have the power to do it. I really feel like we’re fighting a losing battle here and there’s just not enough people who are willing to do shit for one another in this world, and I just don’t wanna be that kind of person, and I don’t care if I don’t see anyone else doing it, then I’ll die trying to do the things I believe. Otherwise what worth is my life if I’m not consistent in not only what I say, but what I do… how I live? On every level, I wanna be the same person, and exude all the things that I believe. Otherwise my life is for naught.”

Inspired in part by the way jazz musicians are still treated and regarded in our society, Payton believes things need to change on a lot of levels. “That’s why I’ve come to have disdain for the word jazz. Because it automatically just means that you’re gonna be disrespected. It’s OK to treat you any kinda way. It’s OK that there are only two people in the club, it’s OK for them to tell you, ‘There’s a whole menu, but ya’ll can only eat this off the menu.’ It’s OK to not have a dressing room, or a dressing room with no ventilation. At a certain point you have to learn to say no.”

Payton has said “no” to much of what’s going on in the world of jazz today, but never without profound insight.  Whether you agree or doggedly reject where he’s coming from, you will walk away different. He will leave an impression on your brain, and a desire in your heart to at least think about what he’s saying.  his is the most intriguing aspect of Nicholas Payton off of his horn. At the end of the most heated debate, the one sentiment that everyone can agree on is that they respect Nicholas Payton for being who he is.

“But on a broader level there’s room for it all to exist. I’m not gonna hate on anybody’s right to express themselves the way they want to, but I’m certainly gonna say what I have to say about it and because I feel like what I represent is not really talked about, I find myself having to be vocal because no one is really saying it. And I’ve kinda had to accept somewhat being the fall guy for what is actually right. So I’m like, well, cool, if that’s what it has to be… fine. But I know what I can’t do. I can’t just be the kind of person to sit there and let it happen, because to me then I’m part of the problem…that’s not me.”

Week #1 Alternate Takes: Album for the Week

I’m excited that this brilliant musician is kicking off my Album of the Week series!

Mulgrew Miller's Solo

Mulgrew Miller’s Solo (Space Time) is a collection of standards (and one original piece), performed solo piano and recorded at various points in France over the course of a decade.

I actually had never listened to this album, and I don’t think I realized I owned it.  What a nice surprise to find untapped material of one of my favorite pianists – and solo piano at that.  Hearing Mulgrew performing solo is, for me, the best way.  I think because he plays so much piano, I absorb it so differently when he’s playing solo.  I will never forget finding out on a whim that Mulgrew was doing a duo gig with Robert Hurst at Smalls Jazz Club in NYC.  Oh. My. Goodness.   I mean, I had a lot of the solo piano bootlegs of Mulgrew (sorry…**embarrassed face**) but…that duo performance is an experience I will never forget.  Their version of Freddie Hubbard’s “Up Jumped Spring” is forever embedded in my spirit.  But anyway, this album was such a treat to discover on my shelf and I’ll be listening to it again this weekend.  He does some of my favorite classics like Con Alma (I’ve always loved the changes of that tune, and appreciate them so much more with just solo piano) and Dreamsville, Body & Soul and Giant Steps, which is not always easy for me to enjoy solo (though I love Kenny Werner’s version).  But he pulls it off masterfully…but what else would you expect from Grew?  Have a good weekend!

Alternate Takes: album for the week


a portion of my music library.

For those of you who have read my “An Album a Day” post on my blog, you know that in an effort to curb the tendencies of allowing technology to dictate how we listen to music, I have gotten back to listening to full albums from front to back, and really taking in the project the way the artist intended.  It’s also a way for me to get to know my immense music library again, and in some cases, discover music I own but have never checked out.  Hence, Alternate Takes: album for the week.  My library is organized alphabetically, so they will not be completely “blind” picks, but the picks will still be random!  I will be posting my picks every Friday (just in time for your relaxing weekend, when you would actually have the time to listen to a whole album!)  This should be fun! 

I’m warning you — I’ve got a lot of guilty pleasures, so I’m asking in advance — no judging!

Happy Friday the 13th — Yep, I said “Happy”

According to About.com, “The sixth day of the week and the number 13 both have foreboding reputations said to date from ancient times, and their inevitable conjunction from one to three times a year (there happens to be only one such occurrence in 2011 and three in 2012), portends more misfortune than some credulous minds can bear.”

Tell that to Monk.

If it is the gullible mind that helps feed the bad luck reputation of Friday the 13th, then it only makes sense that someone as headstrong and original as Thelonious Monk would celebrate it; reversing its meaning and deflating its negative energy.  When you listen to the 1959 Town Hall version of Monk’s tune “Friday the 13th”, it is anything but eerie and shuddersome.  It’s one of the most joyful, fun, and celebratory minor  four-bar phrases I’ve ever heard!

Many studies have suggested that the “bad luck” some people experience on Friday the 13th is directly related to their paralyzing fear of the day, not validity.  For example, if you’re terrified to drive a car, it is likely you could have some sort of accident if you venture behind the wheel.  Monk being ruled by fear proves impossible if you listen to his music.  One of the biggest risk-takers and musically principled figures in jazz, it is brilliantly poetic that Monk would turn paranoia into play.  So, get out there and enjoy the day!  Here’s a little motivation music!

Check Out Josh Jackson

Josh Jackson of The Checkout

When you visit jazz music magazine, The Checkout on the web, you don’t feel like you’ve time warped five or six decades into the past.  You immediately feel like jazz is fresh, vibrant, now — and cool.  But this isn’t some manipulation or illusion; it’s just an accurate depiction of what’s really going on.  Finally.

Josh Jackson, creator and producer of The Checkout, which airs on WBGO-Jazz 88.3 FM,  is the man behind the music.  He has taken his passion for music and partnered it with his extensive radio experience and tech savvy, to bring modern jazz into the forefront of the multi-media world we’re submerged in.  The Checkout is a one-stop-shop and a jazz lover’s haven for exclusive content via interviews, live studio sessions, playlists and podcasts.  No where else can you hear/see an in-studio session with Brian Blade, hear Esperanza Spaulding discuss what’s on her iPod via Shuffle, view a live twitter feed, and hear Sonny Rollins discuss his experience living blocks away from World Trade on 9/11 — in one place.  I put Mr. Jackson on the other side of the microphone to ask what he set out to do differently when conceptualizing the program.  His answer?  “I think what I wanted to do, is what I still want to do, and that is cover the [jazz] scene the way it is.”

This may sound simple, but jazz music is perhaps the most complex art form there is in terms of identity; the past and present, both needing and fighting each other at the same time.  Nostalgia versus stagnancy.  Labels and definitions being oxymoronic, or much-needed boundaries in how the music is created.  All of these sensitive subjects can make it difficult for a responsible broadcaster to produce and deliver.  Jackson strikes an impressive balance in this area, and is creating a loud buzz in the jazz community and beyond.

Jazz has lacked proper exposure over the last few decades, and newer artists have suffered the most.  Jackson seems to have a need to make up for lost time.  And while The Checkout has unfailingly featured jazz music’s greats and legends, the program is an unsurpassed platform for artists just stepping into their own.  “I don’t advocate for The Checkout being all of WBGO; The Checkout is one hour in a week of WBGO programming.  But I do advocate that WBGO, and any other station in any other market, consider having a show like The Checkout, so that there is a space on the dial in whatever market, where you can see the musicians that are operating today, no matter what age they are,” states Jackson. It is this kind of thoughtful balance that lends to The Checkout being a show for everyone.  “There is a great audience for jazz, despite what people tell you. [It is]  fragmented and scattered, and so my job as a broadcaster is to find the net that’s gonna catch all those fragments in all those places. And cumulatively, I do believe that it’s a bigger audience than what a lot of research would tell us. The interesting thing about The Checkout is that it has an incredibly diverse audience, demographically.”

This diversity is perhaps one of the greatest achievements of the program. The debate between the generations has classically been one about “whose jazz” matters and whose lacks relevancy, with the younger breed of musicians often becoming  frustrated with constantly fighting the ghosts of jazz past.  Jackson diffuses this pointless fire by not making a case either way, letting the artists speak for themselves — all of them.  “I’m not a critic,” says Jackson.  “And I also don’t have that sort of critical stance of separating art as some kind of object to look at and to study. I mean, that’s a very Euro-centric way of assessing criticism and so I know I’m not that.”

Not that, but who Jackson is, is an award-winning producer of several documentaries, with more than 250 live concert recordings under his belt.  He’s also co-founder his own media company, and a main contributor to National Public Radio’s NPR Music.  However, you won’t find any trace of pretentiousness, which is a valid stigma that the storytellers of jazz must face and fight to eliminate, as many people have accredited the elitist attitude within the jazz community to the genre’s declining audience.  “You have to deal with people who aren’t fans the way an insider is a fan, and you have to connect with them on their level sometimes,” Jackson explains.  The human connection that Jackson has made his broadcasting mantra, has served the program well, as aficionados, casual listeners, and newcomers alike, can all enjoy The Checkout equally.  Jackson’s being tapped in this way, has informed several of his endeavors.  Most vividly, Live at the Village Vanguard.

Photo of Jamire Williams by John Rogers/WBGO

A joint venture between WBGO and NPR Music, Live at the Village Vanguard is a program which brings the complete live jazz experience into the homes and laptops of the world, giving them first-hand insights to these concerts with live streaming both on the radio and online.  Participants can also chat live and watch a live video stream of the concerts.  The nature of interplay and interaction in the jazz ensemble inspires a similar intercommunication on the side of the audience.  Jackson, who is a huge fan of both the club and the live recordings the Vanguard has historically released, is proud to call the Vanguard home.  On being able to pull off something of this magnitude, Jackson enlightens, “One of the things I think I know about media right now is that there are a lot of ways that people are accessing content.  Now we have the technology and now we have a generation behind me of digital natives, who…This is what they know: that all information is available any time, and so we’ve got to keep up with that.  For a place like WBGO, still the biggest part of the pie is the FM transmitter, but at the same time there are people who are streaming the signal online, and accessing it on their mobile device.  The cost in the technology is what’s going down.  Now there’s the ability for a place like WBGO, who doesn’t really have a lot of money to invest on the technology end, to do streaming video, and to incorporate a chat so that people can communicate with each other while the music is happening. And also I think that aside from You Tube, jazz has suffered in a lot of ways since maybe the 1960s in not having a lot of exposure on the video side. You know, it’s one thing to listen to a record; it’s another thing to watch a performance and to hear musicians reacting to each other.”

Otis Brown III & Esperanza Spalding backstage @ Vanguard (by John Rogers/WBGO)

Jackson is just as deft at exploring jazz musicians as people as he is at showcasing their talent.  And it makes sense that I find Jackson as interesting as his program.  But what drives Josh Jackson?  “…I think I wanna know who these people are, you know? Because my experience has been that they’re all…they’re all interesting people in some way.  I wanna know more about the people who do this and what their thoughts are, and also to connect with them on some way that I can connect with them. I can’t play like Wayne Shorter; I can’t write like that, you know?  None of that stuff.  But also, he’s a human being and so are our listeners so if you’re just willing to listen to what someone has to say, typically you’re going to find some kind of connection on a level that you may not have expected.  And that opens up a whole new way to hear things, sometimes.  I mean, the best interviewer is a listener. I go in with maybe a handful of questions that I kinda want to get to at some point, but I don’t have like this kind of grand design…plan, about how this thing needs to happen.  I’m always thinking about the listener when I’m interviewing somebody.  I’m thinking about somebody who’s meeting so-and-so, for the first time…and sometimes that someone is me, too.”

In my opinion, what The Checkout illustrates best is that the more we tell the truth about jazz, the more interesting it is.  And the truth is, jazz is not one dimensional and encompasses more than some will allow in their own minds.  Now, I am a firm believer that jazz is not “whatever you want it to be”.  I’m not that liberal.  But I do believe that the genre has room for everyone who is making music within it.  And it’s a lot of people.

“The point of The Checkout I think is that it’s for everyone,” Jackson concludes. “The only thing you have to have is a willing ear, and you have to be willing to listen.  It’s a show for listeners.”

And we’re listening.

——————————————————————–

One of my favorite segments of The Checkout is Shuffle.  Jackson has his guests place their iPods on shuffle mode, and discuss the first 5 songs that show up in an attempt to gain further insight about the musician and how what they listen to may inform their own artistry.  “People for the most part have fairly diverse listening habits.  And yet, maybe not as wide as a lot of jazz musicians,” Jackson suggests.  “So there’s ways of introducing the audience to some things they’ve never heard, and I’ve never heard.”

I played the game myself in honor of my interview with Mr. Jackson.  Here’s what popped up in my iPod!

Angelika’s Shuffle List

“Morgan the Pirate” by Lee Morgan from Search For the New Land (Blue Note)
“Giant Steps” by John Coltrane from Giant Steps (Altlantic)
“Lift Jesus” by Kim Burrell from Everlasting Life (Tommy Boy)
“Valse Triste” by Wayne Shorter from The Soothsayer (Blue Note)
“My Little Brown Book” by Duke Ellington and John Coltrane from Duke Ellington & John Coltrane (Impulse!)

The Checkout airs on Tuesday evenings at 6:30pm on WBGO/Jazz 88.3 FM and on WBGO.org