Reaching and Grasping

My day job finds me explaining math at various levels of rigor.  At one end of the spectrum, math manifests as a game, not to be played but rather hacked.  “What is the path of least resistance to the correct multiple choice answer on the SAT?”  Honestly, not so fun, as all the beauty and structure and glory of math is sucked out by the greedy and lazy test-taking mindset.  When I am fortunate enough to engage with students at the advanced high school or college level, warm coals of that glory start to radiate through, especially to receptive students.  All math-lovers wish that love of math were more contagious, that teenagers could learn to truly dig humanity’s greatest accomplishment rather than just transact with it.  Realistically, it’s probably impossible to devise a worthwhile “romantic” math curriculum, and in any case, it’s more important for students, young ones especially, to earn basic skills in arithmetic and reasoning.  That said, I gripe about the rather ahistorical treatment of math in high school and college.  Math biographies and timelines are not so interesting, but the history and development of the concepts themselves reveals a side of math that students rarely see: its fluidity, its improvisational and searching nature, its fundamental arbitrariness despite its miraculous and unreasonable effectiveness.  



Take geometry, which is in many ways the black sheep of the high school curriculum.  Geometry is typically the first and indeed only subject where a student is exposed to proofs.  Proofs dismay and discourage most students too; they require strategic and formal yet open-ended thinking, unlike algebra, which is mostly about symbolic manipulation and “tricks of the trade.”  One might rightfully ask, “Why should geometry be the home turf of abstract reasoning?”  Its domain of objects -- shapes, pictures -- is less obviously ‘mathematical’ than the domain of algebra -- equations, variables.  But such a question betrays a lack of historical perspective. Geometry predates algebra by an order of magnitude; symbolic manipulation is a far more recent mathematical style than geometrical (i.e. visual) argument is.  In fact, most algebraic ideas are, in one way or another, abstractions/crystallizations of geometrical ideas.  Also, algebra, at least at the high school level, is relatively devoid of theorems, while geometry is all about its theorems.  There is lots to do in algebra, but not all that much to prove.  But the value and legacy of mathematics lies in its magnificent, vast collection of true statements derived from (nearly-)self-evident axioms: its theorems.  Theorems undergird all the practical techniques and applications as well as the aesthetic internal theorizing. But that doesn’t answer the question.  Why learn logical arguments in a pictorial medium?  Or, equivalently, why do the foundations of mathematical reasoning go back to Euclid, a geometer (rather than, say, Diophantus or al-Khwarizmi, the OG algebraists)?  



My own answer hints at the hidden, fluid nature of math I brought up earlier.  The supreme power, the miracle of math, is to lift situations and patterns from the real world into the transcendent abstract realm where mathematical technology can perform its work.  True equality does not exist in the physical world, but an equation can capture and generalize the notion of a balanced scale, or two things of the same type, or a fair transaction.  Likewise, circles and triangles are fictions of the mind, austere and perfect yet rigid models we try to squeeze real shapes into.  Real shapes, i.e. any visual thing at all, are infinite and totally ubiquitous, even more ubiquitous than the phenomena captured by equations/algebra, which makes them the ideal starting ground for this mathematical procedure of abstraction and generalization that unlocks the potential of reasoning.  The genius of Euclid and other Ancient Greek geometers was not just the treasure chest of theorems and propositions they proved, but the messy, playful compromising between real and abstract that enabled those theorems to 1) exist, 2) cohere, and 3) link together in an astounding beautiful and smooth way.  It’s almost impossible to imagine, but there was a time before such a concept as “square” existed, and obviously yet amazingly, some human mind had to be the first to come up with that concept.  But it’s not like once one person thought of “square,” it was immediately understood by everyone else.  This is the battle frontier of math!  A word must be chosen.  What does that word refer to?  Is a “square” merely a four-sided figure?  Does it need more structure?  Equal sides, equal angles?  (Sides and angles are already abstract terms, relatively easy to intuit but not so easy to pin down with enough precision for mathematics.)  If something is like a square but does not have equal sides, does that need a new word?  Where does that conceptual bubble begin and end?  (Think of rectangles and rhombi, distinct yet overlapping and both under the umbrella of parallelograms.)  There is simply no way there was instant consensus.  Early mathematicians must have wrung out these ideas and fought endlessly, internally and externally, consciously and subconsciously.  And it’s not like this is some effete, silly, cushy-armchair philosophical game; the stakes are staggeringly high, for mathematics cannot recover from even a single successful attack; it is both the strongest and most delicate human creation.



Once the dust settles and a concept takes form in a rigorous and complete way, the usual mathematical muscles can get involved.  Cold, logical reasoning stacks statement upon statement, never worrying about foundations.  Despite the existence of innumerable beautiful and powerful theorems and techniques, this mode of mathematics impresses me less.  I am instead in love with the mathematician whose reach initially extends beyond his grasp, who wrestles with dirty and mysterious half-formed ideas until he can confidently display an austere, coherent conceptual gem that plays nice with others.  The domestication of the beasts of the mind.



The histories of mathematical ideas are not taught in school, so students don’t get a sense of that process.  We enjoy peace earned through the battles of the past.  But as concepts stack up, often precariously in the adolescent mind, so grows the implicit weight of abstraction.  Teenagers, laden with thousands of years of sophisticated scholarship boiled down into extremely efficient mathematical/linguistic machinery, inevitably hit some point where a new idea simply does not fit into their model.  The notion of, say, graphing a quadratic equation is both 1) needlessly complicated and 2) seemingly arbitrary.  

“Why do we care what it looks like?” 

“Why should the solutions, which sometimes you call ‘roots’ and sometimes ‘zeroes’ and sometimes ‘factors,’ have anything to do with crossing the x-axis?!”  

“Why do these so-called parabolas only smile and frown but never tilt to the side?”  



Most teachers dismiss these questions because they cannot answer them satisfactorily.  

“You’ll get used to it.” 

“It’s not about the math per se; it just makes you smarter.”

“You’ll need this next year.”

The subtle tragedy in all this is that the students are right: it is totally arbitrary, at least at the most foundational level.  Math is not real.  It could have been something else.  But, the greatest minds of the past fought hard, not for the flawless definitions, but for the best compromises.  The most comfortable perches on the tightrope between abstract generality and practical specificity.  The concepts were designed to solve problems, as much as homeworks would have one believe that problems are designed to explain concepts.  To chime in on an admittedly inconsequential debate, mathematics is certainly invented and not discovered.  Being right on this question brings me no joy, but I would like to see this truth acknowledged by the education system.  It can be acknowledged gingerly at first: take 25 minutes in a geometry class to dissolve Euclid’s fifth (parallel) postulate and peel back the curtain to non-Euclidean geometry.  Show 7th graders what kind of nonsense you can come up with if addition is no longer commutative.  Convince a college freshman that the additive identity (0) and the multiplicative identity (1) cannot be the same number.  An informal discussion of paradoxical statements like “this statement is false” could open the door to Gödel’s mind-bending work.  A similar project could be undertaken to demystify computation, which to most people might as well be sacred yet unapproachable magic we cannot live without.  Music theory is often viewed as a frustrating game of puzzles devised by nerds in lieu of making real music, but one could instead view music theory, and indeed music itself in many instances, as a solution to puzzles that arise naturally.  Tonality is a compromise between tuning, modality, and symmetry.  Why should parallel fifths and octaves be forbidden in counterpoint? (What “proof by contradiction” can you come up with if they are allowed?)  Chord-scale jazz thinking is a somewhat-fast algorithm for finding the right notes -- what are its weaknesses that offset its speed, and why?  When is it worth it?  (To be fair, I think music theory actually does a better job, on average, of presenting itself as a series of historical developments compared to math.)  



I bet that acknowledging this intuitive, historical, imperfection-embracing mindset wouldn’t just tantalize the especially curious students but also bridge the gap to abstract/theoretical/technical topics for struggling students.  Pull back the veil, demystify, show the cracks in the armor -- if for no other reason than to make math (or whatever subject) less intimidating.  Wouldn’t it be empowering if a teacher acknowledged a student’s complaints about mathematics as valid, but then worked with her to see why things are the way they are?  The answer would not merely be “by decree.”  On a related note, Common Core math has lots of issues, especially at the elementary level, where students need to build up fluency in math through repetition and memorization.  CC’s goal of making math more intellectual and less mechanical is misguided for young kids, but by the late middle school/early high school level, forays into history a la the examples I mentioned above would accomplish these goals better than the silly renamings and fragmentations of ideas that currently comprise CC.  If nothing else, give kids a little buzz of excitement now and then by telling some of the rare tales of math being exciting.  Archimedes running nude through the street shouting “Eureka!” upon discovering his principle of water displacement; Turing cracking the Enigma code; Eratosthenes calculating the circumference of the entire freaking Earth using nothing but wells and shadows.  My own middle school math teacher spun some great tales and we as a class were transfixed.  It is far more engrossing to work hard on problems when you feel you are tapping into some great ancient legacy, gliding along the swift river of ideas and accomplishment.  That’s part of the joy of music transcription or even just reading sheet music, or playing chess, or celebrating an old holiday.  Zoom out and appreciate the magnificent edifices upon which we stand!



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Long Coda: the Example of Continuity

To put my money where my mouth is, I’ll do my best to build the formal notion of continuity from the ground up. It’s one of my favorite examples of mathematicians pinning down a slippery concept precisely without sacrificing flexibility. Also, many teachers never define continuity satisfactorily because the somewhat vague intuitive notion of its meaning is sufficient for most purposes, even through calculus. If anything, students are merely given examples of non-continuity and expected to intuit the definition from there, as if swimming were the act of not drowning. But it is rewarding to wrestle directly with an evasive concept that seems so obvious at first! Without further ado:

“Continuous” in everyday speech means something like “smooth; unbroken; happening always.” In a mathematical setting, this notion naturally applies to the idea of a smooth, unbroken curve in the plane or in space, but also the idea of a shape or quantity smoothly morphing over time. Think of a candle melting, a tree growing, or water swirling around in a cup. This is already tricky for a mathematically conservative and uncreative mind: firstly, how does one reconcile the paradox of a smooth curve made of individual infinitesimal breadthless points? and secondly, how would one extend that notion to 2-, 3-, or N-dimensional, potentially physical objects like candles, trees, or water?

To the uninitiated, the answer is complicated, baffling, likely meaningless:

Let f : [a,b] → R and x0 ∈ [a,b]. f is continuous at x0 if for

every ε > 0 there exists δ > 0 such that | x − x0 | < δ implies | f(x) − f(x0) | < ε.

Not helpful. Let’s step back, way back, and find the path there ourselves.

First things first -- let’s focus on the idea of a smooth curve with no gaps. A curve that can be drawn without lifting your pencil. An unbroken string of pearls. Recall that most often, plane curves are generated from equations relating X and Y, as in the X- and Y-axes of the coordinate plane. More specifically, one typically considers functions relating X to Y. A function is a rule (an equation) that allows one to plug in an X-coordinate and generate a Y-coordinate so that a point on the plane, having an X-coordinate and a Y-coordinate, represents, potentially, a solution to an equation. The simplest possible example is the function Y = X, which tells us to draw a line through all the points where the Y- and X-coordinates are the same. An infinite diagonal line from Southwest to Northeast. Y = 2X + 3 is a slightly steeper and higher line including points such as (0, 3), (10, 23), and (-1.5, 0), as well as everything in between and beyond. More exotic functions generate curves rather than straight lines, but the principle remains the same: plug in X, return Y, plot the pair. Already we can see the roots of continuity: we are assuming X and Y are real numbers, which is to say we are allowed to plug in any value from the continuum of all possible values. Not just whole numbers, but fractions and irrational numbers too. An infinitely fine grain, the smoothest sand on the beach of the mind. The fact that there exists so many damn numbers, an infinitude between even the smallest gaps, gives us a clue as to how we might capture the notion of drawing a curve without lifting the pencil. Maybe there’s a way to do it “one point at a time” but leverage the infinitude of points into a suitable definition for curves, which is to say functions.

However, the problem with that approach is obvious. A single point “knows nothing” of the curve it’s on; it doesn't “know its neighbors.” A point is very slim on data: just two individual numbers, bundled together. Darn. But we do like how “zoomed in” a single point is; a continuous curve should be unbroken even at atomic scales and beyond (it would be a shame to discover gaps between the pixels). Can we have our cake and eat it too -- compromise between the global shapeliness of a curve and the local specificity and numerical properties of an individual point? Herein lies our first big strategic move: we will take the indirect approach of calling a function continuous at a point rather than over its whole domain. An approach that seems backwards at first, but the convenient fact is that if we do this successfully, we can call a whole function continuous if we know it is continuous at every point individually. In other words, we employ the smoothness of the numbers themselves to do work for us. We, as mathematicians, can zoom in to a specific location and analyze behavior there rather than having to juggle a whole snake of points all at once.

But we aren’t there yet. How do we imbue a point, a naïve and minimal chunk of data, with more structure and awareness of its surroundings? The key is to zoom out from the point, in the slightest way possible, to a “neighborhood” around the point. One can imagine a little blob surrounding a point on the plane. But we must be more precise, and we must appeal to the curve itself, not merely the space on the plane. We also must be extremely careful not to zoom out too much, for even a tiny segment of a curve is as infinite and unwieldy as the whole thing. Hence the foundational innovation undergirding limits, continuity, calculus, and the whole subject of mathematical analysis: ε. This measly Greek letter (epsilon) represents an arbitrarily small yet finite value. Think of the game you can play with any child:

“What’s the smallest positive number?”

“1.”

“What about ½?”

“Oh...well then what about ½ of ½?”

“Now you’re getting it.”

The notion of ε scales to whatever resolution of tininess we need at the present moment. Let’s see it in action.

To draw a curve without lifting the pencil, each point on the curve must be close enough to its neighbors that no pencil-lift is necessary to get there. On the pencil-scale, a distance of, say, .01 millimeters will surely do: that is, if there are no gulfs in the theoretical curve longer than .01 mm, we will be safe dragging our pencil across any smaller gaps. In this case, ε stands in for .01 mm. On the extra-thick Sharpie scale, a full millimeter might be sufficient for ε. On the electron microscope scale, ε would be on the order of nanometers. The magic is in the flexibility of the idea of ε. Let’s break it down further and get specific. Call whatever point we’re zoomed into, on whatever curve, p. p has an X-coordinate and a Y-coordinate determined by its X-coordinate. Call its X-coordinate x0 and thus its Y-coordinate f(x0). (Formally, “f of x-zero;” i.e. the result of applying the function f to the number x0.) We want to encode the idea of minuscule intervals around p in both the X- and Y-directions. Mathematically, all points on the curve a distance less than ε away, where ε can be any small positive (greater than 0) number. In order to disambiguate the X- and Y-directions, we introduce δ (delta) as another arbitrarily small positive value, to be used shortly. We are ready to put it all together.

We can now make precise the notion of sliding an infinitesimal amount along our curve, starting from the point p with coordinates (x0, f(x0)). The neighborhood around x0 consists of all x-values less than δ away, which is calculated through subtraction. Mathematically, all values of x such that | x − x0 | < δ. (The absolute value just turns all distances positive in order to defend against the semi-nonsensical notion of negative distance.) Likewise, the neighborhood around f(x0) (now we are oriented on the vertical Y-axis) is all those values of f(x) such that | f(x) − f(x0) | < ε. δ and ε can be freely specified at any point; we imagine in the meantime numbers like .000001. To finally define a continuous function (and thereby a continuous curve), we play a game. Imagine your adversary encloses point p within a small vertical box of size ε, and challenges you as follows:

“Your curve must not change more than ε. If you slide left or right along the curve and the y-value jumps more than ε, the curve is discontinuous and I win.”

Let’s imagine the two scenarios. If the function f is indeed continuous as we imagine it, that is smooth and unbroken, we should be fine. Imagine p is attached to a smooth line on both sides, and say ε is .001. Zoom in super-close to p and mark a ceiling and floor .001 above and below it. The smoothness of f implies that the ceiling and floor will cut off a box such that a minuscule segment of f with lies totally within. Call the width of the box δ. Here is a picture:

cont.jpg

The adversary is defeated for now. He is free to shrink ε even further, but we can counter with a smaller δ that does the job. We believe in the smoothness of the real numbers to win this battle for us. Because ε can shrink to any microscopic scale at all and we can still find such a δ that encloses our smooth curve, we confidently declare that f is continuous at x0.

How do we know this definition is working? We check the other scenario, where f has some gap or jump, and hope that the adversary wins the game. So pick p somewhere where f jumps; let’s say that to the right, it is attached to a smooth curve, but has a gap on the left:

discont.jpg

The adversary sets a small ε and challenges us to ensure that f changes less than ε vertically within a horizontal interval of δ. On the right side, we are OK. Tiny rightward nudges produce only tiny upward nudges, so our quest for δ begins swimmingly. However, on the left side, we run into a major problem. Even the smallest leftward nudge pops us downward far more than ε. We cannot find a small yet positive δ that closes the box; we fail! f is discontinuous at x0. Exactly as planned -- the definition “feels right.”

Note that we would have won our continuity-testing game anywhere else on f, even in the second scenario. It thus makes sense to say that f would be continuous on intervals that do not include that pathological point p. Remember, f being continuous as a whole curve/function amounts to all its individual points having the continuity property individually.

All that is left to do is summarize the procedure of this game in mathematical notation. One step at a time:

Let f : [a,b] → R and x0 ∈ [a,b].

All this is saying is that our function, our curve, is defined as mapping x-values on an interval of the real numbers ([a,b] means every number from a to b) to a real-numerical output. It’s a fancy way of placing us on the X-Y plane. Our special point has to have its X-coordinate, x0, in the domain of f. Read ∈ as “belongs to.”

f is continuous at x0 if:

for every ε > 0 there exists δ > 0 such that | x − x0 | < δ implies | f(x) − f(x0) | < ε.

Now the meat. “For every ε > 0” means that the adversary is free to challenge us with an arbitrary small positive number to box us in. Our job is to find, i.e. show that “there exists δ > 0 such that” the horizontal neighborhood around x0, i.e. the x-values fulfilling | x − x0 | < δ, don’t pop us out of the vertical neighborhood, i.e. the y-values fulfilling | f(x) − f(x0) | < ε.

In summary: the adversary assigns ε, and if we can always counter with a δ that keeps f comfortably in the adversarial box, we establish continuity at that point.

Deep breath. We have successfully defined an intuitively clear but mathematically slippery notion: continuity of a curve (represented by a function). The point here was to show that these definitions don’t just appear from nowhere; they are earned through head-scratching, compromise, and creative workarounds to paradoxes and imprecisions in intuition. While the definition may at first seem needlessly technical, abstract, or indirect, it turns out to be instead an ingenious balance of specificity and flexibility. We, counterintuitively, zoom into single points to define a global property of a curve; we play a recursive game with simple individual steps involving finite, definite numerical values that generalizes to infinitesimal scales so that we are satisfied without having to appeal to the paradox of zero-length nudges or zero-area boxes. Better yet, this definition is totally agnostic to the properties of f: it tells us whether points or intervals are continuous or not no matter how wild our curve gets. It also easily generalizes to higher dimensions with a rather minimal amount of mathematical massaging. In fact, it generalizes to domains beyond numbers in the case of general topology. An even more abstract definition, presented without comment or explanation:

Let (X, TX ) and (Y, TY) be topological spaces. A function f : X → Y is said to be

continuous if the inverse image of every open subset of Y is open in X.

(The real puzzle here is the meaning of open.)

I would have loved to grapple with this stuff in high school. Sure, it’s difficult. Merely presenting the definition and expecting a student to understand it would have been an obviously stupid idea. But with an hour of mental wrestling, led by a teacher, working through examples and trying out some hypotheses, this becomes a rewarding exercise that reveals the glorious, dirty, living, breathing, miraculous nuts and bolts of mathematics, the hard-earned truths that unlock our simple computational methods. Not exactly “light afternoon reading,” but instead of the ten-thousandth arcane, soulless symbolic manipulation of the sort that pervades high school math? Yes please!





If you read this far, good for you and please accept my gratitude.  I hope you don’t feel I wasted your time.  Some music recommendations to make up for it:





Be well and keep it real.





  

Where Two Streams Cross

November 2020: It’s impossible to be anything but dismayed at the overall state of things.  Approximately zero progress has been made on the pandemic; the institutions that should have protected, informed, and healed us have totally failed, and miserably so.  The “election” was (and still is) an utter embarrassment.  The two groups of people I regularly work with, kids and musicians, are both suffering as greatly as ever; the initial shock of the collapse has been replaced with a gurgling sense of dread accompanied by the withering-away of invaluable time.


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The first two gods of jazz tenor saxophone are Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young.  Any jazz fan knows this and most are familiar with the narratively convenient dichotomy of their styles: Hawk, the bold, fiery lion; versus Prez, the cool, melancholic hipster.  Seemingly every aspect of each man’s style is at odds with the other’s.  Hawk’s sound is fat and fluffy in the low register, growly and rough in the middle register, and blasting in the relatively rare moments where he goes up high.  Lester, on the other hand, is comfortable to hang in his silky high register, but will descend to his throaty middle register and occasionally to his whispery bottom notes.  Pre-war Lester’s sound is buoyant, while post-war it’s brittle; early Hawk is bulbous and strong, and later he is rough, almost plasticky.  Moreover, Hawk’s sense of harmony is remarkably advanced for a pre-bop improviser: his default harmonic statement is the arpeggio, but he liberally sprinkles in adjacent chromatic tones and chord substitutions, and hiding within his arpeggios is often a smoothly voice-led composite melody, like a tasty inner voice from a pianist or a big band.  Lester’s harmony is less sophisticated; essentially everything he plays is diatonic or the blues, and he is generally unbothered by quickly moving harmony so long as he can find a note or two to milk while the band shifts underneath him.  A dominant chord replaced with a spooky augmented triad is about as fancy as Lester gets.


If you need a refresher on Hawk vs. Prez, listen to the most famous, recognizable solo of each character: Coleman Hawkins playing “Body and Soul” in 1939, and Lester Young playing “Oh Lady Be Good” in 1936.


Like any two diametrically opposed forces, Hawk and Prez define a spectrum, on which one can locate every jazz saxophonist since.  Indeed, there is no worthy player who is not a direct descendant of both giants, in one way or another.  This is of course true for the saxophonists of the generation just after Hawk and Prez, and in particular for two of my personal gods: Sonny Rollins and Warne Marsh, born 1930 and 1927 respectively. At first glance, the ancestry seems clear cut: Rollins, a vocal devotee of Hawkins with a comparably muscular tone; Marsh, perhaps the only tenor player with an ever darker, featherier tone than Prez, who literally played Lester Young transcriptions on stage.  Sonny is Hawk’s next evolution, and Warne is Lester’s, right?  

Not so.


Before I make my case that Sonny is actually closer to Prez and Warne is actually closer to Hawk, I want to explain why I would spend time on these comparisons at all.  The goal is to show a path towards piecing together one’s own personal style.  You nor I will ever do anything truly original, but we can each come up with a unique cocktail of the features of the masters.  Importantly, almost none of these features are incompatible with each other, even if they may seem so at first.  With a creative, open mind, it’s possible to fuse and blend seemingly opposed musical attributes.  You could play like Paul Desmond and Chris Potter at the same time.  You could play like Gene Ammons and Mark Turner simultaneously with a spicy dose of Don Byas.  You could play fast swing like Stan Getz but play ballads like John Coltrane.  And so on.  Though I do not yet have a convincing solution, I strongly believe that the best of my own personal style will emerge as a crossing of Rollins and Marsh, and later on I will outline an exercise I use to deliberately cross their streams.


Up front, I will admit that Sonny Rollins is the far superior artist to Warne Marsh.  Sonny is, by all accounts, a deeply thoughtful, enlightened person, a continuously unsatisfied artist continuously reaching beyond his grasp, despite a vast and diverse career.  Warne became almost instantly complacent due to the deadly combination of exceptional talent and self-destructive habits.  The sad truth is that one could delete Warne Marsh from jazz history and it would be relatively undisturbed, but Sonny Rollins is an obviously foundational figure, the Saxophone Colossus indeed.  

However! for listeners in the know, Warne is a dark and prickly yet delicious fruit and an alluring yet dangerous influence on saxophonists.  And his lackluster career was not a foregone conclusion; Sonny’s illustrious career was not either, especially considering his addiction and imprisonment in his early twenties.  Both men, in fact, blossomed early into promising if not downright artistic saxophonists, and the 1950s shaped each’s career and eventual legacy.

Therefore, it is fair to compare Rollins and Marsh at the crests of their 50s waves, when their talents were freshly honed and surely disarming to a hungry listener or fellow saxophonist.

Conveniently, both Rollins and Marsh recorded “I’ll Remember April” in trio formats, in 1957.

Sonny’s is a live recording from the immortal Blue Note album A Night at “The Village Vanguard” and Warne’s is from his self-titled Atlantic release (the title of the track is merely “Excerpt,” which likely allowed the dodging of licensing fees, made possible because Warne doesn’t play the melody).  Both are masterful 5-star takes; the point is not to rank them but rather to analyze them and in particular trace the Hawk and Prez influences from a generation upstream.  Let’s listen.


* * *


First, consider Sonny.  Listen at least until the trading.  As with any saxophonist, Sonny makes his first impression through his sound.  He blows hard and tongues even harder; even his most open notes fly straight out the end of the bell.  The little bit of grit at the start of the accented notes creates an obvious transient; i.e. the beginning of the note, and therefore its placement with respect to the beat, is crystal clear.  The aggressive tonguing itself comes more from Coleman Hawkins, who could really smack his high notes too, but musically, the pre-head intro is a two-note riff around which the time coalesces — that’s pure Lester Young.  


Semi-side note: the way Sonny plays the melody is an exemplar of what makes him so special to me: every note, every phrase is articulated in a different way.  From smooth legato to chirpy staccato, from beefy straight tone to wiggly vibrato, it’s all in there.  Sonny’s advantage over all other saxophonists ever (except for perhaps Bird) is his gigantic toolbelt of articulation.  His air, tongue, lips, and fingers can play the same “note” in a million different ways and his unsurpassed artistry is picking out the perfect one, every single time.  (Lester had lots of articulations, too, though not quite as vast a palette.  Hawk even less so: I hear his default tonguing style change and develop over his career, but I don’t hear the cornucopia of articulations within a single solo to the same degree as Sonny or Prez.  Vibrato is another story for another missive...)


The solo is more or less what one expects from Sonny Rollins in 1957: incredibly swinging, serious bebop, perfectly nestled in the changes, juxtaposed with levity courtesy of cute melodic commentaries and quotations.  A delightful, unassailable formula.  Where does this performance lie on the Hawk-Prez spectrum?  Neither of the two OGs ever really embraced bebop, so we must retrodict the 1937 analog of Sonny’s use of bop as his main vehicle in 1957.  What “kind” of bebop is Sonny playing?  I’d call it prime, uncontroversial bebop.  Rhythmically, lots and lots of eighth notes plus the classic eight-note triplet arpeggios/turns, and the upbeats are heavily accented.  Melodically, the lines are full of all the lovely twists that push and pull on the beat: inner groupings of both even and odd numbers of eighth notes, expressed through articulation differences and melodic contour.  Harmonically, it’s on the conservative side, relishing the glory of bop that outlines the changes as they are.  The most adventurous side-steps are brief octatonic moments that intensify dominant chords, but Sonny does not leave such moments unresolved.  I’d argue that this style of high bebop is to 1957 what groovy diatonic playing is to 1937; viz. Lester Young.  Yes, the rougher sound indicates Hawk, but the material actually being played strikes me as coming from Lester’s philosophy (if not his style): don’t mess with the changes; don’t be esoteric; don’t forget the sweet melodic moments; let your tonguing imbue the beat with bounce, variation, and energy.  An ultimately rhythmic conception with a side dish of melodic sentimentality.  Another point in the Prez column: what does Sonny do at 1:43, 2:29, and 3:52?  Riffs, baby!  Sonny doesn’t chill on the riffs for as long as Prez would have, but that device is as Youngian as it gets.  Simple, repetitive riffs deepen the groove and charge up energy to be released in subsequent bursts of melody.  That was never Hawk’s style; he was always overflowing with energy and wasted no time deploying his serpentine lines straight into the foreground.


In short, while Sonny’s aggressive tone reminds us of Coleman Hawkins, the contents of his solo, and even more so his overall approach to improvising, place him, in my view, much more on the Lester Young side of the spectrum.


* * *


On to Warne Marsh.  His rendition of “I’ll Remember April” is hardly a rendition at all — it is an incomplete performance, solely a tenor solo over the changes with no reference to the melody, and no beginning nor ending except for the briefest studio fade.  Marsh fans are used to this sort of thing; arrangement and presentation were not skills Marsh or any of the Tristano people possessed.  Perhaps bothersome for the listener who wants a bow on top of his improvisation, but not really a problem for a saxophonist investigating the craft or a collector amassing material.  


In any case, the first impression of this take is strong, despite the non-beginning, because the bass and drums are swinging hard right out of the gate.  If you listen closely, you’ll notice that Warne does not actually begin with the easy-to-hear A—F# descending third; in classic Marsh form, there is an almost-imperceptible blur of a few indistinct notes just before the beat, like a drag on a snare drum made of marshmallows.  The dichotomy of clear(ish) notes and ghostly shadow notes is a hallmark of Warne’s style, in a certain sense a replacement for the drama he loses by basically never tonguing.  It’s not even clear if the second phrase goes straight into the third or if there is a breath between them.  Listen just before the ascending triplet arpeggio at about 0:04 — does the sound stop, or is he continuing to release the slightest drip of air as a gossamer thread between two helical phrases?  The mystery is tantalizing and essential to his turn-on-a-dime style.  This tiny example leads us to consider his articulation more broadly.  In some ways, Warne’s way of playing is simpler than Sonny’s (I think it’s easier to emulate, though also a bad idea to emulate more than just a little bit — more on that another time).  It’s simpler because Warne does not have nearly the arsenal of tonguings that Sonny does, and the way the notes come out is a result of the contour of the line, which is, in general, a spontaneous creation (Sonny, though certainly spontaneous himself, has more vocabulary and often plays things that he’s clearly worked out in advance).  Another way of describing this is that Warne is a “fingers-first” player while Sonny is a “tongue-first” player: Warne’s fingers think the notes and he blows through them as they come out; Sonny articulates complete ideas, complete phrases, and his fingers follow, conforming to the scales/changes/quotes so that the story his tongue tells makes sense.  (Indeed, I’d argue that Coleman Hawkins is more of a fingers player and Lester Young is more of a tongue player.)  My theory of Warne Marsh-style articulation is based on a visual metaphor: a moving surface, perhaps of the ocean, through which notes can either breach or descend.  Notes that are higher in register or blown harder pop out; lower/softer notes stay submerged.  The net effect is like watching a dolphin leap out of and back into the water as it traverses the waves — you watch, in alternation, its majestic body but then just a watery shadow.  A natural follow-up question is “how much of this effect is intentional?” My guess is that it is mostly a byproduct of the lines he plays, which is to say Marsh is not really choosing when to pass through the “surface;” the direction, jaggedness, and momentum of his lines (i.e. the choices of his fingers) push him above and below naturally.  This is in direct contrast with Sonny, who could play the same piece of melodic material with totally different, specifically-chosen articulations, imbuing even the most familiar line with a twist.  To finish on the subject of articulation, I want to argue a somewhat subtle point: although Warne’s notes can come out in wildly different ways in terms of timbre, volume, and emphasis, the technique behind them is rather homogeneous and is subordinate to his melodic, finger-led thinking.  And despite his generally warbly sound that is at odds with the beefiness of Hawk, Warne’s overall approach, the order of operations to getting notes out of the horn, is more aligned with Hawk than with Lester.


With respect to harmony, Warne Marsh is almost inarguably more advanced and adventurous than Sonny Rollins, at least at this point in their careers.  That is not a value judgment, though.  There is certainly a glory to Sonny hitting all the right notes all the time and a satisfaction to reciting bebop vocabulary that Warne never gives.  Nonetheless, Warne’s harmony is surprising, edgy, and utterly progressive for the 1950’s, and therefore a treat for any listener attuned to it.  The whole solo is full of goodies, but listen to the chorus from about 0:54 to 1:45.  He is juggling forbidden fruit the whole time but is nevertheless playing the changes.  You can hear alterations of the basic chords, superimpositions of new chords, and delightful sidesteps into neighboring harmonies that swivel back home in a frankly sexy way.  Without getting into pages of analysis, the fact of the matter is that Sonny did not play like that, and Lester Young even less so.  However, Coleman Hawkins’ playing is full of comparable moments — tasteful flirtations with remote harmonies, gracefully packaged within lines that begin and end inside the changes.  In fact, until Warne, there was not really a saxophonist as harmonically adventurous as Hawk, and there have been few since.  Warne and Hawk are further connected by their reluctance to regurgitate.  Neither player has characteristic licks; they improvise more on a note-to-note basis.  Sonny and Lester, of course, were unafraid of vocabulary.


So, let’s tally up the final scorecard.  Sonny’s burly tone — yes, more Hawk-like; Warne’s feathery, high-register-centric tone — yes, closer to Prez.  But Sonny’s overall style: highly varied, well-curated articulation; conservative diatonic harmony; a mix of linear playing and melodic/riffy playing; and an ultimately rhythmic conception — that’s Lester Young.  By contrast, Warne’s overall style: a finger-first approach with articulations as byproducts of the lines; progressive, adventurous harmony; a constant flow of abstract ideas without appealing to fossilized vocabulary — Coleman Hawkins, through and through.  Perhaps not the initially expected result, but that’s the point — great players take lots of little things from other great players, and superficial influences need not box one into a narrow style.


* * *


Frankly, it doesn’t really matter if Sonny/Warne is more like Hawk or more like Prez.  It is not so hard to argue the opposite of what I said above (though I still think I’m right of course).  My large-scale goal here is to prove that saxophone playing, and indeed any complex craft/artform, is built up from a large amount of small components, many of which are independent of each other.  This is a deep fact because it shows that there can be a truly gigantic number of different styles even without coming up with something “truly original” (the originality, I’d argue, would come from the choice of how to combine these components).  It also indicates how one might improve their playing.  In my opinion, there is not really such a thing as “general improvement.”  Rather, one can crank up individual skills a little at a time through exercise, then make an artistic judgment about how to compile them into a musical personality.  Transcription is great, probably indispensable, but you must break apart what you transcribe into its pieces: pitch content, articulation, time feel, pacing, tone, etc.  Otherwise you’re missing the full benefit and you’re doomed to merely amassing vocabulary.  Not to mention it takes a little pressure off if you transcribe a solo for a purpose, say, to feel how Freddie Hubbard places his notes relative to the beat. In that case, it’s fine if you miss some notes or leave out the double time!  Moreover, this way of thinking, factoring great players/solos/records into their components, can alleviate some of the anxiety of falling in love with seemingly incompatible styles.  From the perspective of a young saxophonist in 1940, Lester and Hawk must have seemed incompatible, but every great saxophonist since has taken from both! A generation or two later, one might have felt that one had to choose between, say, Zoot Sims and Joe Henderson; nowadays, Chris Potter and Mark Turner, but no.  There is no single choice to be made — follow the heart and cherrypick.  It goes deeper: if you play jazz but you love to listen to Sting or Tchaikovsky or Umm Kulthum, figure out what small piece of those outside influences you can appropriate and coherently integrate into your jazz playing.  Go beneath the surface.  Don’t just copy — analyze, abstract, experiment.  So much more is possible than any of us realize.  


* * *


Coda: I love the two “I’ll Remember April” cuts because the changes and the trio format act as a kind of scientific “control” relative to which one can experiment.  A fun exercise is to play along.  There are four basic ways to do this: play like Sonny with Sonny; play like Warne with Warne; play like Sonny with Warne; play like Warne with Sonny.  And when I say “play like,” I mean “take some element of that player’s style and try to incorporate it;” the point is not to be a carbon copy.  Articulation, time feel, harmonic approach: all good individual options.  I usually start by playing like Sonny along with Sonny — the intro and melody make a good on-ramp and the solo is nice and long so you can take little breaks to listen then dive back in if need be.  Once you get cooking and you feel your Sonny Rollins impression is at least passable, switch over immediately to the Warne recording and play along with him.  As best as you can, keep the Sonny approach going, but keep your ears open to Warne at the same time.  How do the eighth notes fit together?  Can you compromise on the fly, find some novel mixture?  What usually happens to me is Warne takes over my ears after a couple minutes and I start playing more and more like him.  You could do another round of Warne-style over Warne, then switch to Sonny, and play like Warne over Sonny.  And so on and so forth; it’s like alternately dunking in hot and cold baths.  After five or six rounds (~20 minutes), I like to just play on my own, maybe with a metronome, and see what comes out.  You’ll surprise yourself!  Sometimes this particular combo comes out sounding kind of like Chris Cheek; sometimes it’s more like Joe Lovano; sometimes something totally weird.  Most of all, it’s really fun and also challenging — the best kind of practice.


One can easily play this sort of game with Sonny and Trane using “Tenor Madness,” or with Stitt/Ammons, or with Miles/Cannonball/Coltrane.  A slightly different game: play a single tune for a long time and try to “time travel.”  Pick something easy — I like to start by playing Lester’s “Lady Be Good” solo verbatim — and try to move through the styles of various players as continuously as possible.  I say continuously because the liminal spaces between styles is where you’ll discover the most exciting stuff.  Start with Lester, then try to play some Hawk, then maybe jump to Bird, take a detour to Lee Konitz or Hank Mobley, then Sonny, or maybe go straight for Coltrane, then Joe Henderson, then Dewey Redman, then maybe tread back to Ornette, then Albert Ayler… Over the course of ten minutes, you’ll get a physical and mental workout, and also probably play things you’ve never played before.  


~ ~ ~


Bonus recommendations:


A Fire Across the Deep by Vernor Vinge: sci-fi novel that I have dragged my feet on but enjoyed nonetheless.  The greatest strength is the world building and believable dialogue.  Some of the political machinations of characters are pretty boring, and the plot doesn’t really begin until page 150 (also really slows down around p. 300), but it’s been a good read before bed and on the train.


Into the Breach by Subset Games (known for FTL: Faster Than Light): really excellent turn-based strategy game, less stressful than FTL but more to my taste.  Chess-like in several ways but with tons of variation due to the various squads you can play as.  Relatively small number of enemy types and missions but they mix in interesting ways and a two-hour playthrough can go by in the blink of an eye.


Duke Ellington: duh.  Just particularly in the mood these days.  I mean come on man.


Neil Luck, British composer: a brilliant madman I recently discovered.  Thinks bigger than just the music, really fun and zany without coming across as gimmicky.  This video got me hooked.  Read some of his writing on a blog too and enjoyed that.





Late Flowerings

I recall reading the following statement from the Wikipedia article of Richard Strauss: “Along with Gustav Mahler, [Strauss] represents the late flowering of German Romanticism after Wagner.”

Fair enough - a good way of putting it. Indeed, I love listening to Strauss for the same reasons I love listening to other German Romantic masters, but on top of those reasons, there’s a bonus to Strauss: a sort of “new-and improved,” boiled-down efficiency afforded to him by his lateness relative to the Beethoven-Wagner arc. Listening to Beethoven entails some listening to Mozart; that is to say, if you’re in the mood for some penetrating romanticism, Beethoven serves it as a sauce on top of a Classical base. Listening to Wagner entails wading through literal hours of sludgy voice leading and heavy-handed leitmotific “development” (insofar as repetition is development). Strauss cuts to the chase, and to put on Salome or Ein Alpensinfonie is to put on a compact, juicy dose of romantic modernism — all the bells and whistles one loves without much fat. The “late flowering” Strauss represents marks a great moment in that particular musical tradition, where Strauss, looking back on the past, picks and chooses his favorite techniques of the old masters and dresses them up, repackages them for an audience who doesn’t want to sift. A “Wagner’s Greatest Hits” album, if you will.

While German Romanticism has come and gone, other traditions are coming ‘round that bend, where the accumulation of early masterpieces affords the creation of refined, retrospective masterpieces. My gut tells me that jazz is not quite there; instead, jazz may be in awkward period after the initial thrust but before the seeds of late flowers blossom. I therefore predict excellent albums resurrecting the best ancestors of jazz a few years from now. Perhaps important centennials (Bird’s being less than a month away at the time of writing) will set the stage, make the time feel right. Right now, my generally low opinion of contemporary jazz comes from the mixed messages sent about the past. Some jazz musicians throw out the baby with the bathwater; they reject past idioms (swing, tonal harmony, blues) without innovating to fill in the gulfs left by removing the DNA of jazz. We can all conjure memories of limp, tepid straight-8ths modal jazz featuring arbitrary forms, unmemorable melodies, and gratuitous cookie-cutter solos. Reject the past, subvert it, fine. But you better put something in its place. On the other hand, puritanical jazz musicians lament the de-emphasis of swing, harmony, and blues a la Ellington, Parker, Monk, etc., but all too often, the music of these contemporary jazz Luddites merely imitates and dilutes the masters they revere. Did you really need to record Inner Urge in 2016 and quote Joe Henderson’s solo to prove that you’re a “student of the music?” Has anyone ever said, “wow, this Charlie Parker cover is so much better than the original!” No. Figure out where you stand, jazz boys, and whatever you do, do it right. There are many pairs of ears that would be receptive to either a) truly innovative, probing music descended from jazz, or b) truly loving, detail-oriented treatments of the great moments of the past, i.e. late flowerings. For what it’s worth, examples of the former do exist, though few and far between. I just heard some of Jacob Garchik’s new big band album Clear Line, which is innovative and subversive: a big band album with no rhythm section (yes, that means no dumb tinkly piano intros, no over-the-top drum fills, no ironically un-interactive solos). Dana Saul’s Ceiling is stunning start-to-finish: real composition, real playing, stylistically unfettered by jazz “best practices.” Innovative, beautiful, and polished. But, I have not yet heard what I would call a late flowering of jazz (or bebop, swing, or whatever, if you want to get specific). I wait eagerly for jazz’s answer to Death and Transfiguration.

The reason the phrase “late flowering” came to mind in the first place actually has nothing to do with music. I think we are currently in a period fertile for late flowerings in video games, despite how quickly the history of video games moves. A decade is an aeon in games, and accordingly, one can look on the watershed games of the 90’s as artifacts of an ancient Golden Age. My most recently completed game, Ghost of Tsushima, has essentially zero innovation on any fundamental level. Yet, it is great. It is a late flowering of the broad “adventure game” formula, essentially a grown-up Zelda game. Late flowerings are especially valuable in games because the main agent of poor aging in games is frustrating carry-overs from the arcade era plus technological limitation. We don’t need finite lives anymore, and 16 colors just doesn’t seem like enough these days. But there is more to what makes Ghost of Tsushima great, for it is not just a piling-on of big, new features. Skyrim pushed the open-world concept to its 2011 limits, and it is surely great and important, but the fact of the matter is that much of The Elder Scrolls is repetitive, artificially bloated, unrefined, and ultimately boring. One wades through Skyrim the way one wades through a Wagner opera: the great moments are enough to keep one sucked in, despite some of the slog. Ghost of Tsushima’s brilliance is a result of its advantage of being able to look back on those old games trim the fat. The world is not overwhelmingly huge, but there are not many empty regions — the nature itself, the wind blowing through the pampas grass and the sun glinting off a decapitated Mongol’s helmet, is beautiful and obviously lovingly crafted. There is not an infinite number of quests, but most quests in the game have some novel story or gameplay element, so the game circumvents the creepy feeling of RPG deja vu. The collectibles only come in a few types, and there’s none of the bullshit of inventory management or encumberment; there’s no frustratingly arcane crafting system. One gets the sense playing the game that the developers respect the player - a fantastic and all-too-rare feeling.

Persona 5 is another perfect example: perhaps the greatest big JRPG of all time if one factors out nostalgia. Hundreds of JRPGs have come along since the first Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, each with its own blend of successful and unsuccessful experiments in gameplay and presentation. FFVII had an engaging story and a generally cool world, but it really dragged during the corridors of random battles. Paper Mario has a timeless and lovely style, but the gameplay is almost trivial. Earthbound is genuinely funny, with excellent style and music, but the graphics don’t exactly hold up today, nor does the relatively uninspired turn-based combat. By contrast, Persona 5 has it all. The art and music is on point, the writing is surprisingly good, even in translation, and the interface generally is smooth, intuitive, and engaging. There’s a healthy dose of the kinds of complex systems some of us love in RPGs (in this case, the creation of new personas, the social links, the “one more” chain attacks), but the systems never get too arbitrary or opaque, nor are they strictly required to play the game. There’s essentially no grinding or throwaway characters, no complicated yet forgettable lore. In other words, Persona 5 is the late flowering of the JRPG because it distills the genre’s strengths and ameliorates or solves its weaknesses.

The Witness is a late flowering of the first-person puzzle game a la Myst. Hollow Knight is the late flowering of the Metroidvania. Hyper Light Drifter is the late flowering of 2D Zelda. None of these games are masterpieces because of innovation; they are masterpieces because of refinement and good judgement.

I wish late flowerings would pop up more in music, as they have in games. At the same time, games, the primary artistic frontier of the early 21st century, tend to lean into nostalgia too much since the artform progresses so quickly: good for these late flowerings but perhaps at the expense of true innovation. I am not sufficiently expert enough in other fields to judge the innovation versus late flowering balance, but it certainly is fascinating to consider. What will be the last great novel? Has it already been written? Could a genius chef innovate say, Italian food, which is so recognizable and beloved for its basics? What is the most innovative garden in the world? Have there been late flowerings of earlier styles of blacksmithing?

Sadly, progress is slow due to the seemingly unending low flame of misery known as COVID-19. Fingers crossed that energy is being stored rather than diffused, so that whenever the floodgates open, there’s a real flood of creativity waiting to burst, not just a dribble.

The futures of jazz and creative music

Still at home. Still lucky enough that COVID-19 hasn’t attacked anyone in my immediate circle, but the recent deaths of two heroes, John Conway and Lee Konitz, make the virus feel like the Grim Reaper. It’s not clear that those two giants were going to make career leaps had the virus not swept them away, so the loss is perhaps not as tragic as the untimely deaths of younger, undiscovered geniuses. The pandemic has compressed the continuous drip of death into a nasty spike, further cementing the fact that we are entering a new era. A big question is, “will Lee Konitz’ career die with Lee Konitz?” which is a way of asking what the future of live and recorded jazz will be once the short-term crisis is ameliorated. For ~70 years, despite many signs of progress, the world has been more stagnant than perhaps was expected. Computer technology is the outlier; if you took away all the screens, how would you know it wasn’t the 1970’s? Or, where are the revolutions in medicine, ecology, psychology, transportation, energy, etc. that should have accompanied the computer revolution? And, even if it is a bit sad to say, jazz has not really gotten better since the death of John Coltrane in 1967. Few titans remain from before then, and the “middle generation” that came of age afterwards has survived on 1) institutional backing and 2) the diminishing possibility of surviving as a gigging jazz musician. Will it really be possible for someone my age to forge a career as a jazz musician the way, say, Sonny Rollins or Dave Liebman did, playing club dates, touring, and/or teaching at jazz colleges? Record deals are ridiculously scarce and maybe not so helpful in the first place; for the time being, there are zero live gigs to be played, and even before COVID, the pickings were rather slim. MSM and Berklee only have so many job openings, and to be honest, I get the sense that jazz colleges aren’t fooling kids into paying exorbitant sums as they used to… probably for the best; the emphasis on college, especially for artists, will likely decline in the coming years.

So what are these brilliant young musicians supposed to do? Many are in debt without skills that pay the bills during a pandemic. I would like to hope that people who are stuck at home are picking up new instruments and that my friends can teach them, but that seems unlikely to be a robust survival plan. Live-streamed concerts fail to capture some essential Dionysian magic, for jazz especially. Home recording is an option for some but certainly not all, and even so, then what? Bandcamp/SoundCloud release to a few dozen people? I am asking all these questions without having answers. I have predicted to friends that the next frontier in creative (American) music will be computational, at the intersection of videogames and music as we know it now. Just as American jazz picked up the torch of enjoyable yet creative/progressive tonal music from European Romanticism in the early 20th century, composers, programmers, and designers will probably take the torch from jazz as we go deeper into the 21st. Common practice European classical music became institutional museum music; it only survives as such, and its direct descendants in the classical academic world are thriving in certain sense, but at the expense of scale and accessibility. It is not hard to find the corresponding story for jazz. The “deal with the devil” that jazz made with educational institutions safeguarded it from totally languishing into obscurity, but probably also sealed its fate as eventual museum music from the 20th century. Wynton Marsalis leads this project, and though many of my peers disapprove of his work, I actually think it’s for the best, and probably necessary for the survival of jazz. My approval of this project is partly rooted in my prediction that the up-and-coming punk geniuses of music will gravitate towards aforementioned computational formats the same way that those kinds of kids gravitated towards jazz improvisation in the last handful of decades. Wynton pushes to exalt jazz because as a historical phenomenon, it has yet to fully enjoy the respect it deserves. Part of his claim is that the major arc of jazz is complete; the Bach-Mozart-Beethoven-Wagner legacy may have its jazz answer in Armstrong-Parker-Coltrane-Marsalis. Indeed, there exist significant musicians in their respective styles after both of those arcs, but the trajectories are inward rather than outward. One can argue that Wagner set in motion the impending doom of tonality and enabled the impulses towards abstraction, esotericism, and ultra-specialization, Babbitt being the ultimate flowering of that impulse. The story in jazz is of course different but comparable. The early progressive albums of Marsalis, like Black Codes, feel like mature saturations of the ideas of the mid 1960’s, suggesting that other jazz artists should find other paths, outside that dominant central culture. Herbie and Wayne had done a good job of changing with the times while others basically kept to their old scripts and rode the waves of their earlier careers. (Joe Henderson showed some reflections of the 1970s, for example, but really he was playing 60’s jazz until he died. Keith Jarrett and Paul Bley survived by putting piano improvisational genius on display without deviating too far from standard practice; Barry Harris, Kenny Barron, and others were even more conservative but the same idea applies.) Despite the successful ventures of The Bad Plus, Eric Lewis, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Logan Richardson, and other jazz artists who drew on rock and popular music from after the 1950s, it may (unfortunately, to some) be the case that jazz improvisation, at least the theoretical descendant of bebop, is best suited to the song structures of the era it came from. In other words, the arc of post-bebop is finite, and was doomed to wither in the 1970’s and beyond, not to be resuscitated by rock, hip hop, or whatever. Cuban and Brazilian musics were, then, lucky pairings. But that is not to say jazz improvisation is done forever — one can still play in the old styles, and who knows? perhaps Middle Eastern music or some other musical culture will provide new soil for jazz to till. The point is that it’s likely time for jazz to crystallize its history and start transitioning away from a punk artform toward an exalted, institutionally supported one.

I think you get the picture if you know a little classical music history and a little jazz history. Getting back to the social/economic point, I wonder if there will be a “fork” among my friends and peers: will some stick to traditions, cling to jazz and hopefully survive off of gigs and maybe some institutional backing down the road, while others move towards other formats of musicmaking that are less traditional but more cutting-edge or at least more connected to modern technology? If this split happens, both positions will be tough. The competition for traditional jazz gigs, tours, and teaching positions will surely be fierce and defeating. On the other hand, if progressive music moves towards computation, games, VR, or whatever, those of us who spent years on instrumental technique and historical listening may feel that our skills are not relevant enough, that we “missed the boat.” There will be successes and failures on both sides. We can only hope that the peaks are very high and that the valleys are not too low.

COVID-19 and Bartok

At the time of writing, late March 2020, the world is in an unignorable state. The novel coronavirus COVID-19 has reached the level of pandemic: thousands have died and probably hundreds of thousands are sick, and those numbers will exponentially increase in the near future. New York City is in pseudo-lockdown; we are encouraged to practice “social distancing” and the vast majority are either working from home or not working at all.

A major discontinuity in global society reminds us of the paradox of the size of the world. On one hand, the world feels small right now: a single virus has taken control of almost every corner of the globe and it is thus easier than ever before to empathize across vast social and geographical distances. The nature of exponential growth is such that no number is too large to conquer: unfettered, the spread of such a virus across all of humanity is just a matter of time, and not that much time, either. On the other hand, the world is still huge: efforts to “flatten the curve” will likely mean that despite the infectiousness of this virus, something like 1% of people in a given area will get it, and about 1% of those will die, meaning 9,999 of every 10,000 people will be more or less OK at the end of this. Personally, I still don’t know anyone with coronavirus, and I would not be surprised if nobody in my circle ever gets it. It is hard to mentally hold both of these size-observations at once. I hope my prediction about 9,999/10,000 being OK comes true; I try not to entertain the thought of a total global meltdown…

Focusing on musicians, I feel for those who previously went all in on playing live and especially with others. I am lucky that much of my musical energy is spent alone and that I don’t rely solely on live performance for income. For the less fortunate, I can only hope that the current restrictions breed creative solutions…I look forward to the outpouring of music at the end of this ordeal. Now is a good time to buy albums for a change, and to get back into listening to music at home, not just during commutes and exercises. I guess in such uncertain times, one might as well gamble on optimism.

///

Today is one of the three days between the birthdays of two of the biggest Bs: Bach (March 21) and Bartok (March 25). I have been playing through Bartok’s second string quartet on the piano, trying to get into the details and all that. The second quartet forms a natural pairing with the first; those are the “romantic” quartets that come before the darker, harsher third and the progressive rock of the fourth and fifth. I had always preferred the first; it is easier to follow and I claim that as Bartok’s first masterpiece, it lays out a proof of concept or “abstract” for the rest of his career: a movement of post-Wagnerian heavy romanticism, a movement of uneasy musical symmetry, and a movement of raw folk energy. But now the second quartet is growing on me. It mixes those three colors rather than separates them by movement, and the romanticism/symmetry blend is particularly gorgeous. In the first movement, chord motion is so frequent and continuous that is impossible to hear a key center for more than a moment, and the keys of motives indicate large-scale architecture more than the fleeting tonalities do. Chords with symmetrical “cores” (for instance, an augmented triad plus one extra note a half step from a chord tone) are always close to their transpositions and inversions, and these structures afford Bartok much harmonic agility while also homogenizing the general sound of the sections, so that dissonant chords don’t “pop out” of a texture of simpler consonant ones. In other words, he manages to import all of the wonderful structural features of more traditionally tonal music into a mysterious world. This is different than the contemporaneous composers Schoenberg and Webern in their “free atonality” period. Those composers sought to express totally new ideas with totally new machinery, perhaps at the expense of a coherent system (12-tone music was the system that came about when Schoenberg felt too adrift in atonal freedom). That music speaks for itself; it is beautiful and important, but Bartok showed, at the same time, that one did not need to throw out the baby with the bathwater, so to speak. Old structures could be wrought into new ones; romanticism and atonality could flirt with each other and compromise.

The timing of the second string quartet is noteworthy, too. It was written amidst the throes of World War I, a far more terrible tragedy than COVID-19 (unless, God forbid, things get shockingly bad in April and beyond). The War shut down Bartok’s ethnomusicological expeditions but also probably forced him to really focus and extract as much as he could from his material. That shows in the quartet, where ideas are juiced to the max and little moments appear and reappear with the subtlest variations. An inspiring message: “You have enough! Make it work!” In the score, I am impressed with the organization of the rehearsal numbers: each labeled chunk clearly features a single idea or mechanism, so that a whole movement is a well-fastened chain of little episodes. There are macro-forms on top, but I find it easiest to listen and admire one chapter at a time. Last thing I noticed: the voice crossings are brave and omnipresent! Flies in the face of the traditional wisdom…

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Stay inside and listen to music. Work with what you have and be romantic even in dark times.

Atmospheres of Charles Mingus

The jazz composer and bassist Charles Mingus is one of my heroes. Mingus, Duke Ellington, and Thelonious Monk form a triad of geniuses, arguably the best composers in jazz history. Wayne Shorter could make a strong claim to be of that echelon, but to my taste, his music doesn’t quite have the divine perfection of Duke, the infinite replayability of Monk, or the scope of Mingus. Shorter, Strayhorn, and Ornette might be the triad just beneath Ellington, Monk, and Mingus - better than everyone below but ever-so-slightly south of the tip top three. Oliver Nelson deserves a very high spot, as does Count Basie…. Duke Pearson is incredible, but…

Arbitrary categorization aside, Mingus has been on my mind and in my ears during recent weeks. I heard for the first time Let My Children Hear Music, a towering orchestral jazz album that Mingus thought of as a jewel in his crown. I also had my first experience with Changes One, which doesn’t possess quite the grandeur of Let My Children Hear Music but contains a definitive recording of “Duke Ellington’s Sound of Love,” one of the absolute greatest Mingus compositions, and features beautiful playing by a smaller ensemble throughout. Ah Um is probably the most “perfect” Mingus album - it is as clean as his bluesy music can be, tightly arranged and executed from start to finish. As masterful as that album is, it is somewhat atypical for Mingus because of its perfection. In contrast with Ellington and Monk, the majority of Mingus’ recordings/compositions are not sparkling and pristine. Even Ellington’s lesser-known albums are composed flawlessly; and except for on a few early recordings with deficient band support, Monk was incapable of anything but the highest level of swing and the most brilliant tunes. But Mingus produced many flawed masterpieces. Large-ensemble orchestrations are occasionally clumsy; big, episodic song forms sometimes lose steam; some of his linear bebop writing feels a bit forced. But still, Mingus is the heaviest of the heavy, and the flaws in his music beg the question ‘why?’ or more concretely, ‘how is this still so good?’

My best answer is atmosphere, one of the most difficult qualities of music to master and compose deliberately. There are endless melodies that are good enough on their own; one could competently learn jazz harmony (from the perspective of composition, at least) in a matter of months; with enough years of practice, any musician could learn to swing. In other words, the basic theoretical/technical components of jazz are staunchly within reach for a fairly disciplined non-genius. But merely putting those components together doesn’t lift the music to that higher plane where one deeply feels a specific aesthetic. By contrast, when musical memories surface of the supreme jazz composers, I’d guess that what comes to mind is a set of emotional/spiritual atmospheres rather than specific moments.

Examples:

  • Duke Ellington’s music, especially the earlier music that predates the Civil Rights movement, comes across as holy and exalted, living proof of graceful black excellence in an era all-too-rife with prejudice. The urgent blues aspects of Duke are counterbalanced with a certain lightness and restraint, almost a fanciness that comes from economical arranging. I have a mental image of the atmosphere of Duke Ellington - the musical equivalent of morning light coming through church windows; warmth hitting the back of the neck.

  • Billy Strayhorn is, in general, easy to tell apart from Duke, for atmospheric reasons. To me, the essence of Strayhorn is the essence of New York City on a rainy night, perhaps being unsure exactly where to go after a drink or two and some secondhand smoke. Strayhorn’s dark-tinged ambiguity complements Duke’s bright clarity.

  • One does not need to be told which tune is being played to envision the atmosphere midway through a Thelonious Monk set. All of his tunes and all of his bands swing in that jaunty, jagged way - lots of space between the notes, lots of kinetic energy.

  • Wayne Shorter’s classic 60’s albums are imbued with a magical blend of fantasy and blues - subtle and impressionistic harmony underneath rather cute melodies. Swinging fairy tales. One hears big rumbly thunder and also small, ginger creatures in the woods.

But Mingus, to me, is even deeper than all of those composers when it comes to atmosphere. The above surely have diverse, wide-ranging output, but I can nail down a relatively slim set of atmospheric characteristics for each. Mingus, on the other hand, actively composed with a wide palette of distinct atmospheres. That is to say he could not only conjure up a specific ambiance underneath the melody, harmony, and rhythm of a musical moment, but he could juxtapose, layer, and blend many of them according to what he thought the music needed. Mingus possessed a higher-order version of an already rare musical skill. This facet of his genius is most proudly displayed in his biggest, dirtiest works. In fact, the multi-atmospheric abilities of Mingus are probably least pronounced in the comparatively clean Ah Um. But Let My Children Hear Music is quite the ride through subareas within classical music, small- and large-ensemble jazz, and the blues; the occasional clunkiness may indeed be unavoidable considering the points A, B, C, … on the album. Mingus Moves is relatively consistent, but Pithecanthropus Erectus and Charles Mingus and Friends in Concert go all over the place, dragging the listener as if by a high-speed time-travelling spaceship. The source of his atmospheric technique is not entirely clear (that’s part of what’s so mysterious and magical about it); one is tempted to point to orchestration, but it really is so much more than that - if anything, it’s a nose for sniffing out perfect orchestrations to complement harmony and melody, plus the cultural/historical awareness to predict how various layers of the music will be received. But that doesn’t really cover it, and probably nothing could. Atmospheric composition is certainly a skill that cannot be taught, maybe one that cannot be learned…. In any case, Mingus’ magic, to summarize, is how he paints with a deeper brush than just melody/rhythm/harmony/etc. - he conjures whole atmospheres, environments one can inhabit rather than merely hear. On top of that, he plays with more than a single atmosphere per composition or album; there are so many rich musical locations he builds, sometimes two or more right on top of each other.

The question then becomes, “how do I listen to this?” Does one try to mentally hold the individual atmospheres for comparison, or does one simply accept each moment and the transits between them, no matter how bewildering? Is it worth trying to untangle the thorny, layered moments, or is it better to let them hit with full astonishing force? Of course, there is no single answer. But if one answer is chosen at a time, it can be adjusted later! That is to say, Mingus is especially rewarding for the listener who is willing to go back for seconds and thirds. A first listening may be a “dragged along” type experience, but the second time through, one could choose to focus on just a few elements at a time, perhaps listening from the bass chair, for instance. What’s amazing is that by focusing on subgroups of the ensemble, one can be transported to vastly diverse places: perhaps bass and drums chug along swinging while the piano and saxophone yell the blues, but the big band behind them is in some bizzaro bebop version of Vienna! The giants of music all reward repeated listening, but in jazz, only Mingus hits so many atmospheric destinations. My final proof of this is that I rarely identify myself as being in a “Mingus mood,” which is not the case for other composers. Sometimes, a little Monk will hit the spot and it’s obvious that that’s the case, but choosing to listen to Mingus comes from a desire to be intrigued/challenged/amazed, rather than a subconscious hunger for a certain atmosphere.

In his ability to create, move between, and layer atmospheres, Mingus reminds me of another great Charles of American music, namely Charles Ives. Anyone who knows Ives knows what I mean: what other music has parallel substrates of marching band, Beethoven, and New England transcendentalism all at once? Someday, someone should record an album of Ives and Mingus covers!

I think the very best video games have palpable atmospheres, too. Besides controls, that’s what makes it fun to just be in the game. Atmosphere is a big difference between the masterpiece Chrono Trigger and something more generic, like one of the less-than-perfect Dragon Quest games. Music is obviously a huge part of game atmosphere. The track “Aquatic Ambiance” from Donkey Kong Country is the only thing that saves the water levels (where the controls aspect of atmosphere is ruined). I’m nearly done playing Kentucky Route Zero, a newer, highly aesthetic narrative game that’s all about atmosphere. That’s what makes it.

Three recent enjoyments: Harold Land, a Bach Prelude, Cryptovolans

It’s early 2020 and I am in a relatively calm period after a dynamic one. I recently returned from Korea and Japan, I just started renting a piano, and I’ve been spending time teaching and learning about mathematics.

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I visited a woodwind store in Japan and picked up the new 100th-anniversary Florida Super Tone Master Otto Link mouthpiece. Slight frustrations with my old mouthpiece led me to try new ones in the first place, but once I started began to replacing my equipment, I got to thinking about my favorite saxophone sounds and what they possess that I lack. The tenor saxophonist Harold Land has always occupied a special place for me; he is vastly underrated and underrepresented, but this makes him a ripe influence for the picking. The slight tragedy of his career is that once John Coltrane ascended, his impact on Land was so great that some part of Land’s natural style'/personality got swallowed up. Land’s genius came to be in 1950’s bebop, and the subtlety and flexibility he brought to that style didn’t fit the same with the modal style of the 1960’s and beyond. A similar trajectory holds for his tone: in the 50’s, with Clifford Brown, the bluesy, textured core of his sound was tempered by a certain coolness; he rarely pushed past mezzo-forte, his tonguing is light but consistent, he ghosts notes at the beginnings and ends of phrases so that his lines are like slick fish popping out from the surface of the water but then sliding back under without a splash. But once Coltrane’s influence took over, Land’s tone often came across as over-exerted or uncontrolled at higher dynamics. He replaced his bluesy swagger for a bluesy screaming urgency, but others did the latter better. Virtually no one could touch him on the former, though! My biggest hope in purchasing a dark metal mouthpiece was to emulate Land’s multidimensional tone from the 50s: a semi-roughened center that sits comfortably in medium dynamics, plus some softly singing overtones that surround the dark core with a halo.

One of my favorite recordings featuring Harold Land is Study in Brown from 1955. The track Jacqui is a personal favorite that features the best of Land’s bebop style. The A sections are standard B-flat major bebop fare, but the bridge is a blues in B major, a key so rarely heard in bebop. Land takes a perfect mini-solo over the end of the first bridge; the foreign key poses no challenge. Notice how his dynamics mirror the contour of his lines and how both of his phrases finish with the most delicious cherry-on-top notes. The soft notes still pop and swing; the loud notes flirt with pathos without going overboard. It’s incredibly tasteful.

Land’s chorus after Clifford Brown’s solo is similarly perfect. He has the best turns in the game; rather than using a triplet turn to correct the parity of a bebop line or to cheaply signify bebop authenticity, Land plays turns to highlight a beat, to intensify an inflection point within a line. I love how each phrase of the first 16 bars inches up his range. Track the highest note of each line until the bridge, and you’ll hear Land turning up the heat a single notch at a time. Lastly, the variance in rhythmic position of the beginnings and ends of lines is perfectly balanced. I classify (4/4 swing) phrases as beginning or ending on the odd downbeat, odd upbeat, even downbeat, or even upbeat, so that there are 16 possible combination of start and end. All too often I hear the same pairs over and over: beginning players almost always start phrases on odd downbeats; these days, I hear many players my age repeatedly ending phrases on odd upbeats, which is really only swinging in moderation. Land mixes it up, and that variation imbues his playing with the supremely important element of bebop surprise. (Good rappers know this well!)

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When my new piano was delivered, I made a beeline for Bach. I instantly discovered my piano-playing fingers had atrophied to basically nothing! The only benefit: when one sucks, one must play Bach very slowly, so every moment really sinks in. I rekindled my love affair with the A major prelude from WTC Book I. To me, this short piece exemplifies one of Bach’s great miracles: the thematic material strongly keeps its identity throughout yet seems infinitely mutable as it moves through keys and voices. In contrast to many fugues and other contrapuntally dense/imitative Bach pieces, this prelude always has the spotlight on one voice and one voice only. The way the other two move out of the way for this is flawless. The balance of steps and leaps is similarly flawless. I find that both staccato and legato renditions of this piece work; usually I gravitate towards bouncier, pluckier Bach, but these lines have a certain passionate liquidity when played connected. The best moment of the piece is probably the appearance of the theme in the relative minor, almost exactly halfway though. The chromatic notes are so good, and the way one voice launches another is totally engrossing.

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I have plunged deeply into SoundCloud at various times, and perhaps my most prized discovery is Cryptovolans, who can only be described as a MIDI genius. CV’s magisterial album Global Understanding is an excellent place to start. The music lives somewhere between an obscure JRPG aoundtrack, advanced prog rock, and music by a hyper-complex composer like Ferneyhough, except that in stark contrast to the latter two categories, this music sounds good. It is no less bewildering, though! Half of the fun of this album is mentally gripping an individual moment of beauty, like finding a shell on the shore; the other half of the fun is being unpredictably punched over and over again until you are forced to submit and let the music steamroll.

I have endless admiration and respect for Cryptovolans and other similar composers. I have nowhere close to this level of MIDI skill, and the difference is really one of kind, not just degree. That is, I cannot even imagine how one undertakes a composition project like this, and that mystery draws me in even deeper. Are algorithms at play? Randomness? Intuition? “Typing” versus “performing?” I couldn’t tell you, but if I could, I wouldn’t. This music is proof of the power of computers and numbers for classical composition! It is moreover proof that the musical/aesthetic soil that fed my generation is sprouting some beautiful, novel, astounding artists. Children who spent hours and hours interfacing with computers through videogames and other programs have their own kind of classical training!