The other evening, I was trying to convey to my daughter the infinite richness of Jazz music. So here is what I did: I decided to go step by step, using the composition “Spain” by Chick Corea.
I began with this superb rendition by Al Jarreau: (and Steve Gadd at the drums if I remember correctly)
The next step in my sequence was Chick Corea playing with Bobby McFerrin: (no real text, no distractions for the music itself)
Next, I suggested that she listen at this amazing interpretation by Chick Corea & Hiromi Uehara: (a big step up in terms of improvisation)
At this point, I decided to be blunt and show my daughter a version of “Spain” interpreted on the actual instrument Chick Corea was trying to imitate on the piano: (not want Chick Corea created, but what he meant – to paraphrase a song by Roger Waters)
But, of course, a finite composition can contain in itself an infinite number of emotions and feelings. Here is a much more recent and yet still powerful rendition of the same composition:
The composition itself is not very complicated, see for yourself:
and yet, as with all Jazz standards, this simplicity is deceptive because it invites and elicits an apparently infinite number of “mini-compositions”, which is what all improvisations are.
Many years ago, I was participating in a seminar of classical Indian music when the teacher (it was either one of the two Gosh brothers, Nayan or Nikhil) told me that the basic elements for an improvisation (in Indian music the ragas/modes and talas/rhythms) where like the “topic of the conversation” but instead of everybody parroting the same “words”, improvisation made it possible for each musician to contribute to what he/she had to say on that “topic”. And this is exactly the same pattern in modern Jazz (and in Baroque music, by the way): compositions (what Jazz musicians like to call “standards”) are just a “pretext” of sorts to say something unique and original not only to that one musician, but even to that moment (as no real improvisation can ever be really repeated).
Sometime in the near future, I will post here a number of version of another one of the most beautiful Jazz compositions ever written, “Goodbye” by Brian Jenkins, an absolutely amazing tune, also deceptively simple, which gave birth to an innumerable number of version including some which are amongst the most beautiful melodies every played, at least in my (admittedly totally biased) opinion.
But that is for the future. For the time being, I hope that you will discover (or re-visit) Chick Corea’s beautiful “Spain”.
The Saker
On the theme of “concierto de Aranjuez” (Joaquín Rodrigo) second movement; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concierto_de_Aranjuez
do you like fusion?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ETla9zs5SI
Return to Forever – The Romantic Warrior
Chick Corea, Al Dimeola, Stanley Clarke, Lenny White.
créme de la créme…
An old favorite from the Dave Grusin days that I am happy to reminded of. if you have seen the movie “La la Land” I think you will like that central piece from the movie’s theme. I like that movie. It is not pretentious, it does not glorify the struggle of oppressed minorities (“Get Out” being the extreme of this) and it actually reminded me of a time when “white people” could celebrate their culture in Hollywood without shame.
I wax nostalgic … Thank you for the happy memory.
-R
Brilliant Observation! This is where, in line with your thinking I feel, Saker, modernism has gone ”wrong”. Atonality lost the spiritual in music .. Jazz on the other hand, as with Bach, Mozart, Beethoven and schubert’s music (and Debussy) has that improvisatory, human element. In the Baroque, after all, the figured bass meant one could – indeed should – improvise. Add character, and one’s own flavour.
> Atonality lost the spiritual in music ..
I must strongly beg to differ. Some atonal music is deeply spiritual, profound, and beautiful. A few that come to mind:
Penderecki: Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima
Schoenberg: String Trio, op 45
Luigi Nono: Prometheus Suite
Ernst Krenek: Lamentatio Jeremiæ Prophetæ, Op. 93
Takemitsu: From me flows what you call Time
Did you buy ‘Light as a Feather’ in 1973 when it came out? I did. It was a beautifully optimistic and innocent album. Never to be forgotten.
And I fell in love with its very original Chick Corea/Flora Purim rendition of ‘Spain’, which has been a favorite of mine for 46 years.
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PFrL2cZMnTE
The original (light as a Feather):
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=a_OEJ0wqt2g
It was 1977 in New York and my High School friends and I were Rockers.I would get tix at Ticketron, that were in department stores, for our shows .Chick Corea and Return to Forever were playing and I thought it would open new horizons for my friends.They all feel asleep.
Thanks Saker I like all of your suggestions. I try with my kids too ie. listen to real music not commercial crap that is abundant in todays music. I would recommend take a look to (Antonio Carlos) Jobim mostly bossa but has many interesting variations. For the romantic, the Mexican trios are not bad “Los Tres Ases” for instance.
As I’m sure you must know Saker, the composition that later musicians name ‘Spain’, is, in fact, Concerto de Aranjuez by Joaquin Rodrigo, a well-known Spanish composer. And, I may add, ‘Sketches of Spain’ by Miles Davis is the definitive jazz version, in my opinion. Anyhow, thanks, it was nice to hear other versions.