Friday, December 20, 2013
like a freckled boxer, meticulously wrapped inside his sharkskin plaid
suit with the long drape and the collar falling back and the tie undone
for exact sharpness and casualness, sweating and hitching up his horn
and writhing into it, and a tone just like Prez Lester Young himself.
“You see man, Prez has the technical anxieties of a money-making
musician; he’s the only one who’s well dressed; see him grow worried
when he blows a clinker, but the leader that cool cat tells him not to
worry and just blow and blow---the mere sound and serious exuberance of
the music is all he cares about. He’s an artist. He’s teaching young
Prez the boxer. Now the others dig!!” The third sax was an alto, 18-year-old cool contemplative Charley Parker-type Negro from High
School---with a broadgash mouth---taller than the rest---grave---raised
his horn and blew into it quietly and thoughtfully and elicited birdlike
phrases and architectural Miles Davis logics. These were the children
of the great bop innovators. Once there was Louis Armstrong blowing his
beautiful top in the muds of New Orleans; before him the mad musicians
who had paraded on official days and broke up their Sousa marches into
ragtime. Then there was swing, and Roy Eldridge vigorous and virile
blasting the horn for everything it had in ways of power and logic and
subtlety---leaning to it with glittering eyes and a lovely smile and
sending it out broadcast to rock the jazz world. Then had come Charley
Parker---a kid in his mother’s woodshed in Kansas City, blowing his
taped-up alto among the logs, practicing on rainy days, coming out to
watch the old swinging Basie and Benny Moten band that had Hot Lips Page
and the rest---Charley Parker leaving home and coming to Harlem, and
meeting mad Thelonius Monk and madder Gillespie…Charlie Parker in his
early days when he was flipped and walked around in a circle while
playing. Somewhat younger than Lester Young, also from KC, that gloomy
saintly goof in whom the history of jazz was wrapped: for when he held
his horn high and horizontal from his mouth he blew the greatest; and as
his hair grew longer and he got lazier and turned to junk, his horn
came down halfway; till it finally fell all the way and today wearing
his thick-soled shoes so that he can’t feel the sidewalks of life
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