Monday, June 8, 2020

Kenny Clare - Conservative Accompanist - from the Modern Drummer

© Copyright ® Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


Rick Mattingly has a knack for interviewing drummers whom I admire and whom I’d like to interview if given the chance. Kenny Clare [1929-1985] has always been one of my drumming heroes, largely because of the character of personality and the values that he demonstrates in the following interview.


And also because he was one, heckuva drummer. 


The following interview appeared in the March 1983 edition of Modern Drummer.


When I mentioned Kenny Clare’s name to Joe Morello one day, Joe responded: “He’s the best jazz drummer in England. Kenny’s just a fine musician.” Judging by Kenny’s credentials, Morello isn’t the only one who holds such a high opinion of him. Kenny has kept very busy over the years accompanying such artists as Tony Bennett, Tom Jones, Judy Garland, Barbra Streisand, Michel LeGrand, the Clarke/Boland Big Band, and John Dankworth and Cleo Laine. He has also done TV and studio work and has even given a few drum clinics. Versatility is obviously an important ingredient of Kenny’s success, but perhaps even more important is his attitude about wanting to truly accompany those he works with. Part of that attitude is simple professionalism, but a lot of it comes from his personality. As Morello put it, ”He’s a sweetheart—a wonderful guy.”
RM: How did you first get involved with music?
KC: My father was a local semi-pro drummer. By semi-pro I mean that he played every night, but he had a day job too. He couldn’t read, but he was a good drummer and knew what a paradiddle was and so forth. When I was about four years old, he tried to teach me, but I told him he was getting it all wrong. Kids are precocious, you know. I didn’t really fool around with drums after that, but there were always drums around the house. We would have musical evenings on Sundays. My mother played piano, my father played drums, and a friend of his played the violin. They would have jam sessions, but it wasn’t jazz; it was the show music of the day. So I was always exposed to music at home. And then my dad would take me to see any movies that were around with people like Gene Krupa in them. He tried very hard to get me interested in the drums, but I guess because he wanted me to, I wasn’t. It’s a typical children’s approach. That’s why rock ‘n’ roll and punk rock and everything else got so big: it’s a fight against the parents.
So anyway, finally one day, a friend of mine said the local Boy’s Brigade—which is like the Boy Scouts—was looking for drummers because they had just started a band. So I asked my father, “What do I need to do to play for the Boy’s Brigade?” He showed me a few licks, which I practiced for about three days on a Chinese tomtom. He wouldn’t let me use his snare drum! So I got the gig because I was the only one who could play. The others couldn’t play at all! So that was kind of fun for a while—walking up and down Main Street on Sunday mornings banging a drum.
Then one day my dad came home and said, “There’s a movie on you’d be very interested to see.” I’m not sure now, but I think it was called Ship Ahoy. It had Tommy Dorsey’s band with Buddy Rich. I knew about Tommy Dorsey, but I didn’t know about Buddy Rich. So I went and saw it, and there was this feature that Buddy had, and they had a dance routine to go with it. I thought the drumming was great, so I gave my drum back to the Boy’s Brigade and decided to become a jazz drummer.
RM: Did you ever take any lessons, other than asking your father about things?
KC: I never had any lessons because there wasn’t anybody around at that time to teach. In London, during the war, anybody who could play was out playing. There was actually no way to learn. It was a long process trying to figure out what was right and what was wrong. But the main thing in those days was the tremendous amount of movies with bands in them. Hollywood, in its wisdom, had finally realized that when people queued up at the Paramount Theatre in New York, it wasn’t to see a movie, but to see the band. So they thought the smart thing to do was to put the band in the movie. So that was how I saw Buddy Rich with Tommy Dorsey’s band—in a movie. And in those days there was a tremendous amount of movies. I would go to these movies and watch the way the drummers played, the way they held their sticks and all of that. That’s how I found out that single-stroke rolls were meant to be played in time. “Oh boy! That’s how you do it!” I’d just thought it was as fast as you could play. So it took a long, long time to find out these silly things.
RM: What were some of your first bands like?
KC: My first band never got a gig; we just practiced. We had a piano, clarinet and drums, and we pretended we were Teddy Wilson, Benny Goodman and Gene Krupa. But we didn’t get any gigs. I guess we weren’t too good, [laughs] Cardboard cutouts don’t make it. Then I got a gig with two accordions, piano and drums, but the agent made more than we did. Then I did a year with a trumpet player who never took the mute out of his trumpet. So, eventually, it went on from there. I finally had to go into the Air Force. After the war, I hasten to add. I managed to do quite a lot of practice there and hang out with a lot of good musicians. Then I came out of being in the Air Force and went straight into being a professional musician. And during that time I learned to read. I learned to read backwards. Does anybody ever do that?
RM: I’m not sure what you mean by learning to read backwards.
KC: Well, I used to play with a five-piece band for about a year, in a ballroom near where I lived. They would play all the hits of the day, which were like “American Patrol” and songs of the Glenn Miller era. I knew all the tunes because I bought all the records. There weren’t that many records to buy. So I would play them a lot, and I could walk down the street and sing to myself the whole arrangement to any tune of the day. So during this time, most of the time I had a regular gig, but every now and again I wouldn’t, so I’d go out and look for gigs. They would always say, “Can you read?” and I’d say, “Of course I can,” because I knew everything they were going to play. I would always put the music up on the music stand, and even though I couldn’t read it, I could play it backwards. But there was always the odd one I didn’t know because I didn’t have the record. Then I was in trouble. So just as the guy was counting off the tune, I’d manage to knock the music on the floor. Then I’d bluff my way through it: “Sorry, my music fell on the floor.” They finally discovered I was cheating.

In my bored moments I started looking at the music to see how they wrote what I was already playing. So I’d look at a chart like ”American Patrol,” and then I’d see some of the same patterns on other things. Once I discovered that, it was easy. There are very few actual phrases that you have to learn to be able to recognize what everything is. Even in the more “hip” charts of today, if you’re ever in trouble, all you have to do is cut everything in half—you know, make one bar into two—and you’ll have it back to something you know. It’s very simple. And so I don’t “read” now; I “recognize.” You know what I mean? I can “read” virtually anything at sight. I don’t make too many mistakes unless I’m tired or something. But I can read a part straight down, and also interpret it, because I always associate what I see on paper with some phrase in my mind. At first, I would think, “There’s a phrase from ‘American Patrol.’ ” I don’t have to do that now, but for a long time I did. I’ve never seen a book written yet that explains that way of doing it. Some books show every possible way you can see a phrase, but a lot of it is useless because you are never going to see it written that way. In the case of reading, you don’t need to do that.
RM: Was there access to a lot of jazz in England?
KC: During the war, which is when I became interested, you could get Armed Forces Network radio programs, so I could listen to bands like Tommy Dorsey five or six times a week. And Glenn Miller was over in England at the time. There were always lots of musicians around; lots of people playing. There were a lot of things I didn’t know about because I was too young. Like there was a club called the Lido Club where Kenny Clarke used to play a lot. I didn’t even know he was in the country. So there was a lot of jazz going on, and a lot of good jazz too.
There was always a certain percentage of good English jazz players. You’ve got to understand, though, that in England, the schooling and training are so far behind that you wouldn’t believe it. When I went to school, we had music lessons, but anything that wasn’t opera or straight music was considered rubbish. And John Dankworth will tell you that guys used to get kicked out of music college because they were caught playing jazz phrases on the piano. It’s stupid. When I see what’s going on over here, I can’t believe what’s going on in England. That’s why you’ve got so many fantastic players. The schooling in this country is just great! But it’s slowly coming in England. It’s taken a long time, but it’s coming.
RM: There’s a controversy about some of the music education over here, though. Some of the older players who learned in the street, so to speak, say that the people coming out of the schools are only learning to be incredible technicians.
KC: Yes, I must agree with that completely. But that’s everywhere in the world. Everybody basically wants to be Buddy Rich, or Billy Cobham, or Steve Gadd, or Louie Bellson, or one of those kind of fast players. But they miss all the other parts of those players. Most people, if they buy a record of Buddy Rich and there’s not a ten minute drum solo, they are not knocked out by it. But you only have to listen to two minutes of Buddy playing with the band. I mean, he’s a fantastic band drummer, and they never really listen to that. They all want to do the other part of it.
Basically, playing the drums means being an accompanist. Whether you’re playing with a country & western singer, or the hottest jazz player in town, you’re there to make whoever you’re playing with feel good. And most drummers, unfortunately, don’t understand that. And a lot of them play that way too, which is a great shame. Technique is only as good as what you can fit into what you are doing without upsetting people. I mean, even Buddy, with all his technique, only plays a drum solo for one number a night. He spends the rest of the two hours playing with the band—setting them up and making them feel good.
So many drummers think that chops are the answer to everything, whereas they’re only the beginning. If you can’t use them, they are no good.
When I was a kid, Dave Tough was one of my favorite drummers. I never saw him live, but every record I got, I knew if it was Dave Tough — even if I didn’t know he had joined that particular band — because you could recognize him. He had a way of making the band sound better somehow. Sid Catlett was another one. When he joined Benny Goodman’s band, I knew straight away when I heard the record. The band sounded completely different. Nobody ever talks about Don Lamond, but he was my main influence as a big band drummer. He was the first one who ever turned me around because he was the first unconventional big band drummer. Even now, he’s still the most different big band drummer. And that’s always been my criteria: to try and do the job I’m doing different than the drummer who was there before. Not necessarily better; just different. Whatever it takes to be different, I’ll do it. Does that sound dumb?

RM: Not at all. The main complaint I hear about modern drummers is that they all sound alike. If Steve Gadd does something that works, all the other drummers try to sound just like him.
KC: Oh sure, but that’s not the drummer’s fault, usually. I mean, I was a studio player for about ten or twelve years, and it finally drove me crazy. I couldn’t do it anymore. I was a drummer in the London studios at the time the Beatles came out. I used to work for George Martin back before he did rock ‘n’ roll dates. He had Matt Monroe, and he would do comedy records like The Goons and all that. So anyway, when The Beatles came along, it got to the point where people in America were trying to copy the Beatles’ sound, and people in England would then copy the copy. I remember working for this one a&r man—we had done a track and it sounded pretty good. But he called down—all unhappy—and said, “Can the rhythm section come up here?” So we went up and he said, “It was alright, but this is really what we want,” and he played us this awful imitation of the kind of thing we had just played. So I got mad and said, “Do you really want us to sound that bad?” I never worked for him again, [laughs] That’s what really drove me out of the studios, that thing where you were just copying everything, including someone else’s drum sound.
Before the Beatles, when groups did an album, most of the time it wasn’t the group, it was studio players. Nobody ever thought of doing less than four tunes on a three-hour session. So if a group couldn’t do four tunes in three hours, they would have to get studio musicians in to do it for them. Then George Martin decided that because the Beatles were creative, he would just let them run around the studio and do whatever they wanted to do. That was the first breakthrough and after that, all the groups could take as long as they wanted to record, as long as the results were right. But until then, all of us dubbed for various drummers on the tracks. I remember one time they brought a band down to do an album, and they had just hired a new drummer. So they brought me in because they didn’t know if he would be any good. He played marvelous! I felt about that big. He was fantastic!
RM: Do you remember any of the groups you played for?
KC: Not really, no. I would just kind of do the gig, take the money and run. Another reason I stopped doing it was because of doing rhythm tracks. I’ve always wanted to play with the people I’m playing with, and when the people I’m supposed to be playing with aren’t there, then I don’t like it. Anymore, when you go in to do a record date, there’s just a rhythm section. That’s not fun, is it? They tell you, “Don’t play anything there because that’s where the trumpets are.” “Trumpets? What trumpets?” There’s no singing, no nothing. You don’t know what the melody line is or anything. All the hit records I was on over the years were all done then and there. The singer was always in the studio.
RM: Describe a typical date.
KC: Petula Clark’s first date was from 7:00 to 10:00 in the evening. We started with a sound thing, which took about ten minutes. Then we ran each tune down and taped it. We had finished the first tune by a quarter to eight, and everybody knew it was good. That was the end of it. They didn’t have to spend three days fixing it up, and then three days after that putting more things on the tape. Overdubbing was never done in those days.
The first time I dubbed on the drums afterward was with George Martin. After he did the Beatles, he also got a friend of theirs from Liverpool, Cilia Black, and the first record she did was a cover of Dionne Warwick’s “Anyone Who Had A Heart.” After they did it, George decided there was something missing, so he called me in and asked, “Can you do anything to kind of build it up a bit?” That was one of my things—I was kind of the “builder-upper” of the rock ‘n’ roll ballad; the big build when they changed key and all that. So I listened to it, and there was nothing to do on the first bit, but in the middle, I decided that if I put some 3/4 jazz things on it, it would work. And it did. That became a way of putting some jazz on the rock ‘n’ roll things. I hadn’t heard anybody else do it when I did it, and it became quite a thing.
RM: Were they using click tracks at that point?
KC: They started doing that for movie things, but not for other things. They never bothered me because I used to always practice to a metronome anyway. It’s very comforting to have a click track.
RM: Do you ever use them for things such as Cleo’s records?
Kenny Clare
KC: Oh no. In fact, I very seldom record with Cleo. John isn’t like most people. Most people decide who they want, and then book the studio to fit the schedule of the musicians. But John always books the studio first, and then sees who he can get. And invariably, I’m already doing something else. But they certainly don’t use click tracks for that.
RM: Have you run across any drum computers yet?
KC: Not really. I mean, that’s after my time basically. But I heard one when I was in Australia recently, and it sounded good.
RM: So you stopped doing studio work because you didn’t like copying and you didn’t like doing rhythm tracks. But wasn’t it hard to give up the financial rewards of studio work?
KC: I guess it sounds crazy, because I was making more money than I ever made in my life. But during the course of my studio playing was when I joined Kenny Clarke’s band, and when I started playing with that band, I remembered what I had become a musician for. It certainly wasn’t to sit and do a dumb TV show, or a rock ‘n’ roll record date. So that’s when I started on the road to ruin and financial disaster—but smiling.
RM: How did you get involved with the Clarke/Boland big band?
KC: The reason I got on the band originally was because they were booked to do some radio programs. They had already done the first one, but Klook [Kenny Clarke] couldn’t do the second one and they had to go ahead and do it because they were under a time thing. I had been doing some recording with some guys from that band, so when they needed a drummer, they recommended me. So I went in and read it down, and it went very well. So then they decided that it would be very nice if they had a spare drummer who felt like part of the family, and who would drop everything and come to work if they needed him. So the next time they got together, I went in and played percussion. The last thing on the date was a 6/8 jazz march. Klook did a “ching, ching, ching” thing on the cymbal, and I did a “Boom de diddily boom de boom” thing on the snare drum. When they heard it back, it sounded like one guy with good chops. So he said, “Next time, bring your drums.” So we went in to do the next album, and I played timps and all that. But on the last tune, they said, “Get out your drums. We’re going to do two drumsets together.” So we set up the two drumsets and started to play, but everytime Klook did a fill, I stopped, because I didn’t want to clutter it up. The guy came over and said, “No, no. Just play as though Klook wasn’t there, and Klook, play as though K.C. wasn’t there.” Okay, fine. We did it and it sounded alright. Then they listened to it overnight, and the next morning, we went back and re-recorded all the tunes that we had done with one drummer, this time with both of us. And that seemed to set the scene.

Then we went to do a gig. Klook and I got it pretty good on the record date; we sounded together because we sat close to each other and listened a lot to each other and didn’t try to overplay each other. It was a nice compatible thing, and it worked. But then we got to this rehearsal before the gig, and we couldn’t get together at all. We tried everything—putting the drums different ways—but it was hopeless. So I wanted to go home. I figured I couldn’t win anyway. If it was good, people would say, “Boy, Kenny Clarke is great!” If it was bad, they’d say, “See, they get this white cat and look what happens.” I would always be the loser, so I was really desperate. I went down to the travel agency to see if I could get home, but there was no train ’till 12 o’clock. So I walked around for about two hours with my head down, thinking “Why me?” But I had to do it, so I went back there and nobody seemed concerned at all. The whole band was backstage having a little party, and they didn’t seem one bit worried about anything. And when we went on, it just went right together. The concert was great, and from then on it was always like that. There was just that one rehearsal where it didn’t work.
That band was a fantastic experience. Klook really has a magic time feel. He’s one of the few drummers in the world who can actually swing all on his own. Fantastic. Not too many people can play that way, but when I was there sitting with him, I could do it. I can’t play that way unless Klook is there. It drives me crazy.
RM: A lot of drummers find it difficult to play with another drummer.
KC: Funny enough, we never talked about it, but right from the first, I would play all of the band figures in the first and last choruses, and during the solos, I would switch to brushes and Klook would do his thing. It always seemed to work fine. If someone was going to play six choruses, I would switch to sticks for the last two. Playing with Klook a lot, I got to know his licks, so sometimes, on the fifth or sixth chorus, I’d join in on his licks or play something against them. It was a lovely feeling. Two drummers can always work, as long as you’re not trying to cut each other. Drummers are already inclined to overplay, and if you get two together who are trying to prove to each other how much better they can play, then it’s hopeless. You just wipe everybody out. Two drummers are a great lethal force in any situation.
I’ve been very lucky in getting to play with a lot of drummers through the years, like doing clinics with drummers like Joe Morello. I think you find out more about a drummer when you’re trying to play with him. You seem to be able to get into their thinking very easily when you’re actually sitting next to them.
RM: With other instruments, when you get two of them together, it’s a duet. But with two drummers…
KC: It’s a battle. Yeah, but it doesn’t have to be. The way we did those clinics with Joe was he would play and I would try and keep up. I’d keep up as long as I could, and when I couldn’t keep up anymore, then I would do something simple, and then Joe would go into that too. We were actually trying to get something together musically, rather than Joe trying to prove that he could play faster than me. It’s a great shame about music that it often seems to be a kind of competition. It isn’t a competition at all.
RM: I’ve always wondered if Americans aren’t more guilty of that kind of thinking than people in other countries, because we are taught that “Competition is the American way.”

KC: I’ve got to say I think you’re right. I think America’s worse for that than anywhere else. I mean, I’m even a soccer fan from England, but the way you present the game over here is quite alarming to me. At the end of the game they count up how many passes each guy made, and whether they hoped to score a goal but didn’t— that’s not important. It’s - did the team win or lose? But they keep all these statistics on things. They don’t keep statistics on drummers yet, but I’m sure they will at some point. “Seventy-four rimshots completed…”
RM: “Three broken sticks.”
KC: [laughing] Yeah, right. It’s crazy.
RM: Getting back to working with other drummers, you once did an album called Drum Conversations with Bellson and Rich.
KC: Oh yeah. That was a funny thing. Originally, that date was set up as a concert. When this very respected drum teacher, Frank King, died, Crescendo magazine decided to put this concert together to raise money for Frank’s wife, because Frank didn’t have any insurance. So they asked me to play and do a drum feature, which was fine because he had been a good friend of mine. So about three weeks before the gig, they called and said, “Louie Bellson is going to come over and do the gig too.” Great! I figured all I would have to do was play a couple of tunes and then let Louie play the rest of it, and I could just sit there and listen. Then about a week later, they called again and said, “Buddy is going to be in town, so he’s going to do it too.” Oh, fantastic! Now I’d only have to play one tune and then I could see the other two play. And then they called again and said, “We’ve hired a bloke to write a tune for the three drummers to do together.” Oh-oh. Now I’m in trouble. And I would have looked stupid if I had tried to get out of it. So I was stuck. But it worked out okay. They were very helpful and kept me going. I didn’t know we were going to record it until about two days before. I’ve never listened to the record, actually. I just look at the picture on the front. “That’s me!
RM: How did you become involved with John and Cleo?
KC: In regards to John, we both went to the same school. We didn’t really have any relationship in school, because he was two years older than me, and when you’re in school, the older ones don’t talk to the younger ones. But we came from the same area, obviously, and so over the next few years I got to play with him quite a bit. Eventually he formed his own big band. I joined that band in 1955, and Cleo was on the band when I joined. After I left the band, I never saw too much of them. I used to do a TV show called That Was The Week That Was—which was kind of famous in its time—and Cleo was a guest on it sometimes. So I’d see Cleo a bit, but I never saw John. At that time, he was busy being a film writer.
Anyway, they did an album called I Am A Song, but after they recorded it, they inadvertently erased half of it. So they called all the musicians back to redo it, but the drummer couldn’t make it, so they ended up calling me. I went in and did it, and that reminded them that I was still alive.
About three months later, they had a tour to do in the U.S., and they called me to see if I could do it. I had just gotten a TV series in Germany, so I couldn’t do it, but I told them, “I’ll be in New York when you start, so I’ll look you up.” I wound up doing the first night in Carnegie Hall with very little rehearsal. So they went ahead and did the rest of the tour, and I went to Germany, and when we all got back to England, they called me and I’ve been doing it ever since. It’s not a year-long gig; it’s still basically casual. But it’s a very enjoyable gig.

Johnny is very exacting about drums. When he wants to stop, he doesn’t want the cymbals ringing over or anything like that. He likes attention to detail, and so do I. I was someplace recently where a bass player was playing a solo, and it was making the drummer’s snares vibrate, and the drummer was too dumb to turn the snares off. It drove me bananas! In all my years with Johnny D., I’ve spent half my time slipping the snares on and off. When I’m not playing, I know the monitor will make my snares rattle, so I take them off.
Back in the old days when I was doing record dates, we used live drums, and when you hit the tom-tom, the snares would rattle. So you had to knock the snares off, play the lick, and then get them back on for the time. I got pretty adept at that. So I like attention to detail. When I hear drummers not doing that, I think, “Why aren’t they noticing things?” It’s all a challenge, and I like a challenge.
RM: You really get to do some playing on that gig.
KC: Oh sure. The way the show is now, the band plays the first half, and everybody has their feature. We do “Caravan,” so I get a chance to play a solo. Actually, I don’t care if I play solos or not.
RM: Does Cleo stay with the band, or does the band follow her?
KC: Well, I listen to Cleo anyway, and sometimes on downbeats I have to watch her breathe. But you don’t really need any more than that. She’s fantastic anyway. She’s got fantastic time and she never screws up or anything like that. She’s not temperamental, or anything like that. She’s marvelous to work with.
RM: Jimmy Cobb once told me that Sarah Vaughan liked to play with the tempo a lot, so in a situation like that, his job was to follow her.
KC: Cleo’s not like that. But I worked with Sarah for about three weeks once on a tour of England. The thing that amazed me about her was that she never did it the same any time. She would read the song differently in the course of two shows. She’d do it one time, like you said, with a different tempo, but also with a completely different approach. Sarah was fantastic.
RM: What’s different about playing with a singer as opposed to playing with an all-instrumental group?

KC: First of all, the audience is completely different. When you’re working with a singer, the audience has come to hear the singer, not the musicians. So you don’t get too many drummers in the audience.
Drummers are funny people. When they see another drummer sitting in the audience, they go bananas. They try to prove to the drummer in the audience that they can play. I’ve never been into that. My first gig in America was at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1959, and sitting in the front row when we went out to play were Sonny Igoe, Ben Riley, Ed Thigpen, and Connie Kay, I think. Now in those days, when an English drummer went to hear somebody play, he didn’t sit up front, he stood in the back. But this was a different approach completely. It was already a hair-raising experience to be playing at America’s premier jazz festival. So when I looked and saw those four, I thought, “My God!” And I really got nervous about it. But then I thought, “What the hell. If I get nervous I’m not going to play any better; I’m only going to play worse.” So I just didn’t look at the front row. And so basically what I’m saying is that I’m never going to try and impress a drummer sitting in the audience. I’m only going to play for the people in the band. As far as I’m concerned, at the end of the bandstand is a brick wall. Whether it’s the Hollywood Bowl or a small club, to me, it’s the same.
But musically, it’s no different playing with a singer than it is playing with a horn player. You’re accompanying. If you’re playing with Milt Jackson, you accompany Milt the same as you’d accompany Cleo Laine, except you do what suits Milt. It’s as simple as that. I mean, you’re not going to play the same for Shirley Bassey as you’re going to play for Cleo, because they each want different things. And it’s the same for jazz players.
One thing I’ve never been able to do is impose on people. Some drummers don’t accompany people; they just set up their thing for the person to play over. I can’t do that. Speaking of Milt Jackson—I worked with him at Ronnie Scott’s last year. I was doing my approach to Klook’s style, because Milt had played with Klook for years. So it was fine; it was happening. Then Jack DeJohnette came in one night, and sat in for a set, and he played everything completely different. Tore the arse out of everything, you know? I can’t do that, but I love it. I wish I could, but after 35 years of being a conservative accompanist, I can’t get out of that mold.
RM: Getting back to John and Cleo, you play in different settings. Sometimes it’s just the small group, sometimes there’s an orchestra…
KC: If we play Vegas, there’s a band there. John’s got a book that covers from five to a thousand, so whatever situation we’re in, we’ve got a book to cover it.
RM: How does your playing change in the different settings?
KC: Obviously, if there are four trumpets sitting there I’m going to play different than if there aren’t four trumpets sitting there. I’m not going to start setting up brass figures that aren’t going to be played. We do play similar figures, but I’ll play them differently when there’s a band with us.
One of the nicest things about this gig is that it’s not always the same. Even with the quintet, it’s not always the same. Most of the charts are originally written out, but then we improve on them, and it becomes part of the chart. And John doesn’t mind that; he likes you to experiment. So this gig really is interesting in a musical way. You get a chance to play a solo sometimes, and it sort of keeps you going.
When I was with Tony Bennett, we always did the same charts. We played a rehearsal every day with a new band, and you’d hear the same mistakes in the same places, and the same complaints because there was some strange string part that was different from the usual thing. And so in the same place every time you’d hear the string players say, “I think I’ve got a wrong note here.” “No, that’s part of the chart.” It was a great gig, and I got to play with some fantastic players, but we were always rehearsing the same few charts. It’s hard to approach it with any kind of freshness when you’re only playing those few charts. I don’t think we changed more than two or three tunes the three years I was with him. When we’d do a TV show, he’d bring out a bunch of other charts, which was marvelous, but on the road, we’d play the same few.
RM: What are you doing besides the gigs with Cleo?
KC: More and more jazz things, which is fantastic. That’s what I always wanted to do, but I guess I didn’t understand how much I wanted to do it. Bobby Rosengarden has been a great help in that respect. I worked with Bobby’s band some years ago when I was with Tony, and we’ve been friendly ever since. Any time he’s been called for a gig in England or Europe, if he couldn’t do it—or do all of it—he’d recommend me. So I’ve done a few tours and things, and it’s getting to be really nice now. I’m starving, but enjoying.
RM: What’s it like being a jazz musician in today’s economy?
KC: It’s becoming increasingly hard to be a musician. I was walking down 7th Avenue the other day, and there was a little group playing on the corner of 49th Street. It was a good little group: good drummer, a girl playing the string bass, an alto player, a tenor player, and a guitar—and they were playing modern jazz. One step up from bebop kind of thing. And it was good! And a couple of kids walked by and put their fingers in their ears! I couldn’t believe it! Why can’t kids see the nice part of jazz music? Maybe it’s because their parents like it, because if the parents like it, then the kids don’t like it on principle. But that’s a tragedy. It’s such a compatible music to listen to and yet I can’t understand why it isn’t more popular.
RM: Part of it gets back to that competition thing—if you like a certain thing, then you’re not supposed to like anything else.
KC: Yeah, sure. And I’ve got to say that when I was a kid, I was basically the same. There was a guy who lived on my street, and he became manager of a record store. We used to sit and argue for hours about how he thought Duke Ellington was great and I thought Duke Ellington was terrible. I liked Tommy Dorsey, Woody Herman and Benny Goodman, but I didn’t like Ellington. Years later, I realized what a fool I’d been. But as a kid, I used to sit and argue with this guy. I think you have to grow up, basically.
RM: A moment ago, you joked that you were “starving, but enjoying.” And earlier, you talked of giving up the financial rewards of the studio to go back to doing what you had become a musician to do.
KC: I just happen to enjoy playing to the point where I don’t enjoy studio work, and that’s why I’m on the road. I’m always amazed when I see in your magazine where people write in and say, “How do I become a studio drummer?” That’s the last thing in the world I’d want to be. I learned to play drums because I enjoyed playing drums; not for any financial reward. I know it’s different nowadays, after the success of some of the groups where they all became millionaires. But in my day, it was fantastic just to not have to do a day job—just play drums and practice and listen to records and all that. I never had any more ambitions than just to play the next gig. I still haven’t. I think too many people these days are interested in what they can get out of it, rather than in what they put into it. I don’t know what to tell those people. But in my case, and I’m sure with a lot of other people, it’s a labor of love.



Sunday, June 7, 2020

How the Rhythm Section Got Its Name - Jerry Coker -Part 3, Piano and Functions of the Rhythm Section

© Copyright ® Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


This feature is a continuation of The Rhythm Section Part 1 Drums and Part 2 Bass and Guitar which in its completed form is Chapter 3 of Jerry Coker’s excellent book.that is focused on enhancing your appreciation of the music. 


Jerry Coker, himself a teacher, composer/arranger, and noted saxophonist, has written How To Listen To Jazz to fill the need for a layman's guide to understanding improvisation and its importance in the development of this artistically rich yet complex music form. Without relying on overly technical language or terms, Jerry Coker Shows how you can become a knowledgeable jazz listener - whether you are an aspiring musician, student, jazz aficionado, or new listener.


PIANO


"Jazz piano has a very interesting history. Early jazz was heavily-dominated by pianists, and some of the jazz vehicles, like ragtime and boogie-woogie, were expressly developed for and by pianists. Many of the early bandleaders and arrangers were pianists. This trend continued through the thirties, when other instruments like saxophone and trumpet were on the rise, ascending to dominance in the forties and remaining dominant over piano during the fifties and sixties. But in the seventies the pianists are again dominant, led by players like McCoy Tyner, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett, and Joe Zawinul, all of whom are bandleaders, composers, and arrangers for major groups.


Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton was one of the first well-known jazz pianists. Morton played as a solo pianist sometimes, and at other times in a trio (adding drums and clarinet); he also led the famous Red Hot Peppers Orchestra. Morton exhibited fine control of the keyboard, one aspect of that control enabling him to slow the tempo momentarily in his right hand, while maintaining an even pulse in the left hand, a feat demonstrated by Frederic Chopin in classical music. Morton claimed to have invented jazz. This is doubtful, but it is certainly true that his playing, his compositions and arrangements (which were extremely clever), and his leadership were valuable contributions to the development of early jazz.

James P. Johnson is sometimes referred to as the father of jazz piano for a variety of reasons. His recording of "Carolina Shout" was made in 1921, making it one of the earliest jazz recordings. His long career took him through several changes of style. For example, his early style was loosely based on ragtime, which he learned from listening to piano rolls and watching the motion of the piano keys. [Many piano rolls were made by pianist-composer of rags Scott Joplin. Joplin's music is known to many people today as a result of its exposure in the successful motion picture "The Sting." Also, composer-author Gunther Schuller's ragtime chamber orchestra, organized at the New England Conservatory in 1973, has featured many Joplin rags in numerous television appearances.]


By the late thirties, Johnson had adopted both the swing and the boogie-woogie styles. Boogie woogie was based on the chord progression to the twelve-measure blues form. It was described as being "eight to the bar" because the left hand (carrying the pulse and the background) usually played eight notes in every measure. Boogie woogie took the nation by storm. It was an exhilarating pulse for dancing because of the push of the double-time feeling, and it was an achievable feat of coordination for amateur or "parlor" pianists. Jimmy Yancey, Meade Lux Lewis, and Albeit Ammons also significantly popularized the boogie-woogie piano style.

Johnson's personal style, within any of the general stylistic changes he passed through, was always more modern than that played or other pianists within the same style. One of his early recordings bore the symbolic title, "You've Gotta Be Modernistic." Johnson was equipped with excellent piano technique, and his improvisations were filled with unexpected, clever, and modern elements, such as rich, extended chordal sounds and sudden but temporary change; of key in the middle of phrases.


Fats Waller was another influential pianist of the twenties and thirties. His humorous, rollicking style was captured not only on a number of recordings but also in printed piano arrangements that featured his many original tunes. Waller was extremely popular, particularly as a singer of clever songs, insuring that his gift would be noticed.[Two songs exemplifying the Waller wit are "Sam, You Made the Pants Too Long" and "Your Feet's Too Big." At the end of "Feet's Toe Big" Fats indignantly asserts, "Your pedal extremities are obnoxious!"]

Earl "Fatha" Hines was also active in the twenties, backing up famous singers on record, playing with luminaries like Louis Armstrong, and writing successful songs. Hines' career, like Johnson's, was long, still active in the seventies. Hines is credited with influencing a number of later pianists like Stan Kenton and Nat "King" Cole. (Many people today are unaware of the fact that Cole, in addition to singing, was a major jazz pianist, winning jazz polls in the early forties.) Hines also led some star-studded orchestras, one of which featured the then young Dizzy Gillespie and Charles Parker later to become leaders of the bebop style.


Duke Ellington was also well known as a composer and bandleader of the first magnitude but it is seldom realized by jazz buffs that he was also a major pianist throughout his more than fifty years as an active player. He was already a well-known pianist in the twenties, and in the sixties he cut an album called "Money Jungle" with Charles Mingus (bass) and Max Roach (drums) that attested to his continuing ability to remain an authoritative performer in a perpetually blossoming state.


Perhaps the greatest jazz pianist of all time, both in terms of ability and influence, was the remarkable Art Tatum, who recorded profusely for more than two decades (early thirties to middle fifties), turning out dazzling performances on hundreds of standard tunes. To describe his technique as "awesome" is somehow too mild a description. Even great classical pianists like Vladimir Horowitz praised and appreciated Tatum's absolute mastery of the keyboard. His harmonies were at least a couple of decades ahead of the times, and his pulse-feeling was flawless. If Tatum had a weakness, it was his lack of original, creative melody in his improvisations. For all that phenomenal technique, he seldom played an improvised melody of any degree of potency or lasting value. Nevertheless, great pianists like Oscar Peterson, Bud Powell, Clare Fischer, Hampton Hawes, and many others were inspired by the Tatum example. Tatum's best recordings are those in which he plays alone, as he liked to squeeze extra chords into the progression or invent breaks in an unplanned, spontaneous manner, which would have been curtailed by other instruments.


Teddy Wilson, chiefly through his work with Benny Goodman's trio and quartet, was highly regarded by jazz audiences and widely imitated by pianists of the thirties and early forties.


In the Bebop Era of the forties, the major pianists were Oscar Peterson and Bud Powell (both of whom had roots in Tatum) and Thelonious Monk. Peterson's style could be described as neo-Tatum. Powell, less emphatically influenced by Tatum, developed an original sort of left-hand style and improvised searing melodies that were very similar to the kind played by alto saxophonist Charlie Parker. Up to the time of Parker, most instrumentalists had been influenced only by players who played the same instrument, but the Parker era ended that.


Thelonious Monk was a jazz musician who played and composed as an individual, seemingly unconcerned with the opinion of others about his highly unorthodox style. His touch (the way in which his fingers depressed the keys) often sounded blatantly hammered out, as one might play "Chopsticks." His melodies were angular, rhythmically disjunct, full of notes that surprise the ear; and his chord notes frequently were so clustered together as to simulate a new version of "Kitten on the Keys." Nevertheless, he was a creative genius with a deep understanding of developing melodies in the manner of variations. The beautiful jazz ballad "Round Midnight," now a standard part of the repertoire of most jazz performers, was composed by Monk. Other Monk tunes that are widely played are "Straight, No Chaser," "Monk's Mood," "Epistrophy," "Bye-Ya," and "Ruby, My Dear." Monk was a musician without precedent, and a few pianists have successfully adopted his style, though musicians of all instruments have been influenced by Monk's output.


Some of the well-known pianists of the fifties are Horace Silver (originally with Stan Getz, still leading his own group in the seventies), Erroll Garner, Wynton Kelly (with Miles Davis), and Red Garland (also with Miles Davis). Garner and Garland form the first two links in a chain that revolutionized the modern-day pianists' left-hand chording style as well as influencing some aspects of the right hand.


In the late fifties and early sixties, the jazz world was blessed with the arrival of many superb pianists, including the major pianists as of this writing [1978/1990]: McCoy Tyner (with John Coltrane), Bill Evans (originally with Miles Davis), Herbie Hancock (originally with Miles Davis, also), Keith Jarrett (originally with Charles Lloyd), and Chick Corea (with Miles Davis). Their careers are far from over, excepting Evans, so that we needn't place them historically or pinpoint their styles and their contributions at this time.


It is worth mentioning here that many of the modern pianists are availing themselves of electric pianos, electronic gadgetry, and also electronic synthesizers. The addition of such instruments has added greatly to the repertoire of tone colors available.


The discussion of the rhythm section has not included all the names worth mentioning, nor has it included performers who play less-common instruments of the rhythm section, like Gary Burton (vibraphones) or Jimmy Smith (organ). But their importance to the jazz scene is not so much their accompmental capacities, as members of a rhythm section, but as soloists of exceptional ability.


FUNCTIONS OF THE RHYTHM SECTION


It was mentioned earlier that it would be absurd to call the Oscar Peterson Trio or the Bill Evans Trio a rhythm section, though the trios are made up of piano, bass, and drums, because they function as a complete group, not as a rhythm section waiting for the arrival of the horn players. But when those instruments are embellished by horns, then at least part of this function is to accompany and inspire the horn soloists. Individually, each member of the rhythm section is responsible for something that should be provided consistently. 


The drummer is responsible for time-keeping figures that will vary only slightly through the performance. The bassist provides a bass line and supports the pulse, along with the drummer, by playing mostly steady quarter notes (one note per beat). The pianist or guitarist will supply the chord progression, supported by the bass line. The members of the rhythm section are individually and collectively responsible for responding to the rhythms and melodies of the soloist, which means that the drummer will play additional rhythms that are not part of the time-keeping figures, the bassist will occasionally alter his steady quarter-note approach, and the pianist or guitarist will improvise the rhythms with which they attack the chords, all in response to the soloist's needs for support. 


Responding does not necessarily mean to echo or imitate what the soloist has just played. It can also mean to fill open space left by the soloist between phrases or while he pauses to breathe or while he contemplates the next phrase. In other cases, the so-called response is actually an inspiring suggestion made to the soloist by the rhythm section or an individual in the section.


Collectively, it is very important that the rhythm section maintain a steady, unified pulse, retain good balance, keep place in the chord progression, guard the form of the tune, feel improvised introductions and endings (very common) together, raise intensity levels where needed, and anticipate opportunities to play rhythmic figures together in their improvised accompaniment.


The function of the pianist and that of the guitarist are, for all practical purposes, identical. Therefore, it is common to see rhythm sections which use either piano or guitar, but not both instruments, as they will collide as two drummers or bassists would, unless their functions, by prior agreement, are sufficiently different that they do not collide. Count Basie (pianist) solved the problem in his band by having his guitarist (Freddy Green) strum in steady quarter-note valued chords, while Basie used a very sparse left hand and played light, semi-melodic figures in the right hand. Miles Davis' group solved the problem in the album "In A Silent Way" (Columbia CS-9875), which uses two electric pianos, and organ, and a guitar in the rhythm section, by approaching their improvised accompaniment not so much by chording in the conventional ways but by playing colorful sounds in different registers on instruments of different timbre (tone quality).”

Saturday, June 6, 2020

A Tribute to Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt - "Blues Up and Down"

How The Rhythm Section Got Its Name - Jerry Coker - Part 2, Bass and Guitar

© Copyright ® Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


This feature is a continuation of The Rhythm Section Part 1 Drums which in its completed form is Chapter 3 of Jerry Coker’s excellent book.that is focused on enhancing your appreciation of the music. 

Jerry Coker, himself a teacher, composer/arranger, and noted saxophonist, has written How To Listen To Jazz to fill the need for a layman's guide to understanding improvisation and its importance in the development of this artistically rich yet complex music form. Without relying on overly technical language or terms, Jerry Coker Shows how you can become a knowledgeable jazz listener - whether you are an aspiring musician, student, jazz aficionado, or new listener.

BASS

“Although the bass seems in most jazz groups to be the heartbeat of the group, as well as the instrument best suited to carrying a bass line, the earliest jazz groups were apt to be without a string bass or to use a bass horn or tuba instead. In fact, it was quite common in the twenties and early thirties for the bass player to carry along a bass horn as well as the string bass to play on some selections. Even when the string bass became a more standard instrument in the jazz bands, its role was subdued and restricted to playing simple chord tones on the first and third beats of the measure most of the time, and he seldom, if ever, played a solo.

The liberator of the bass was Jimmy Blanton, bassist with Duke Ellington in 1940-41, who is credited with creating the walking bass line as well as producing some of the first melodic bass solos. A bass line, generally in quarter notes (one note for each beat), that moves in a scalar, semi-chromatic fashion, as opposed to two notes per measure on simple chord tones.

Blanton died very young, before his full potential was realized. Ellington recorded an album with Blanton that illustrates his great talent. In its 10" LP form of the fifties (already a reissue of the 78 RPM originals), the album was called Duos. His lead was taken by bassists of the forties, like Oscar Pettiford, Milt Hinton, Slam Stewart (who bowed his solos and hummed in unison with himself), and Curley Russell. Pettiford's impressive technique and hornlike melodic style was followed by several bass virtuosos of the fifties and sixties, like Charles Mingus, Paul Chambers (with Miles Davis), and the astoundingly swift and complex style of Scotty LaFaro. It was most unfortunate that the lives of Blanton, Pettiford, Chambers, and LaFaro were all cut short, at the height of their playing careers. Another important bassist Ray Brown, is a master of the walking bass line, playing with one of the biggest sounds possible to achieve. He played with Dizzy Gillespie and, later, with the original Modern Jazz Quartet (before Percy Heath). The MJQ was the first jazz concert chamber group. Ray then joined the Oscar Peterson Trio, beginning a long and productive association. Percy Heath is an uncommonly well-schooled bassist, having spent most of his career with the Modern Jazz Quartet. For the last decade, the giants of the bass have been Ron Carter (with Miles Davis) and Jimmy Garrison (who gained fame with the John Coltrane Quartet). Garrison, probably inspired by Mingus and Brown, was largely responsible for the use of double-stops (playing of more than one note simultaneously) in bass solos. Another strong contributor to the bass style is Charlie Haden, who is most often heard with Ornette Coleman's Quartet.

When the rock style began to permeate jazz music, many bassists switched from the acoustic bass (wooden, upright) to the electric bass. Most of them, like Ron Carter, continue to play both acoustic and electric basses. Probably no bassist today rivals Stanley Clarke (with Chick Corea) in his handling of both kinds of bass, perfectly accommodating the jazz and rock styles.

A stunning arrival on the jazz scene was bassist Jaco Pastorius (with Herbie Hancock and Weather Report), whose remarkable speed, mastery of double-stops (actually many were full, rich chords), command of the harmonics range, and tasteful use of electronic gadgetry when needed made him an overnight sensation. [Harmonics are achieved on stringed instruments by very lightly touching the strings at certain places (while plucking with the other hand, of course), causing the pitches to be much higher but related to the pitch that would have been produced had the string been depressed all the way, as it normally is.]

On Portrait Of Tracy (Epic PE 33949) he played the piece unaccompanied, supplying melody, chords, and bass line, making his bass sound much like an electric piano. His improvisations, which moved as quickly and gracefully as solos heard on any other instrument, were highly original and filled with choice melodies. Pastorius also composed and arranged music with a talent comparable to his performing level.

The bass has undergone quite a transformation. Like the drums, the bass was relatively insignificant at first, sometimes not even included in the earlier jazz groups, and the first assignments were pretty mundane. People like Blanton, Pettiford, Mingus, and LaFaro proved the instrument's virtuoso possibilities and soloing capacity, while Clarke and Pas-torius have brought the instrument to its full fruition, technically and stylistically.

GUITAR
“The earliest jazz guitarists were mostly blues singers, like Huddy Ledbetter ("Leadbelly"), who used the guitar in an almost purely accompanimental capacity. In fact, a banjo was the instrument more likely to be found in the early jazz groups. Banjoist Johnny St. Cyr was a regular member of the famous Joe "King" Oliver and Louis Armstrong Orchestras in the early and middle twenties. In time the banjo was replaced by the guitar; for a while, at least, the guitar's role in the group was somewhat limited, like those of the bass and drums. The early guitars were not amplified, played virtually no solos, and simply supplied a strumming, pulse-keeping part. Eddie Lang (with Red Nichols, Miff Mole, Joe Venuti, and other Dixieland groups of the late twenties and the thirties) was one of the first liberators of the guitar, playing solos occasionally and having a more important role to play in the rhythm section.

Charlie Christian was one of the most significant and widely imitated guitarists in jazz history. It is remarkable that Christian lived for only two years after being discovered by Benny Goodman. Although he died at the age of twenty-three, his influence has been felt by nearly every major guitarist since that time. Furthermore, Christian was simultaneously involved in two different eras of jazz history: the Swing Era (the period that was noted for the profusion of famous big bands and the jitterbug dancers) and the Bebop Era that followed. Christian's guitar was amplified electronically, and he was a heavily featured soloist. His improvising style was angular (that is, his improvised melodies contained many wide leaps) and extremely original, seemingly without precedent, though Christian claimed that Gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt was a strong influence for him.

After Christian, the guitar became a much more popular jazz instrument than before, giving rise to a number of fine guitarists during the Bebop Era (and thereafter), like Jimmy Raney (with Stan Getz), Tal Farlow (with Red Norvo), Billy Bauer (with Woody Herman and Lennie Tristano), Arv Garrison (with Charles Parker), and studio guitarist Johnny Smith (with Stan Getz). 

Perhaps the most inspiring impro-viser of that group of guitarists is Jimmy Raney, who developed a flowing, graceful improvising style that always contained interesting note choices (sometimes deriving from polychords, the stacking of two unrelated chords simultaneously). Raney was also responsible for inspiring Stan Getz to one of his finest performances as a sideman on the album, 'Jimmy Raney Plays,'' for which Raney was the composer. Ironically, Getz appears on the album under an assumed name, Sven Coolson, because he was under contract to another recording company. Getz' playing style was typical of the "cool school" (a restrained manner of playing) popular at that time.

The great master of jazz guitar, Wes Montgomery, was a self-taught player with a bittersweet career. Wes played with the Lionel Hampton Orchestra in the forties, and though already a very accomplished player and ripe for stardom, he returned to his home, Indianapolis, to live a more conventional and stable family life. It took him away from national exposure before he could rise to early fame, but the people in the Indianapolis area, especially the jazz musicians, were intensely aware of his mastery. Wes and his two
brothers, Monk (bass) and Buddy (piano), teamed up with Pookie Johnson (tenor) and Sonny Johnson (drums) to form a quintet that was legendary, performing for many years at the Turf Bar. It ranked among the finest jazz groups ever assembled. Individually, every player was an excellent soloist, and as an ensemble, their repertoire (mostly originals) was enormous, yet full of complexities in the arrangements, which were all played from memory. It was a perfect example of a group of self-taught players whose music nonetheless was expertly crafted and stylistically abreast (or ahead of) the times.

Wes Montgomery's improvising style was revelatory, especially in terms of building a solo to a point of climax, which he accomplished by playing the guitar in different ways (in themselves innovative). The first part of his solo, perhaps the first chorus or two, would be played as most players do, that is, in a single melodic line. Then in the middle of the solo, Wes would begin playing in octaves (two notes that are eight scale steps apart, bearing the same letter name but in different registers), which he could do at about the same speed as other guitarists would play single lines. Incidentally, most guitarists today will, at times, play in octaves in the manner invented by Montgomery. Then, in the next stage of his solo, Wes enlarged the octaves into tightly-compressed chords that moved in a melodic fashion, which harmonized his melodies. Finally, the compacted chords would open up into very full, widely spaced chords. By combining the various textures (single line, octaves, tight chords, and open chords), in their particular order, his solo would grow in intensity throughout its length, and the solo acquired an acute sense of order. Montgomery's sense of form also extended itself into the weaving of his melodies, each melodic fragment getting repeated, developed, and played in variations.

Suddenly, around 1959, Wes was rediscovered by the rest of the world, almost overnight, resulting in many semi-pop albums, in which Wes played tunes like "Goin' Out Of My Head" in octaves and little else. For those who knew him


well musically, it was frustrating that he finally gained deserved recognition and economic reward for his genius, but at the expense of much of his musical greatness. Wes Montgomery died just a few years after his rediscovery.

Because Montgomery brought the guitar to perfection in the existing jazz style, it is natural that, after his death, the next great guitarists, with the exception of George Benson, played in a jazz-rock style that contrasted sharply with earlier guitarists. The new giants of guitar included Larry Coryell, John McLaughlin (with Miles Davis and Mahavishnu), and John Abercrombie (with Billie Cobham). Their manner of playing involves the use of string stretching (when it is applied to sustained tones, the pitch "yaws") and a profusion of electronic gadgetry, like phase shifters, reverberation, echo-plex, fuzz-tone, and cry-baby [wah-wah]pedals, much of which originated in the rock style.”

To be continued with Piano and the Functions of the Rhythm Section in Part 3