hearing absolute
Posted: Wed Aug 20, 2008 6:08 pm
motherlode mentioned an idea - quite a while ago - which he called "hearing absolute". he said at the time, that beboppers used to speak about the idea of "hearing absolute".
after his post, i asked my oldest jazz friend benny powell if he'd heard of this, while he was playing on the bebop scene in new york during the forties. i still find this idea compelling. it seems like this is what people did - who had the confidence to do so. and i'm attempting to open up our discussion to the idea that "not knowing" is more important than "knowing" - a statement that cage and einstein both made in different ways. and which was also made by anything charlie parker, ornette coleman, or charles mingus ever played.
and it seems to me that so much of george russell's music falls into this category as well. listening to the recent re-issue of the band from newport 1964 with john gilmore, it's really striking that no matter what concept drives the musical structure it never loses its freedom and its ability to soar in any direction at any time. and to anyone interested in how music developed after charlie parker, i can only recommend listening to this and hearing the astonishing variety of sounds - a language with it's own unique unspoken meaning.
b
after his post, i asked my oldest jazz friend benny powell if he'd heard of this, while he was playing on the bebop scene in new york during the forties. i still find this idea compelling. it seems like this is what people did - who had the confidence to do so. and i'm attempting to open up our discussion to the idea that "not knowing" is more important than "knowing" - a statement that cage and einstein both made in different ways. and which was also made by anything charlie parker, ornette coleman, or charles mingus ever played.
and it seems to me that so much of george russell's music falls into this category as well. listening to the recent re-issue of the band from newport 1964 with john gilmore, it's really striking that no matter what concept drives the musical structure it never loses its freedom and its ability to soar in any direction at any time. and to anyone interested in how music developed after charlie parker, i can only recommend listening to this and hearing the astonishing variety of sounds - a language with it's own unique unspoken meaning.
b