There are many branches and styles within jazz. It is beautiful, often soulfull music. Many of the greatest popular artists are influenced by jazz - Steely Dan, Joni Mitchell, Anita Baker, just to name a few. It is a wonderful original art form from America, that now has broad followings around the world.
Once upon a time, I thought all bourbon tasted the same. Once upon a time, I thought all rock guitar riffs sounded the same. Once upon a time, I thought country music sounded the same.
It seems the more I listen to different types of music, the easier it is to appreciate all types of music.
I agree, Jazz is really growing on me. It's perfect as background music because it's rarely annoying and I'm finding more and more that I like. I'm very "young" in Jazz so I don't know all the great go-to's but for now I'm liking the normals I guess: Bob James, Dave Grusin, and a few others I can't pronounce.
So on the mark. Thanks for sharing your experience, lucky you to have such a roommate.
A very good friend of mine is a drummer and his brother is a pianist. Both are accomplished jazz musicians on our local scene. It was incredibly helpful in my development when I'd listen to them practice and attend their weekend shows. Talk about training one's ear with all of that frequent up close exposure to live instruments. Charles
i was so fortunate that in college my first roommate was a burgeoning jazz saxophonist there on scholarship... over the course of the schoolyear taught me how to listen to and appreciate jazz... started with chuck mangione, herbie mann, earl klugh, jazz crusaders in the fall, and by springtime, i had learned to ’get’ bird, coltrane, monk, mingus, roland kirk et al
talk about life changing... have been in love with the artistry, energy, creativity of jazz ever since - the gift that never stops giving 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
@superblackbirddave1, Your wife is not alone with those sentiments. Jazz and classical music will never be mainstream for the general population and I accept that. Pop,Rock, Hip hop,Rap is what millions gravitate toward and where mega amount of money is generated.
I actually feel lucky/fortunate to be one of the "relative minority" of people who simply love and deeply appreciate the outstanding music that the jazz genre offers. Given its small niche in the music universe it’s amazing the vast amount of recordings (And quality) available. Charles
I'm very new to jazz but I'm enjoying it, unfortunately the misses is NOT. Her opinion on jazz is and I quote "it sounds like 4 people playing 4 different songs on 4 different instruments all at the same time"
Squeaky squeak squeak, honk honk honk, ratta tap tap, bing bang bong, tinkle tinkle, rumble bum bum.
God I love it!
I know you say you love it, and you are probably being a bit facetious, but for the uninitiated, it should be pointed out, that there are vast differences in many varieties of jazz.
None of the following subgenres of jazz sound anything like each other:
Post-bop (Coltrane, Miles, Freddie, Evans, McCoy, etc) Fusion (Return to Forever, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Allan Holdsworth, Alex Machacek, etc) Chamber jazz (Oregon, Terje Rypdal, Jarrett, Eberhard Weber, Jan Garbarek, etc) Avant-garde (Cecil Taylor, Anthony Braxton, Ayler, Art Ensemble of Chicago, etc) Jazz-metal (Panzerballett, Counter-World Experience, Spaced Out, etc) M-Base (Steve Coleman, Andrew Milne, Greg Osby, Cassandra Wilson, etc)
Hi @kijanki, Got It!😂. Honestly it's hard to tell sometimes when communication is limited to text and in addition knowing that in reality 'some' would actually feel /believe that in regard to jazz. Charles
@kijanki, I don't know if your comment is tongue in cheek or not. If your serious see my post above. Those musicians sound nothing alike playing the same songs. Very different approaches and improvisations. Probably you are posting in the same spirit of @snackeyp. Charles
@snackeyp What you are hearing is related to musical training. Classically trained musicians know where the right notes are and get them on the first try, while Jazz musicians go by trial and error. Jazz bass or guitar player "walks" all over the fretboard until he finds the right note. That makes all Jazz sound very alike, no matter who plays.
Yeah, I know. I was mocking my coworker who always says that jazz all sounds the same. I should have explained that but I wasn't very much awake yet when I had that thought. I told him he should try listening to the Grateful Dead (who I love BTW). A lot of people say that all Dead music sounds the same.
Sorry guys. Was making a joke! I love jazz more than any other music. I used to think it all sounded the same but once it clicked it became my favorite form of music. I feel like a troll for this. Should have added sarcasm quotes or something! Cheers
@snackeyp, I'm not sure what you're listening to. Listen to the following small sample.
Piano, Theloneus Monk vs Oscar Peterson. Guitar, Wes Montgomery vs Jim Hall. Trumpet, Clfford Brown vs Chet Baker. Alto saxophone, Paul Desmond vs Charlie Parker.
If you're unable t distinguish differences between these iconic jazz musicians playing the same instrument then something's wrong. Charles
Just my opinion , but I don't think it all sounds the same. What I consider to be traditional Jazz sounds nothing like what I consider to be modern Jazz. Neither sound like fusion. Your definition of modern, traditional, or fusion will probably influence your opinion.
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