All language subtitles for Jazz.S01E09.The.Adventure.1955.to.1961.1080p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP2.0.H.264-Kitsune_track3_[eng]

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:25,462 --> 00:00:27,264 A LOT OF YOUNGER MUSICIANS 2 00:00:27,289 --> 00:00:30,125 WERE HANGING AROUND WITH ELVIN JONES, AND THEY WERE TALKING ABOUT, 3 00:00:30,250 --> 00:00:32,624 "MAN, YOU KNOW, WE HEAR THE INTENSITY THAT YOU GUYS PLAYED 4 00:00:32,749 --> 00:00:34,125 "WHEN YOU WERE PLAYING WITH COLTRANE. 5 00:00:34,250 --> 00:00:35,666 "WHAT WAS THAT LIKE? 6 00:00:35,791 --> 00:00:37,624 HOW DO YOU, LIKE, PLAY WITH THAT KIND OF INTENSITY?" 7 00:00:37,749 --> 00:00:39,624 AND ELVIN LOOKS AT THEM AND SAYS, 8 00:00:39,749 --> 00:00:42,958 "YOU GOT TO BE WILLING TO DIE WITH THE MOTHERFUCKER." 9 00:00:43,797 --> 00:00:45,839 AND THEN THEY STARTED LAUGHING LIKE KIDS DO 10 00:00:45,864 --> 00:00:47,139 WAITING FOR THE PUNCHLINE, 11 00:00:47,164 --> 00:00:52,291 AND THEN THEY REALIZE SOMEWHERE IN THE MIDDLE OF THAT, HE WAS SERIOUS. 12 00:00:53,010 --> 00:00:54,843 HOW MANY PEOPLE DO YOU KNOW 13 00:00:55,005 --> 00:00:58,338 THAT ARE WILLING TO DIE PERIOD, DIE WITH ANYBODY? 14 00:00:58,463 --> 00:01:00,547 AND WHEN YOU LISTEN TO THOSE RECORDS, 15 00:01:00,672 --> 00:01:02,672 THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT THEY SOUND LIKE. 16 00:01:02,838 --> 00:01:08,171 I MEAN, THAT THEY WOULD DIE FOR EACH OTHER. 17 00:01:25,296 --> 00:01:28,421 IN THE YEARS THAT FOLLOWED CHARLIE PARKER'S DEATH, 18 00:01:28,547 --> 00:01:34,838 AMERICANS FOUND THEMSELVES LIVING IN AN ANXIOUS GOLDEN AGE. 19 00:01:35,005 --> 00:01:39,255 THEY SAW THE REELECTION OF THE OLDEST PRESIDENT IN THEIR HISTORY 20 00:01:39,380 --> 00:01:45,547 AND THE ELECTION OF THE YOUNGEST. 21 00:01:45,672 --> 00:01:49,213 THE BROOKLYN DODGERS LEFT NEW YORK FOR LOS ANGELES, 22 00:01:49,338 --> 00:01:51,213 SCIENCE CONQUERED POLIO, 23 00:01:51,338 --> 00:02:00,171 AND THE SOVIETS SENT THE FIRST SATELLITE HURTLING INTO SPACE. 24 00:02:00,296 --> 00:02:05,005 BLACK AMERICANS INTENSIFIED THEIR DEMAND FOR CIVIL RIGHTS, 25 00:02:05,171 --> 00:02:09,838 INSISTING ON INTEGRATED SCHOOLS AND PUBLIC FACILITIES, 26 00:02:09,964 --> 00:02:16,505 REFUSING TO MOVE TO THE BACK OF THE BUS. 27 00:02:16,630 --> 00:02:19,505 JAZZ OF EVERY KIND SURVIVED, 28 00:02:19,672 --> 00:02:22,755 BUT IT STRUGGLED TO FIND AN AUDIENCE. 29 00:02:22,880 --> 00:02:26,838 BENNY GOODMAN PLAYED JAZZ ONLY OCCASIONALLY NOW, 30 00:02:27,005 --> 00:02:29,797 PREFERRING TO PERFORM CLASSICAL MUSIC. 31 00:02:29,922 --> 00:02:35,380 DUKE ELLINGTON AND COUNT BASIE AND DIZZY GILLESPIE WERE STILL ON THE ROAD, 32 00:02:35,505 --> 00:02:40,213 BUT THEY FOUND WORK HARDER AND HARDER TO COME BY. 33 00:02:40,338 --> 00:02:43,088 LOUIS ARMSTRONG WOULD FALL OUT OF FAVOR 34 00:02:43,213 --> 00:02:44,713 WITH MANY BLACK AMERICANS 35 00:02:44,838 --> 00:02:49,672 THEN RISK HIS WHOLE CAREER ON A MATTER OF PRINCIPLE. 36 00:02:49,797 --> 00:02:54,838 MILES DAVIS' BRILLIANT MUSIC AND ARROGANT SELF-CONFIDENCE 37 00:02:55,005 --> 00:02:59,005 WOULD MAKE HIM AN ICON FOR YOUNG BLACKS AND WHITES ALIKE, 38 00:02:59,129 --> 00:03:05,005 BUT SUCCESS DID LITTLE TO SUBDUE HIS INNER DEMONS. 39 00:03:05,171 --> 00:03:08,547 MEMBERS OF THE "COOL," MOSTLY WHITE WEST COAST SCHOOL 40 00:03:08,672 --> 00:03:11,672 CONTINUED TO DO WELL ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES, 41 00:03:11,797 --> 00:03:15,296 AND PARTLY IN REACTION TO THEIR POPULARITY, 42 00:03:15,421 --> 00:03:18,630 A HARD-DRIVING DRUMMER FROM PITTSBURGH STARTED A GROUP 43 00:03:18,755 --> 00:03:24,838 AIMED AT BRINGING JAZZ BACK TO ITS AFRICAN-AMERICAN ROOTS. 44 00:03:24,964 --> 00:03:27,088 MEANWHILE, AGAINST FORMIDABLE ODDS 45 00:03:27,213 --> 00:03:29,964 AND IN THE FACE OF WITHERING CRITICISM, 46 00:03:30,088 --> 00:03:33,088 A HANDFUL OF YOUNG INNOVATORS WOULD EMERGE. 47 00:03:33,213 --> 00:03:35,463 THEY PUSHED THE BOUNDARIES OF THE MUSIC 48 00:03:35,588 --> 00:03:39,088 FAR BEYOND WHERE EVEN PARKER AND THE BEBOPPERS HAD GONE, 49 00:03:39,213 --> 00:03:42,296 UNTIL CONVENTIONAL NOTIONS OF RHYTHM AND HARMONY 50 00:03:42,421 --> 00:03:48,505 AND AGREED-UPON CHORD SEQUENCES HAD ALL BEEN ABANDONED. 51 00:03:48,630 --> 00:03:51,713 THE MUSIC WAS CHANGING FASTER THAN EVER NOW, 52 00:03:51,838 --> 00:03:54,463 BRANCHING OUT IN UNEXPECTED WAYS, 53 00:03:54,588 --> 00:03:57,380 BREEDING FACTIONS AND SOMETIMES BITTER QUARRELS 54 00:03:57,505 --> 00:04:03,922 ABOUT ARTISTIC FREEDOM AND THE VERY NATURE OF CREATIVITY. 55 00:04:04,046 --> 00:04:08,213 THE DEFINITION OF WHAT WAS JAZZ AND WHAT WAS NOT 56 00:04:08,338 --> 00:04:11,838 BEGAN TO BLUR. 57 00:04:12,005 --> 00:04:14,713 IN THE YEARS THAT FOLLOWED CHARLIE PARKER'S DEATH, 58 00:04:14,838 --> 00:04:19,880 JAZZ WOULD STRUGGLE TO EMBRACE IT ALL. 59 00:04:20,005 --> 00:04:21,964 WHEN WE TALK ABOUT MUSIC, 60 00:04:22,088 --> 00:04:23,964 THE REASON WE USE TERMS THAT SOUND VAGUE 61 00:04:24,088 --> 00:04:26,630 IS NOT BECAUSE THERE'S ANYTHING VAGUE ABOUT MUSIC, 62 00:04:26,755 --> 00:04:30,505 BUT BECAUSE MUSIC EXPRESSES HUMAN EXPERIENCE SO SPECIFICALLY, 63 00:04:30,630 --> 00:04:32,005 IN SUCH SPECIFIC WAYS, 64 00:04:32,129 --> 00:04:35,672 THAT WHEN YOU ATTEMPT TO FIND LANGUAGE TO DESCRIBE THAT, 65 00:04:35,797 --> 00:04:37,171 THE WORDS FALL SHORT. 66 00:04:37,296 --> 00:04:39,672 WHAT'S FALLING SHORT IN THAT EQUATION IS LANGUAGE, 67 00:04:39,797 --> 00:04:41,296 NOT THE MUSIC. 68 00:04:41,421 --> 00:04:43,463 THE MUSIC EXPRESSES THINGS ABOUT HUMAN EXPERIENCE 69 00:04:43,588 --> 00:04:45,713 THAT CANNOT BE EXPRESSED ANY OTHER WAY. 70 00:04:45,838 --> 00:04:56,005 THAT'S WHY IT'S SO IMPORTANT. 71 00:05:05,630 --> 00:05:07,505 IN 1955, 72 00:05:07,630 --> 00:05:11,547 A BLIND PERFORMER FROM ALBANY, GEORGIA, NAMED RAY CHARLES 73 00:05:11,672 --> 00:05:14,672 DID SOMETHING FEW OTHER ARTISTS HAD EVER DARED TO DO. 74 00:05:14,797 --> 00:05:16,672 ♪♪ WOMAN... ♪♪ 75 00:05:16,797 --> 00:05:19,005 HE BLENDED JAZZ AND BLUES 76 00:05:19,129 --> 00:05:23,672 WITH THE SACRED MUSIC OF THE SANCTIFIED CHURCH. 77 00:05:23,797 --> 00:05:25,630 ♪♪ THAT'S BECAUSE ♪♪ 78 00:05:25,755 --> 00:05:28,171 ♪♪ I GOT A WOMAN ♪♪ 79 00:05:28,338 --> 00:05:30,005 ♪♪ WAY OVER TOWN ♪♪ 80 00:05:30,171 --> 00:05:32,171 ♪♪ GOOD TO ME ♪♪ 81 00:05:32,296 --> 00:05:34,129 ♪♪ YES, I HAVE... ♪♪ 82 00:05:34,255 --> 00:05:38,463 SOME DENOUNCED THE RESULT AS BLASPHEMOUS, "DEVIL'S MUSIC," 83 00:05:38,588 --> 00:05:41,797 BUT BLACK TEENAGERS FLOCKED TO HEAR IT, 84 00:05:41,922 --> 00:05:44,838 AND I GOT A WOMAN SHOT TO THE TOP 85 00:05:45,005 --> 00:05:46,838 OF THE RHYTHM AND BLUES CHART. 86 00:05:47,005 --> 00:05:50,088 ♪♪ SHE'S A KIND OF FRIEND INDEED ♪♪ 87 00:05:50,213 --> 00:05:54,088 RAY CHARLES' BRAND OF MUSIC BECAME KNOWN AS "SOUL." 88 00:05:54,213 --> 00:05:56,046 ♪♪ SHE'S GOOD TO ME♪ 89 00:05:56,171 --> 00:05:57,964 ♪♪ YES, I HAVE ♪♪ 90 00:05:58,088 --> 00:06:00,255 ♪♪ SHE SAVES HER LOVIN' ♪♪ 91 00:06:00,380 --> 00:06:02,421 ♪♪ EARLY IN THE MORNIN' ♪♪ 92 00:06:02,547 --> 00:06:04,255 ♪♪ JUST FOR ME ♪♪ 93 00:06:04,380 --> 00:06:06,421 ♪♪ OH, YES ♪♪ 94 00:06:06,547 --> 00:06:08,338 ♪♪ HEY, I GOT A WOMAN ♪♪ 95 00:06:08,463 --> 00:06:10,129 ♪♪ WAY 'CROSS TOWN... ♪♪ 96 00:06:10,255 --> 00:06:13,213 SOME WHITES WERE LISTENING TO SOUL MUSIC, TOO, 97 00:06:13,338 --> 00:06:18,046 INCLUDING A ONE-TIME TRUCK DRIVER BORN IN TUPELO, MISSISSIPPI. 98 00:06:18,171 --> 00:06:20,922 ♪♪ I--I--I--I--I'M HER LOVIN' MAN ♪♪ 99 00:06:21,046 --> 00:06:24,880 NOW WHITE TEENAGERS HAD A NEW DANCE MUSIC OF THEIR OWN. 100 00:06:25,005 --> 00:06:27,713 THEY CALLED IT ROCK AND ROLL, 101 00:06:27,838 --> 00:06:29,713 AND THE AUDIENCE FOR JAZZ, 102 00:06:29,838 --> 00:06:32,338 ONCE THE MOST POPULAR MUSIC IN AMERICA, 103 00:06:32,463 --> 00:06:34,505 SHRANK STILL FURTHER. 104 00:06:34,672 --> 00:06:37,547 ♪♪ I GOT A WOMAN ♪♪ 105 00:06:37,672 --> 00:06:40,296 ♪♪ WAY OVER TOWN, THAT'S ♪♪ 106 00:06:40,421 --> 00:06:42,838 ♪♪ GOOD TO ME ♪♪ 107 00:06:43,005 --> 00:06:49,380 ♪♪ GOOD TO ME ♪♪ 108 00:06:49,505 --> 00:06:52,463 BUT FOR THOSE WHO STAYED WITH JAZZ, 109 00:06:52,588 --> 00:06:58,547 THE MUSIC WOULD NEVER BE MORE THRILLING. 110 00:06:58,672 --> 00:07:01,630 THERE ARE MANY DIFFERENT TYPES OF MUSICIANS 111 00:07:01,755 --> 00:07:03,630 WITH DIFFERENT TALENTS. 112 00:07:03,755 --> 00:07:06,129 LIKE, ONE MUSICIAN MIGHT BE ABLE TO REALLY HEAR HARMONY, 113 00:07:06,255 --> 00:07:08,129 ANOTHER MUSICIAN MIGHT BE ABLE TO PLAY REALLY FAST, 114 00:07:08,255 --> 00:07:09,713 ANOTHER ONE MIGHT HAVE A GREAT SOUND, 115 00:07:09,838 --> 00:07:13,296 ANOTHER ONE MIGHT HAVE A TREMENDOUS PERSONALITY THAT'S VERY UNIQUE, 116 00:07:13,421 --> 00:07:15,505 ANOTHER ONE MIGHT JUST SWING HARD, 117 00:07:15,630 --> 00:07:18,255 AND SOME MUSICIANS' TALENT IS IN KNOWING OTHER PEOPLE, 118 00:07:18,380 --> 00:07:21,005 AND THEY CAN PLAY, AND WHEN YOU HEAR THEM PLAY, 119 00:07:21,129 --> 00:07:23,838 YOU HEAR THE SOUND OF A LOT OF PEOPLE IN THEIR PLAYING. 120 00:07:24,005 --> 00:07:26,255 OTHER MUSICIANS PLAY, AND YOU HEAR NEUROSIS. 121 00:07:26,380 --> 00:07:27,755 BUT IT'S GREAT, YOU KNOW. 122 00:07:27,880 --> 00:07:29,672 OTHERS PLAY, YOU HEAR TREMENDOUS FEAR, 123 00:07:29,838 --> 00:07:31,171 BUT YOU HEAR THEM CONFRONTING IT. 124 00:07:31,338 --> 00:07:34,713 SO IN JAZZ MUSIC, WE HAVE MANY DIFFERENT TYPES OF MUSICIANS. 125 00:07:34,838 --> 00:07:38,838 AND THE MUSIC IS POWERFUL FOR ANY TYPE OF PERSON. 126 00:07:38,964 --> 00:07:41,171 AND SONNY ROLLINS IS THE TYPE OF MUSICIAN 127 00:07:41,338 --> 00:07:42,922 THAT'S CONSTANTLY QUESTIONING HIMSELF. 128 00:07:48,171 --> 00:07:50,797 SONNY ROLLINS IS A TITAN. 129 00:07:50,922 --> 00:07:55,547 HE HAS THAT EBULLIENCE THAT I ASSOCIATE WITH LOUIS ARMSTRONG, 130 00:07:55,672 --> 00:08:01,296 AND I THINK VERY FEW MUSICIANS HAVE THAT. 131 00:08:01,421 --> 00:08:04,088 BUT SONNY IS AN OLD-STYLE MUSICIAN 132 00:08:04,213 --> 00:08:06,797 IN THE SENSE THAT HE DISTRUSTS RECORDS. 133 00:08:06,922 --> 00:08:08,505 HE DOESN'T ENJOY RECORDING. 134 00:08:08,630 --> 00:08:10,672 HE BELIEVES THAT RECORDS ARE BASICALLY COMMERCIALS 135 00:08:10,797 --> 00:08:12,505 TO BRING PEOPLE INTO THE CONCERTS. 136 00:08:12,630 --> 00:08:14,505 THAT'S WHERE THE MUSIC REALLY TAKES PLACE. 137 00:08:14,630 --> 00:08:17,505 HE'S A LIVE PERFORMER WHO LIKES TO RESPOND TO THE MOMENT. 138 00:08:17,630 --> 00:08:21,005 BUT HE'S SUCH AN HONEST MUSICIAN THAT IF HE'S NOT INSPIRED, 139 00:08:21,129 --> 00:08:24,505 HE WON'T SIMPLY PLAY BY ROTE THE WAY MOST MUSICIANS WILL 140 00:08:24,630 --> 00:08:26,505 AND TURN OUT A PERFECTLY ACCEPTABLE PERFORMANCE 141 00:08:26,630 --> 00:08:29,547 THAT THE AUDIENCE WON'T BE ABLE TO TELL THERE'S ANYTHING WRONG. 142 00:08:29,672 --> 00:08:31,505 NO. HE'LL RIFF ALL EVENING. 143 00:08:31,630 --> 00:08:34,505 HE'LL GOOF OFF OR PLAY THE SAME TUNE FOR HALF AN HOUR. 144 00:08:34,630 --> 00:08:37,005 I'VE SEEN HIM PLAY THE SAME MELODY STATEMENT FOR 20 MINUTES 145 00:08:37,129 --> 00:08:38,630 LIKE HE CAN'T GET OUT OF IT, 146 00:08:38,755 --> 00:08:40,171 THERE'S NOTHING HE REALLY WANTS TO PLAY. 147 00:08:40,338 --> 00:08:42,046 BUT YOU CATCH HIM ON AN INSPIRED NIGHT, 148 00:08:42,171 --> 00:08:45,672 AND HE'D TEAR THE HAIR OFF YOUR HEAD. 149 00:08:45,838 --> 00:08:50,797 IT SEEMED TO MANY CRITICS LOOKING FOR AN HEIR TO CHARLIE PARKER 150 00:08:50,922 --> 00:08:53,713 THAT SONNY ROLLINS WAS THE MOST INNOVATIVE 151 00:08:53,838 --> 00:08:59,046 AND INFLUENTIAL SAXOPHONE PLAYER IN JAZZ. 152 00:08:59,171 --> 00:09:02,046 HE GREW UP ON THE WEST SIDE OF MANHATTAN, 153 00:09:02,171 --> 00:09:05,005 A NEIGHBOR OF THELONIOUS MONK, BUD POWELL, 154 00:09:05,129 --> 00:09:07,338 AND THE GREAT COLEMAN HAWKINS, 155 00:09:07,463 --> 00:09:16,338 WHOSE BIG AGGRESSIVE TONE HE WOULD INCORPORATE INTO HIS OWN. 156 00:09:16,463 --> 00:09:19,338 IT'S LIKE A LOT OF CATS ARE PRACTICERS, 157 00:09:19,463 --> 00:09:21,505 AND THEN THEY PRACTICE, AND THEN THEY COME, 158 00:09:21,630 --> 00:09:24,005 AND THEN THEY PLAY BASICALLY WHAT THEY'VE PRACTICED. 159 00:09:24,129 --> 00:09:26,005 SONNY ROLLINS WOULD JUST COME OUT AND PLAY. 160 00:09:26,129 --> 00:09:28,505 AND YOU CAN TELL A LOT OF THE THINGS THAT HE'S PLAYING 161 00:09:28,672 --> 00:09:30,505 ARE JUST THINGS THAT POP IN HIS HEAD, 162 00:09:30,630 --> 00:09:31,755 IMMEDIATELY, RIGHT THERE. 163 00:09:31,880 --> 00:09:33,255 THE DRUMMER WILL PLAY SOMETHING, 164 00:09:33,380 --> 00:09:35,672 HE'LL HEAR IT AND TURN IT AROUND. 165 00:09:35,838 --> 00:09:37,629 HE'S IN THE MOMENT. 166 00:09:42,630 --> 00:09:45,630 LIKE SO MANY OTHER ADMIRERS OF CHARLIE PARKER, 167 00:09:45,755 --> 00:09:47,755 ROLLINS BECAME ADDICTED TO HEROIN. 168 00:09:47,880 --> 00:09:51,755 BUT UNLIKE MANY, HE ABRUPTLY LEFT NEW YORK 169 00:09:51,880 --> 00:09:54,880 AND WORKED AS A DAY LABORER FOR A YEAR 170 00:09:55,005 --> 00:09:58,838 TO GET HIMSELF OFF DRUGS. 171 00:09:58,964 --> 00:10:02,547 WHEN HE RETURNED AND BEGAN WORKING WITH THE DRUMMER MAX ROACH, 172 00:10:02,672 --> 00:10:04,046 HE SEEMED MORE POWERFUL 173 00:10:04,171 --> 00:10:16,005 AND MORE RHYTHMICALLY INVENTIVE THAN EVER. 174 00:10:16,129 --> 00:10:19,672 HIS SOLOS WERE LONG, ENDLESSLY IMAGINATIVE, 175 00:10:19,838 --> 00:10:27,755 YET LINKED WITH EVERYTHING THAT HAD GONE BEFORE. 176 00:10:27,880 --> 00:10:32,713 ONE OF ROLLINS' BEST-KNOWN ALBUMS WAS SAXOPHONE COLOSSUS, 177 00:10:32,838 --> 00:10:40,171 AND HE SEEMED THE LIVING EMBODIMENT OF THAT WORD. 178 00:10:40,296 --> 00:10:42,213 PEOPLE HAVE REALLY UNDERESTIMATED 179 00:10:42,338 --> 00:10:46,296 THE INTELLECTUAL ACHIEVEMENT OF JAZZ 180 00:10:46,421 --> 00:10:49,797 AND WHAT IT TELLS US ABOUT THE HUMAN MIND 181 00:10:49,922 --> 00:10:52,463 AND HOW CAPACIOUS THE HUMAN MIND IS. 182 00:10:52,588 --> 00:10:56,547 AND FOR ME, SONNY ROLLINS IS A PRIME EXAMPLE OF THIS. 183 00:10:56,672 --> 00:11:00,630 I WENT TO SEE HIM PLAY A COUPLE YEARS AGO 184 00:11:00,755 --> 00:11:07,964 ON THE SATURDAY NIGHT BEFORE EASTER SUNDAY. 185 00:11:08,088 --> 00:11:10,505 AND I WENT TO SEE THE LATE SHOW, 186 00:11:10,672 --> 00:11:18,296 AND HE STARTED TO PLAY HIS FAVORITE THEME SONG,ST. THOMAS. 187 00:11:18,421 --> 00:11:21,213 HE'S PLAYING, IMPROVISING JUST THE MOST MAGNIFICENT STUFF 188 00:11:21,338 --> 00:11:23,171 YOU'VE EVER HEARD. 189 00:11:23,296 --> 00:11:26,713 AT EXACTLY 10 SECONDS TO MIDNIGHT, 190 00:11:26,838 --> 00:11:29,338 AMIDST HIS SOLOING, HE PLAYS... 191 00:11:35,213 --> 00:11:36,838 BACK TO ST. THOMAS. 192 00:11:37,005 --> 00:11:39,505 THE PIANO PLAYER CRACKS UP, A FEW PEOPLE CRACK UP. 193 00:11:39,630 --> 00:11:41,088 HE HAD QUOTED... 194 00:11:41,213 --> 00:11:42,755 ♪♪ WITH YOUR EASTER BONNET ♪ 195 00:11:42,880 --> 00:11:44,755 ♪♪ WITH ALL THE FRILLS UPON IT ♪ 196 00:11:44,880 --> 00:11:46,171 AT EXACTLY MIDNIGHT, 197 00:11:46,296 --> 00:11:48,797 THAT IS, EXACTLY THE TIME IT HAD TURNED INTO EASTER SUNDAY, 198 00:11:48,922 --> 00:11:54,588 HE QUOTED EASTER BONNET AFTER PLAYING A SOLO FOR 15 MINUTES. 199 00:11:54,713 --> 00:12:10,213 WHAT KIND OF MIND DOES THIS TELL US ABOUT? 200 00:12:19,505 --> 00:12:23,338 BUT FOR ALL THE SELF-CONFIDENT SWAGGER OF HIS SOUND, 201 00:12:23,505 --> 00:12:32,171 SONNY ROLLINS WAS ALWAYS HIS OWN TOUGHEST CRITIC. 202 00:12:32,296 --> 00:12:37,088 IN 1959, THE PRESSURE OF HAVING TO OUTDO HIMSELF EVERY NIGHT 203 00:12:37,213 --> 00:12:38,797 BECAME TOO MUCH. 204 00:12:38,922 --> 00:12:41,296 HE STOPPED PERFORMING ALTOGETHER 205 00:12:41,421 --> 00:12:45,088 AND BEGAN VENTURING ALONE OUT ONTO THE WILLIAMSBURG BRIDGE 206 00:12:45,213 --> 00:13:05,505 TO PLAY HIS SAXOPHONE INTO THE WIND. 207 00:13:05,630 --> 00:13:07,171 HE'S THE TYPE OF MUSICIAN 208 00:13:07,296 --> 00:13:09,456 THAT'S ALWAYS REASSESSING HIMSELF. 209 00:13:16,298 --> 00:13:18,421 SO I COULD SEE HOW AT A CERTAIN TIME, 210 00:13:18,547 --> 00:13:20,046 HE DIDN'T FEEL HE WAS DEVELOPING 211 00:13:20,171 --> 00:13:21,964 TO THE LEVEL THAT HE WANTED TO DEVELOP, 212 00:13:22,088 --> 00:13:23,463 SO HE JUST STOPPED PLAYING PUBLICLY 213 00:13:23,588 --> 00:13:25,985 AND WENT OUT AND WOULD PRACTICE ON THE BRIDGE. 214 00:13:26,010 --> 00:13:27,463 AND, YOU KNOW, IT'S LIKE A ROMANTIC THING, 215 00:13:27,588 --> 00:13:29,421 SOMEBODY ON THE BRIDGE WITH A SAXOPHONE. 216 00:13:29,547 --> 00:13:32,737 BUT THE WHOLE CONCEPTION OF ISOLATION 217 00:13:32,762 --> 00:13:35,533 AND HAVING TO REALLY CONFRONT THE DRAGON... 218 00:13:39,400 --> 00:13:43,171 WHICH IS THE DRAGON OF MUSIC AND OF PRACTICING YOUR HORN. 219 00:13:43,338 --> 00:13:46,005 AND THEN WHEN HE CAME OFF OF THAT PERIOD 220 00:13:46,129 --> 00:13:47,547 OF INTENSE PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT, 221 00:13:47,672 --> 00:13:51,303 HE WAS PLAYING EVEN MORE HORN THAN HE PLAYED BEFORE. 222 00:13:58,915 --> 00:14:03,296 I THINK SONNY ROLLINS WAS ONE OF THE HEIRS TO LOUIS ARMSTRONG 223 00:14:03,421 --> 00:14:06,838 WHO UNDERSTOOD THAT PITCHES ARE NOT CENTRALLY IMPORTANT IN JAZZ. 224 00:14:06,964 --> 00:14:08,547 RHYTHM IS. 225 00:14:10,296 --> 00:14:12,838 HE COULD PLAY A SOLO USING ONE PITCH 226 00:14:12,964 --> 00:14:15,797 THAT WOULD SWING SO VIOLENTLY YOU COULDN'T BELIEVE IT. 227 00:14:38,505 --> 00:14:40,755 THERE'S NO END TO WHAT YOU CAN DO WITH RHYTHM. 228 00:14:40,880 --> 00:14:45,171 AND TO FUSE POLYRHYTHM WITH COMPLEX HARMONY 229 00:14:45,338 --> 00:15:05,547 IS AN AMAZING ACHIEVEMENT OF JAZZ. 230 00:15:05,672 --> 00:15:08,588 ROLLINS RETURNED TO JAZZ IN TRIUMPH, 231 00:15:08,713 --> 00:15:11,213 ONLY TO ABANDON IT AGAIN SEVERAL TIMES 232 00:15:11,338 --> 00:15:13,421 OVER THE YEARS THAT FOLLOWED, 233 00:15:13,547 --> 00:15:18,213 AS HIS RESTLESS TALENT AND HIS PRIVATE ANXIETY ABOUT ITS WORTH 234 00:15:18,338 --> 00:15:22,338 BATTLED FOR HIS HEART AND MIND. 235 00:15:22,505 --> 00:15:25,713 "WE HAVE TO MAKE OURSELVES AS PERFECT AS WE CAN," 236 00:15:25,838 --> 00:15:30,672 HE ONCE SAID. 237 00:15:30,838 --> 00:15:32,505 THAT'S A VERY FAMILIAR SCENE-- 238 00:15:32,630 --> 00:15:35,005 DUKE ELLINGTON AT HIS PIANO. 239 00:15:35,171 --> 00:15:37,505 AS WE BOTH KNOW, BANDS COME AND GO. 240 00:15:37,672 --> 00:15:39,005 HOW DO YOU ACCOUNT FOR THE FACT 241 00:15:39,171 --> 00:15:41,296 THAT YOURS HAS BEEN UP THERE FOR SO LONG, 242 00:15:41,421 --> 00:15:42,797 THAT IT'S CONSTANTLY IN DEMAND 243 00:15:42,922 --> 00:15:45,088 FOR, WHAT, MORE THAN 30 YEARS NOW, ISN'T IT? 244 00:15:45,213 --> 00:15:49,838 OH, IT'S ABOUT 80% LUCK-- GOOD LUCK, THAT IS. 245 00:15:49,964 --> 00:15:51,338 MY IDEA OF GOOD LUCK 246 00:15:51,463 --> 00:15:53,713 IS BEING AT THE RIGHT PLACE AT THE RIGHT TIME, 247 00:15:53,838 --> 00:15:55,838 DOING THE RIGHT THING BEFORE THE RIGHT PEOPLE. 248 00:16:01,421 --> 00:16:04,171 DESPITE HIS NEAR-UNIVERSAL FAME, 249 00:16:04,338 --> 00:16:13,088 BY THE MID-1950s, DUKE ELLINGTON WAS IN TROUBLE. 250 00:16:13,213 --> 00:16:18,672 SOME OF HIS FINEST MUSICIANS HAD LEFT HIM. 251 00:16:18,838 --> 00:16:25,505 RUMORS FLEW THAT HE COULD NO LONGER AFFORD TO STAY ON THE ROAD. 252 00:16:25,630 --> 00:16:27,547 HE ADMITTED TO A REPORTER 253 00:16:27,672 --> 00:16:37,505 THAT, "OUR BAND IS OPERATING AT A LOSS NOW." 254 00:16:37,630 --> 00:16:40,755 IN THE SUMMER OF 1955, 255 00:16:40,880 --> 00:16:43,797 HE FOUND HIMSELF PLAYING HIS OLD TUNES 256 00:16:43,922 --> 00:16:56,838 FOR AN ICE SHOW AT THE AQUACADE IN FLUSHING, NEW YORK. 257 00:16:56,964 --> 00:16:59,547 THEN IN JULY 1956, 258 00:16:59,672 --> 00:17:02,505 THE JAZZ IMPRESARIO GEORGE WEIN INVITED HIM 259 00:17:02,630 --> 00:17:06,588 TO APPEAR AT THE THIRD ANNUAL OUTDOOR JAZZ FESTIVAL 260 00:17:06,713 --> 00:17:09,088 HELD AT THE TRANQUIL SUMMER RETREAT 261 00:17:09,213 --> 00:17:11,672 OF SOME OF AMERICA'S WEALTHIEST FAMILIES-- 262 00:17:11,838 --> 00:17:23,046 NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND. 263 00:17:23,171 --> 00:17:24,838 ELLINGTON SAW THE FESTIVAL 264 00:17:25,005 --> 00:17:27,838 AS A CHANCE TO REINVIGORATE HIS CAREER, 265 00:17:28,005 --> 00:17:31,338 AND HE DID SOMETHING HE HAD NEVER DONE. 266 00:17:31,505 --> 00:17:39,588 HE GAVE A PEP TALK TO HIS MEN BEFORE THEY WENT ONSTAGE. 267 00:17:39,713 --> 00:17:40,880 THANK YOU. 268 00:17:41,005 --> 00:17:42,838 ELLINGTON HAD PUT TOGETHER A PIECE 269 00:17:42,964 --> 00:17:45,005 CALLEDTHE NEWPORT FESTIVAL SUITE. 270 00:17:45,129 --> 00:17:47,547 IT WENT OVER WELL ENOUGH WITH THE AUDIENCE, 271 00:17:47,672 --> 00:17:49,547 BUT AS IT CAME TO A CLOSE, 272 00:17:49,672 --> 00:17:52,088 PEOPLE BEGAN HEADING FOR THE PARKING LOT. 273 00:17:55,630 --> 00:17:58,672 ELLINGTON CALLED FOR ONE OF HIS OLD STANDBYS, 274 00:17:58,838 --> 00:18:16,630 DIMINUENDO AND CRESCENDO IN BLUE. 275 00:18:16,755 --> 00:18:24,380 PEOPLE STOPPED, LISTENED, AND HURRIED BACK TO THEIR SEATS. 276 00:18:24,505 --> 00:18:35,421 THEN TENOR SAXOPHONIST PAUL GONSALVES BEGAN TO PLAY. 277 00:18:35,547 --> 00:18:37,547 PEOPLE SAT IN RESERVED SEATS NORMALLY, 278 00:18:37,672 --> 00:18:39,463 AND THEY SAT AND WATCHED THE CONCERT, 279 00:18:39,588 --> 00:18:43,421 AND ONCE IN A WHILE, THEY'D STAND UP AND CHEER AND GIVE A STANDING OVATION. 280 00:18:43,547 --> 00:18:45,922 BUT A WOMAN STARTED TO DANCE 281 00:18:46,046 --> 00:18:50,797 WHEN ELLINGTON HAD PAUL GONSALVES PLAYING HIS TENOR SOLO. 282 00:18:50,922 --> 00:18:52,838 AND DUKE SAW THIS WOMAN DANCE. 283 00:18:53,005 --> 00:18:56,797 EVERYBODY CROWDED AROUND TO SEE THE DANCING OF THIS WOMAN, 284 00:18:56,922 --> 00:18:58,880 A BLOND WOMAN FROM NEW BEDFORD. 285 00:18:59,005 --> 00:19:02,171 SHE WAS QUITE ATTRACTIVE. 286 00:19:02,296 --> 00:19:03,672 IT REALLY TOOK HOLD. 287 00:19:03,797 --> 00:19:05,505 AND ELLINGTON SAW THIS THING HAPPENING, 288 00:19:05,672 --> 00:19:18,588 AND HE JUST KEPT PAUL GONSALVES PLAYING. 289 00:19:18,713 --> 00:19:21,505 AND AS IT BEGAN TO BUILD, 290 00:19:21,672 --> 00:19:24,505 SOME GORGEOUS, VOLUPTUOUS LADY IN THE AUDIENCE 291 00:19:24,672 --> 00:19:27,588 DECIDED THAT SHE WAS BEING MOVED TO THE POINT 292 00:19:27,713 --> 00:19:29,838 WHERE SHE COULD NO LONGER CONTAIN HERSELF, 293 00:19:30,005 --> 00:19:32,171 SO SHE JUMPED UP ON THE STAGE 294 00:19:32,338 --> 00:19:37,505 AND STARTED ALLOWING HERSELF TO BE FLOUNCED AROUND A BIT. 295 00:19:37,672 --> 00:19:39,005 HA HA. 296 00:19:39,171 --> 00:19:41,171 AND ELLINGTON KIND OF ENJOYED THAT, 297 00:19:41,338 --> 00:19:42,672 AND IT INSPIRED HIM, 298 00:19:42,838 --> 00:19:45,296 AND HE IN TURN INSPIRED THE BAND, 299 00:19:45,421 --> 00:19:46,672 AND THE BAND WAS, UH... 300 00:19:46,838 --> 00:19:48,505 SAM WOODYARD WAS THE DRUMMER, 301 00:19:48,630 --> 00:19:51,421 AND HE STARTED POUNDING A LITTLE HEAVIER, 302 00:19:51,547 --> 00:20:01,547 SO THINGS BEGIN TO BUILD UP TO A REAL FRENZY. 303 00:20:01,672 --> 00:20:03,296 GONSALVES DUG IN, 304 00:20:03,421 --> 00:20:13,213 ONE FURIOUS CHORUS FOLLOWING ANOTHER. 305 00:20:13,338 --> 00:20:15,338 DUKE CAUGHT THAT SPIRIT. 306 00:20:15,505 --> 00:20:18,505 HE KEPT PLAYING THAT PIANO AND COMPING AND COMPING 307 00:20:18,630 --> 00:20:24,380 AND KEPT IT GOING AND KEPT IT GOING. 308 00:20:24,505 --> 00:20:27,380 AND YOU COULD SEE IN HIS FACE THE JOY AND THE EXCITEMENT. 309 00:20:27,505 --> 00:20:29,380 THIS WAS SOMETHING THAT NEVER HAPPENED FOR HIM 310 00:20:29,505 --> 00:20:37,005 WITH ALL THE YEARS HE'D BEEN PLAYING. 311 00:20:37,129 --> 00:20:39,505 THE AUDIENCE BECAME SO ENTHUSIASTIC 312 00:20:39,630 --> 00:20:42,505 THAT GEORGE WEIN, AFRAID OF A RIOT, 313 00:20:42,630 --> 00:20:47,672 BEGAN FRANTICALLY SIGNALING ELLINGTON TO CUT THE NUMBER SHORT. 314 00:20:47,797 --> 00:20:51,672 BUT ELLINGTON REFUSED TO STOP GONSALVES. 315 00:20:51,797 --> 00:21:05,380 GONSALVES WENT ON PLAYING FOR 27 CHORUSES. 316 00:21:05,505 --> 00:21:23,505 THE CROWD DEMANDED 4 ENCORES. 317 00:21:23,630 --> 00:21:26,171 PAUL GONSALVES! 318 00:21:26,296 --> 00:21:33,005 PAUL GONSALVES! 319 00:21:33,129 --> 00:21:35,505 A RECORD OF THE CONCERT 320 00:21:35,630 --> 00:21:38,129 SOLD HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF COPIES, 321 00:21:38,255 --> 00:21:42,755 MORE THAN ANY OTHER RECORD DUKE ELLINGTON EVER MADE. 322 00:21:42,880 --> 00:21:46,463 EVERY TIME I SAW DUKE AFTER THAT, 323 00:21:46,588 --> 00:21:48,505 HE WOULD BE TALKING ABOUT THE INTRODUCTION 324 00:21:48,672 --> 00:21:50,922 OF THE DIMINUENDO AND CRESCENDO IN BLUE. 325 00:21:51,046 --> 00:21:56,005 HE WOULD SAY, "I WAS BORN AT NEWPORT IN 1956." 326 00:21:56,171 --> 00:21:57,463 LOTS OF LUCK HE WAS "BORN." 327 00:21:57,588 --> 00:21:59,797 HE'D ONLY CREATED THE WHOLE HISTORY OF AMERICAN MUSIC 328 00:21:59,922 --> 00:22:02,505 PRIOR TO 1956. 329 00:22:02,672 --> 00:22:06,171 BUT THE BAND WAS WORKING MORE. THEY WERE GETTING MORE MONEY. 330 00:22:06,338 --> 00:22:08,588 PEOPLE WERE CALLING FOR THE BAND, 331 00:22:08,713 --> 00:22:14,713 AND DUKE FELT A NEW SURGE IN HIS LIFE. 332 00:23:05,129 --> 00:23:09,505 NOW, MILES DAVIS BENEFITED FROM THE REACTION 333 00:23:09,630 --> 00:23:13,296 THAT PEOPLE WERE BEGINNING TO FEEL IN THE 1950s 334 00:23:13,421 --> 00:23:19,421 AGAINST THE SUBURBANIZATION OF THE UNITED STATES. 335 00:23:19,547 --> 00:23:21,838 YOU KNOW, A LOT OF MASS PACKAGING 336 00:23:22,005 --> 00:23:26,672 IN A KIND OF A PROJECTION OF A CERTAIN SUBLIME MEDIOCRITY, 337 00:23:26,797 --> 00:23:28,213 IF YOU WILL. 338 00:23:28,338 --> 00:23:31,213 SO PEOPLE WANTED SOMETHING THAT WAS ELEGANT 339 00:23:31,338 --> 00:23:33,838 BUT THAT HAD A BITE TO IT. 340 00:23:33,964 --> 00:23:37,380 AFTER MILES DAVIS HAD KICKED HIS HEROIN HABIT, 341 00:23:37,505 --> 00:23:45,880 HE RESOLVED TO MAKE UP FOR LOST TIME. 342 00:23:46,005 --> 00:23:49,588 HE WAS UNDER CONTRACT TO A SMALL LABEL NAMED PRESTIGE 343 00:23:49,713 --> 00:23:52,005 AND RECORDED A STEADY STREAM OF ALBUMS 344 00:23:52,129 --> 00:23:56,755 WITH GROUP AFTER GROUP OF GIFTED MUSICIANS-- 345 00:23:56,880 --> 00:23:59,171 SONNY ROLLINS, 346 00:23:59,296 --> 00:24:01,838 HORACE SILVER, 347 00:24:01,964 --> 00:24:04,380 MILT JACKSON, 348 00:24:04,505 --> 00:24:06,838 RED GARLAND, 349 00:24:06,964 --> 00:24:09,880 PAUL CHAMBERS, 350 00:24:10,005 --> 00:24:12,463 PHILLY JOE JONES, 351 00:24:12,588 --> 00:24:15,338 CANNONBALL ADDERLEY, 352 00:24:15,463 --> 00:24:35,129 AND A YOUTHFUL VETERAN OF RHYTHM AND BLUES BANDS--JOHN COLTRANE. 353 00:24:35,255 --> 00:24:38,046 HIS SOUND BECOMES REALLY CLEAR. 354 00:24:38,171 --> 00:24:39,630 HIS DIRECTION IS CLEAR, 355 00:24:39,755 --> 00:24:42,171 PLAYING THE LONG LINES WITH A BEAUTIFUL SOUND, 356 00:24:42,296 --> 00:24:43,838 ALWAYS WITH THAT SENSE OF SWING, 357 00:24:43,964 --> 00:24:49,421 BECAUSE HE ALWAYS COULD REALLY SWING. 358 00:24:49,547 --> 00:24:52,713 AND REAL SWINGING RHYTHM SECTIONS THAT ARE VERY ORGANIZED. 359 00:24:52,838 --> 00:24:55,797 YOU DON'T HEAR A LOT OF SLOPPINESS ON HIS RECORDINGS 360 00:24:55,922 --> 00:24:58,505 BECAUSE HE HAS PEOPLE IN VERY DEFINED ROLES, 361 00:24:58,672 --> 00:25:01,129 AND HIS ALBUMS ARE ALWAYS GOOD TO STUDY 362 00:25:01,255 --> 00:25:07,672 BECAUSE YOU CAN HEAR WHAT'S GOING ON AT THAT TIME. 363 00:25:07,797 --> 00:25:09,338 LIKE DUKE ELLINGTON, 364 00:25:09,463 --> 00:25:11,338 DAVIS WAS ALWAYS ABLE TO INCORPORATE 365 00:25:11,463 --> 00:25:15,713 THE DISTINCTIVE SOUNDS OF DISPARATE MUSICIANS INTO HIS OWN MUSIC, 366 00:25:15,838 --> 00:25:18,213 LIKE THE SENSE OF SPACE HE HEARD 367 00:25:18,338 --> 00:25:23,463 IN THE WORK OF THE PIANISTS AHMAD JAMAL AND THELONIOUS MONK. 368 00:25:23,588 --> 00:25:27,296 FROM MONK, HE LEARNED THAT YOU COULD USE 369 00:25:27,421 --> 00:25:31,380 THE NEW KIND OF HARMONIC IDEAS THAT HAD ARRIVED, 370 00:25:31,505 --> 00:25:35,755 BUT YOU COULD USE THEM IN THE SPARE, TELLING WAY 371 00:25:35,880 --> 00:25:38,255 THAT BILLIE HOLIDAY AND LOUIS ARMSTRONG 372 00:25:38,380 --> 00:25:41,338 AND BLUES SINGERS AND PLAYERS USED THEIR MATERIAL. 373 00:25:51,797 --> 00:25:55,171 SO YOU DIDN'T NEED TO USE THE BAROQUE ELEMENTS 374 00:25:55,296 --> 00:25:56,672 THAT YOU GOT IN BOP. 375 00:25:56,797 --> 00:26:05,005 YOU COULD JUST CUT STRAIGHT TO THE CHASE, AS THE SAYING GOES. 376 00:26:05,129 --> 00:26:06,755 BECAUSE HE LEARNED FROM MONK 377 00:26:06,880 --> 00:26:10,338 THAT WHEREAS ONE GUY MIGHT PLAY 7 OR 8 NOTES, 378 00:26:10,463 --> 00:26:15,005 MONK MIGHT PLAY 3 OR 2. 379 00:26:15,129 --> 00:26:18,005 BUT THEY'D BE SO TELLINGLY PLACED 380 00:26:18,129 --> 00:26:21,005 THAT THEY WOULD HAVE THE SAME IMPACT. 381 00:26:21,129 --> 00:26:32,171 SOMETIMES BIGGER. 382 00:26:32,296 --> 00:26:35,296 HE WAS THE YOUNG ROMANTIC. 383 00:26:35,421 --> 00:26:37,046 HE WAS A TRUE ROMANTIC. 384 00:26:37,171 --> 00:26:40,838 HE PLAYED BALLADS THE WAY NOBODY ELSE COULD PLAY THEM. 385 00:26:41,005 --> 00:26:42,380 THEY WEREN'T SENTIMENTALIZED. 386 00:26:42,505 --> 00:26:45,005 THEY WERE BEAUTIFUL, AND THEY WERE DEEP, 387 00:26:45,171 --> 00:26:47,255 AND THEY DIDN'T REQUIRE A LOT OF HAND-WRINGING. 388 00:26:47,380 --> 00:26:49,672 AND THEY WERE DIFFERENT FROM ANYBODY ELSE. 389 00:26:49,838 --> 00:26:52,672 YOU'D HAVE THESE ALMOST STARK MELODIES 390 00:26:52,838 --> 00:26:55,005 IN A ROMANTIC BALLAD, 391 00:26:55,171 --> 00:27:00,838 AND THE STARKNESS WOULD MAKE THE ROMANCE ALL THE MORE COMPELLING. 392 00:27:01,005 --> 00:27:10,505 AND HE KNEW THAT. 393 00:27:10,630 --> 00:27:13,129 IT WAS JUST HIM AND THE TRUMPET, 394 00:27:13,255 --> 00:27:16,171 AND YOU WERE FEELING AS YOU WATCHED AND LISTENED 395 00:27:16,296 --> 00:27:20,838 THAT YOU WERE SORT OF EAVESDROPPING ON A VERY PRIVATE MOMENT, 396 00:27:20,964 --> 00:27:23,213 AND IT WAS ALMOST AN IMPOSITION 397 00:27:23,338 --> 00:27:27,797 WHEN THE OTHER MUSICIANS WOULD COME IN. 398 00:27:27,922 --> 00:27:30,630 DAVIS HAD BECOME A CONSUMMATE PROFESSIONAL, 399 00:27:30,755 --> 00:27:33,338 AND HIS TENDERNESS WHEN PLAYING LOVE SONGS 400 00:27:33,505 --> 00:27:39,171 HAD BEGUN TO WIN HIM A WHOLE NEW AUDIENCE. 401 00:27:39,296 --> 00:27:43,046 BUT MILES DAVIS WANTED MORE. 402 00:27:43,171 --> 00:27:45,005 "THE REAL MONEY," HE SAID, 403 00:27:45,129 --> 00:27:48,505 "WAS IN GETTING TO THE MAINSTREAM OF AMERICA." 404 00:27:48,630 --> 00:27:50,421 HE HAD BEEN RECENTLY SIGNED 405 00:27:50,547 --> 00:27:54,296 BY THE BIGGEST LABEL IN THE BUSINESS, COLUMBIA RECORDS, 406 00:27:54,421 --> 00:27:57,213 A COMPANY WITH ALL THE RESOURCES HE WOULD NEED 407 00:27:57,338 --> 00:28:00,380 TO BECOME A BIGGER STAR. 408 00:28:00,505 --> 00:28:03,380 BUT HE COULD NOT BEGIN TO RECORD FOR COLUMBIA 409 00:28:03,505 --> 00:28:07,005 UNTIL HE HAD PRODUCED 4 FINAL ALBUMS FOR PRESTIGE. 410 00:28:07,129 --> 00:28:10,005 DAVIS WAS SO EAGER TO MOVE ON 411 00:28:10,129 --> 00:28:22,505 THAT HE MANAGED TO MAKE ALL 4 RECORDS IN 2 DAYS. 412 00:28:22,630 --> 00:28:36,338 NO SECOND TAKES WERE EVER NEEDED. 413 00:28:36,463 --> 00:28:38,380 MILES' MUSIC APPEALS 414 00:28:38,505 --> 00:28:43,505 TO THE VULNERABLE SIDE OF PEOPLE. 415 00:28:43,630 --> 00:28:51,005 HIS MUSIC SPEAKS TO THE SOLITARY PERSON INSIDE OF EACH OF US. 416 00:28:51,129 --> 00:29:04,046 AND IT SOOTHES US IN KNOWING THAT WE ALL FEEL ALONE. 417 00:29:04,171 --> 00:29:08,505 BUT ON THE OTHER HAND, HE SWINGS. 418 00:29:08,630 --> 00:29:11,672 AND THIS COMBINATION OF 2 OPPOSITE THINGS, 419 00:29:11,797 --> 00:29:13,171 YOU PUT THEM TOGETHER, 420 00:29:13,296 --> 00:29:39,296 AND THAT'S A COCKTAIL THAT IS IRRESISTIBLE. 421 00:29:39,421 --> 00:29:41,005 AT THE ROUGE LOUNGE ALL THIS WEEK 422 00:29:41,171 --> 00:29:43,463 IS ONE OF THE GREAT JAZZ GROUPS IN THE COUNTRY TODAY, 423 00:29:43,588 --> 00:29:44,964 AND THAT'S THE MAX ROACH-CLIFF BROWN ENSEMBLE. 424 00:29:45,088 --> 00:29:47,964 AND WITH US TONIGHT IS ONE OF THE OUTSTANDING JAZZ TRUMPETERS 425 00:29:48,088 --> 00:29:50,713 IN THE COUNTRY TODAY-- EMARCY RECORDING STAR CLIFFORD BROWN. 426 00:29:58,672 --> 00:30:01,129 IN THE HARD LIVING WORLD OF JAZZ, 427 00:30:01,255 --> 00:30:04,672 CLIFFORD BROWN STOOD OUT. 428 00:30:04,797 --> 00:30:07,588 DRUGS AND ALCOHOL DIDN'T INTEREST HIM, 429 00:30:07,713 --> 00:30:09,922 NOR WAS HE TEMPERAMENTAL. 430 00:30:10,046 --> 00:30:13,338 BROWN ROUTINELY ARRIVED AN HOUR EARLY FOR RECORDING DATES 431 00:30:13,505 --> 00:30:19,713 TO CLEAN HIS HORN AND READY HIS MIND. 432 00:30:19,838 --> 00:30:22,213 AND HE ALWAYS SEEMED TO HAVE TIME 433 00:30:22,338 --> 00:30:29,005 FOR YOUNGER PLAYERS EAGER FOR ADVICE. 434 00:30:29,129 --> 00:30:42,046 HIS ONLY VICE WAS CHESS. 435 00:30:42,171 --> 00:30:45,380 "CLIFFORD WAS A PROFOUND INFLUENCE ON MY PERSONAL LIFE," 436 00:30:45,505 --> 00:30:47,255 SONNY ROLLINS REMEMBERED. 437 00:30:47,380 --> 00:30:50,964 "HE SHOWED ME THAT IT WAS POSSIBLE TO LIVE A GOOD CLEAN LIFE 438 00:30:51,088 --> 00:30:58,630 AND STILL BE A GOOD JAZZ MUSICIAN." 439 00:30:58,755 --> 00:31:00,922 CLIFFORD BROWN DIDN'T TAKE ANY DRUGS, 440 00:31:01,046 --> 00:31:02,797 AND HE DIDN'T SMOKE, AND HE DIDN'T CURSE, 441 00:31:02,922 --> 00:31:05,922 AND HE WAS A, YOU KNOW, PUREBRED YOUNG MAN. 442 00:31:06,046 --> 00:31:07,797 BUT HE PLAYED WITH MORE BRILLIANCE 443 00:31:07,922 --> 00:31:10,296 THAN ANYONE WHO HAD COME ALONG SINCE PARKER, 444 00:31:10,421 --> 00:31:14,338 AND IN A SENSE HE PROVED THAT IT WASN'T ABOUT DRUGS. 445 00:31:14,463 --> 00:31:17,255 AND IN FACT, IT HAS OFTEN BEEN SUGGESTED 446 00:31:17,380 --> 00:31:22,046 THAT THE END OF HEROIN'S SWAY OVER JAZZ 447 00:31:22,171 --> 00:31:24,672 OCCURRED IN THE MIDDLE 1950s 448 00:31:24,838 --> 00:31:27,338 ONE, BECAUSE OF CHARLIE PARKER'S DEATH, 449 00:31:27,505 --> 00:31:31,213 AND 2, BECAUSE OF THE ARRIVAL OF CLIFFORD BROWN. 450 00:31:34,630 --> 00:31:39,171 AS MUCH AS HIS FELLOW MUSICIANS ADMIRED BROWN'S CHARACTER, 451 00:31:39,338 --> 00:31:45,505 THEY WERE AWED BY THE WARMTH AND RICHNESS OF HIS TONE... 452 00:31:45,630 --> 00:31:48,171 AND THE LONG, MELODIC DANCING LINES 453 00:31:48,338 --> 00:32:05,838 THAT SEEMED TO FLOW EFFORTLESSLY FROM HIS HORN. 454 00:32:05,964 --> 00:32:08,547 I LOVE CLIFFORD BROWN'S PLAYING. 455 00:32:08,672 --> 00:32:12,046 IT'S SOME OF THE WARMEST PLAYING ON ANY INSTRUMENT 456 00:32:12,171 --> 00:32:16,713 THAT'S BEEN RECORDED IN JAZZ. 457 00:32:16,838 --> 00:32:20,171 THE PASSION THAT HE PLAYED HIS LINES WITH, YOU KNOW? 458 00:32:20,296 --> 00:32:24,171 HE CREATED, WHEN I SAY LINES, I MEAN HIS PHRASES, YOU KNOW, 459 00:32:24,296 --> 00:32:37,129 THE WAY THEY UNFOLDED AND KIND OF JUST OOZED OUT OF HIS HORN. 460 00:32:37,255 --> 00:32:38,547 IN 1954, 461 00:32:38,672 --> 00:32:42,547 HE HAD JOINED FORCES WITH THE BRILLIANT DRUMMER MAX ROACH. 462 00:32:42,672 --> 00:32:44,547 FOR MORE THAN 2 YEARS, 463 00:32:44,672 --> 00:32:49,880 THEIR QUINTET WAS ONE OF THE MOST INNOVATIVE IN JAZZ. 464 00:32:50,005 --> 00:32:53,171 AND IT SEEMED TO MANY THAT CLIFFORD BROWN WAS DESTINED 465 00:32:53,296 --> 00:32:56,880 TO JOIN THE RANKS OF THE GREATEST OF ALL TRUMPET PLAYERS-- 466 00:32:57,005 --> 00:33:02,838 LOUIS ARMSTRONG, DIZZY GILLESPIE, MILES DAVIS. 467 00:33:08,380 --> 00:33:10,171 THANK YOU VERY MUCH. 468 00:33:10,338 --> 00:33:14,505 YOU'VE MADE ME FEEL SO WONDERFUL. 469 00:33:18,964 --> 00:33:22,880 ON THE EVENING OF MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1956, 470 00:33:23,005 --> 00:33:26,880 AT THE END OF A RARE DAY OFF SPENT WITH HIS WIFE AND INFANT SON, 471 00:33:27,005 --> 00:33:34,005 BROWN TOOK PART IN A JAM SESSION IN PHILADELPHIA. 472 00:33:34,171 --> 00:33:36,588 HE HADN'T REALLY WANTED TO BE THERE, 473 00:33:36,713 --> 00:33:42,838 BUT CHARACTERISTICALLY, HE WAS DOING A FAVOR FOR A FRIEND. 474 00:33:42,964 --> 00:33:45,713 NOW HE WOULD BE FORCED TO DRIVE THROUGH THE NIGHT 475 00:33:45,838 --> 00:33:55,005 TO GET TO HIS NEXT GIG IN CHICAGO. 476 00:33:55,129 --> 00:33:56,672 IT WAS AFTER MIDNIGHT 477 00:33:56,838 --> 00:34:03,171 BEFORE BROWN AND THE PIANIST RICHIE POWELL FINISHED PLAYING. 478 00:34:03,296 --> 00:34:06,213 THEY TOOK OFF IN POWELL'S NEW CAR 479 00:34:06,338 --> 00:34:09,171 WITH POWELL'S WIFE NANCY AT THE WHEEL. 480 00:34:09,296 --> 00:34:11,547 IT BEGAN TO RAIN. 481 00:34:11,672 --> 00:34:15,213 SUDDENLY, THE CAR SKIDDED OUT OF CONTROL, 482 00:34:15,338 --> 00:34:20,672 FLEW OVER AN EMBANKMENT, AND TURNED OVER. 483 00:34:20,797 --> 00:34:31,171 ALL 3 PASSENGERS WERE KILLED INSTANTLY. 484 00:34:31,296 --> 00:34:33,838 DIZZY GILLESPIE WAS ABOUT TO GO ONSTAGE 485 00:34:34,005 --> 00:34:36,046 AT THE APOLLO THEATER IN HARLEM 486 00:34:36,171 --> 00:34:42,005 WHEN HIS MEN HEARD THE NEWS THAT CLIFFORD BROWN WAS DEAD. 487 00:34:42,129 --> 00:34:44,005 WHEN THE CURTAIN ROSE, 488 00:34:44,129 --> 00:34:49,505 MOST OF THE MUSICIANS WERE IN TEARS. 489 00:34:49,672 --> 00:34:52,338 "FOR HIS ARTISTRY," GILLESPIE SAID, 490 00:34:52,463 --> 00:35:10,255 "THERE CAN BE NO REPLACEMENT." 491 00:35:10,380 --> 00:35:15,630 ♪♪ I DON'T KNOW WHY ♪♪ 492 00:35:15,755 --> 00:35:24,838 ♪♪ BUT I'M FEELIN' SO SAD ♪♪ 493 00:35:24,964 --> 00:35:28,964 ♪♪ I LONG TO TRY ♪♪ 494 00:35:29,088 --> 00:35:34,838 ♪♪ SOMETHING I'VE NEVER HAD♪ 495 00:35:35,004 --> 00:35:39,838 ♪♪ NEVER HAD NO KISSIN' ♪♪ 496 00:35:39,964 --> 00:35:44,838 ♪♪ OH, WHAT I'VE BEEN MISSIN' ♪♪ 497 00:35:45,004 --> 00:35:50,088 ♪♪ LOVER MAN, OH, WHERE CAN YOU BE? ♪♪ 498 00:35:50,213 --> 00:35:54,588 SARAH VAUGHAN IS MY FAVORITE SINGER. 499 00:35:54,713 --> 00:35:59,046 ♪♪ THE NIGHT IS SO COLD ♪♪ 500 00:35:59,171 --> 00:36:03,088 ♪♪ AND I'M SO ALL ALONE... ♪ 501 00:36:03,213 --> 00:36:06,004 SHE HAD THE MOST ASTONISHING RANGE 502 00:36:06,171 --> 00:36:08,296 OF ANY JAZZ SINGER. 503 00:36:08,421 --> 00:36:11,797 SHE WAS EXTREMELY SOPHISTICATED HARMONICALLY-- 504 00:36:11,922 --> 00:36:15,004 I MEAN IN THE WAY THAT CHARLIE PARKER AND DIZZY GILLESPIE 505 00:36:15,171 --> 00:36:18,088 AND ALL THE GREAT INSTRUMENTALISTS OF BOP WERE. 506 00:36:18,213 --> 00:36:20,463 PEOPLE MAKE THE MISTAKE OF CALLING HER OPERATIC 507 00:36:20,588 --> 00:36:21,964 AND SAYING THAT IF SHE WANTED TO, 508 00:36:22,088 --> 00:36:23,588 SHE COULD HAVE BEEN AN OPERA SINGER, 509 00:36:23,713 --> 00:36:25,713 AND I THINK THEY'RE ENTIRELY MISSING THE POINT. 510 00:36:25,838 --> 00:36:27,213 SHE HAD THE RANGE, 511 00:36:27,338 --> 00:36:29,713 BUT SHE HAD NO INTEREST IN THAT KIND OF SINGING. 512 00:36:29,838 --> 00:36:31,505 HER WHOLE APPROACH TO PHRASING 513 00:36:31,630 --> 00:36:33,922 IS MUCH MORE ORIENTED AROUND THE CHURCH AND AROUND JAZZ. 514 00:36:34,046 --> 00:36:38,046 ♪♪ I'VE HEARD IT SAID ♪ 515 00:36:38,171 --> 00:36:43,713 ♪♪ THAT THE THRILL OF ROMANCE ♪♪ 516 00:36:43,838 --> 00:36:46,964 ♪♪ CAN BE ♪♪ 517 00:36:47,088 --> 00:36:51,088 ♪♪ LIKE A HEAVENLY DREAM ♪♪ 518 00:36:51,213 --> 00:36:52,463 THE TONE OF HER VOICE, 519 00:36:52,588 --> 00:36:54,421 THE RICHNESS OF HER VOICE... 520 00:36:54,547 --> 00:36:58,004 ♪♪ I GO TO BED ♪♪ 521 00:36:58,171 --> 00:37:00,004 ...FOR ME, WAS OTHERWORLDLY. 522 00:37:00,171 --> 00:37:02,004 ♪♪ WITH A PRAYER ♪♪ 523 00:37:02,129 --> 00:37:05,505 I FELT I LEFT MY BODY WHEN I LISTENED TO SARAH VAUGHAN. 524 00:37:05,672 --> 00:37:09,505 ♪♪ ...LOVE TO ME ♪♪ 525 00:37:09,630 --> 00:37:14,505 ♪♪ STRANGE AS IT SEEMS ♪♪ 526 00:37:14,630 --> 00:37:16,004 CHOPS LIKE YOU WOULDN'T BELIEVE. 527 00:37:16,129 --> 00:37:18,004 ANOTHER ONE OF THOSE VOCALISTS 528 00:37:18,129 --> 00:37:21,046 WHO CAN STAND RIGHT NEXT TO AN INSTRUMENTALIST 529 00:37:21,171 --> 00:37:24,338 AND DELIVER WITH AS MUCH DEXTERITY 530 00:37:24,463 --> 00:37:27,713 AND WITH AS MUCH CLARITY 531 00:37:27,838 --> 00:37:36,505 AS ANY INSTRUMENTALIST OF HER TIME. 532 00:37:36,630 --> 00:37:40,046 SARAH VAUGHAN SAW HERSELF AS A MUSICIAN 533 00:37:40,171 --> 00:37:41,880 RATHER THAN A SINGER. 534 00:37:42,004 --> 00:37:45,171 SHE WAS A GIFTED PIANIST IN HER OWN RIGHT, 535 00:37:45,338 --> 00:37:47,964 AND WHEN SHE CLOSED HER EYES ONSTAGE, SHE SAID, 536 00:37:48,088 --> 00:37:50,588 SHE COULD SEE--AND SING-- 537 00:37:50,713 --> 00:37:54,588 LINES THAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN IMPROVISED ON THE PIANO. 538 00:37:54,713 --> 00:37:59,338 MUSICIANS LOVED HER FOR HER PERFECT PITCH AND RHYTHMIC SENSE, 539 00:37:59,463 --> 00:38:02,171 HER SOPHISTICATED EAR FOR CHORD CHANGES, 540 00:38:02,296 --> 00:38:04,255 AND HER ASTONISHING VOICE. 541 00:38:04,380 --> 00:38:09,046 SHE COULD SING EVERYTHING FROM SOPRANO TO BARITONE. 542 00:38:09,171 --> 00:38:12,046 THEY CALLED HER "SAILOR" AT FIRST 543 00:38:12,171 --> 00:38:14,838 FOR THE RICHNESS OF HER VOCABULARY 544 00:38:14,964 --> 00:38:19,672 AND HER FONDNESS FOR GOOD TIMES. 545 00:38:19,797 --> 00:38:24,088 LATER, SHE BECAME KNOWN AS "SASSY." 546 00:38:24,213 --> 00:38:27,129 "SASSY," DIZZY GILLESPIE ONCE SAID, 547 00:38:27,255 --> 00:38:31,922 "CAN SING NOTES OTHER PEOPLE CAN'T EVEN HEAR." 548 00:38:32,046 --> 00:38:36,004 ♪♪ THE WAY YOU WEAR YOUR HAT ♪♪ 549 00:38:36,171 --> 00:38:39,922 ♪♪ THE WAY YOU SIP YOUR TEA♪ 550 00:38:40,046 --> 00:38:43,672 ♪♪ THE MEMORY OF ALL THAT ♪♪ 551 00:38:43,838 --> 00:38:47,421 ♪♪ NO, NO, THEY CAN'T TAKE THAT AWAY FROM ME ♪♪ 552 00:38:47,547 --> 00:38:49,922 HARMONICALLY, MELODICALLY, 553 00:38:50,046 --> 00:38:51,838 THIS WOMAN CAN DO ANYTHING. 554 00:38:51,964 --> 00:38:55,129 SHE WAS ALWAYS AN EXPERIMENTALIST. 555 00:38:55,255 --> 00:38:58,838 ♪♪ THE WAY YOU HAUNT MY DREAMS ♪♪ 556 00:38:58,964 --> 00:39:00,630 YOU HEAR 557 00:39:00,755 --> 00:39:04,505 WHEN SHE'S JUST UTTERLY ENJOYING HERSELF MUSICALLY. 558 00:39:04,630 --> 00:39:08,505 YOU HEAR HER VERY COMPLICATED RELATIONSHIP TO LYRICS, 559 00:39:08,630 --> 00:39:11,463 THE WAY SHE WILL DISTANCE THEM OFTEN 560 00:39:11,588 --> 00:39:14,171 AND PLAY WITH THEM, PARODY THEM, 561 00:39:14,338 --> 00:39:15,755 CLAIM TO FORGET THE WORDS, 562 00:39:15,880 --> 00:39:18,630 WHICH I'M NOT AT ALL CONVINCED SHE ALWAYS FORGOT, 563 00:39:18,755 --> 00:39:20,046 YOU KNOW, AND SUBSTITUTE SCAT. 564 00:39:20,171 --> 00:39:24,547 I THINK ALL OF THAT BESPEAKS A CHAFING AT THE BOUNDARIES 565 00:39:24,672 --> 00:39:27,088 OF THE POPULAR SONG AS A JAZZ MUSICIAN. 566 00:39:27,213 --> 00:39:28,338 ♪♪ ...AWAY FROM ME ♪♪ 567 00:39:28,463 --> 00:39:31,880 ♪♪ THE WAY YOUR SMILE JUST BEAMS ♪♪ 568 00:39:32,004 --> 00:39:35,338 ♪♪ THE WAY YOU SING OFF-KEY, KEY, KEY ♪♪ 569 00:39:35,463 --> 00:39:39,171 ♪♪ THE WAY YOU HAUNT MY DREAMS ♪ 570 00:39:39,296 --> 00:39:44,630 ♪♪ NO, NO, CAN'T TAKE THAT AWAY FROM ME ♪♪ 571 00:39:44,755 --> 00:40:02,004 ♪♪ CAN'T TAKE THAT AWAY FROM ME♪ 572 00:40:02,129 --> 00:40:04,630 I'M LOOKING FOR A BOY SINGER. 573 00:40:04,755 --> 00:40:08,672 I'D LIKE TO GET A YOUNG SINGER FOR MY BAND, YOU KNOW. 574 00:40:08,838 --> 00:40:10,672 A YOUNG, YOUNG SINGER? 575 00:40:10,838 --> 00:40:12,255 YEAH, A YOUNG SINGER. 576 00:40:12,380 --> 00:40:13,672 I'D LIKE TO. 577 00:40:13,838 --> 00:40:16,505 I DON'T THINK YOU HAVE TO GO ANY FURTHER. 578 00:40:16,672 --> 00:40:20,088 WELL, WHO IS IT? 579 00:40:20,213 --> 00:40:21,630 YOU? 580 00:40:21,755 --> 00:40:24,004 AHH, YOU KILL ME, DADDY! 581 00:40:24,129 --> 00:40:26,004 HE DID NOT DISTINGUISH 582 00:40:26,129 --> 00:40:28,505 BETWEEN BEING AN ARTIST AND BEING AN ENTERTAINER. 583 00:40:28,630 --> 00:40:31,505 SINCE YOU, UH, BROUGHT MEMORIES TO MY MEMORY, 584 00:40:31,630 --> 00:40:33,129 LOOK HERE, UH... 585 00:40:33,255 --> 00:40:35,004 HE WAS A GREAT ARTIST, 586 00:40:35,129 --> 00:40:37,672 BUT HE WAS THERE TO ENTERTAIN YOU. 587 00:40:37,838 --> 00:40:42,213 HE WASN'T OFFERING HIS ART AS, YOU KNOW, HOMEWORK. 588 00:40:42,338 --> 00:40:44,672 IT WASN'T FOR 4 CREDITS. 589 00:40:44,797 --> 00:40:45,922 IT WAS TO HAVE FUN. 590 00:40:46,046 --> 00:40:47,421 LOOK AT DADDY MITCH. 591 00:40:47,547 --> 00:40:49,505 DRAPE IT ON US THERE, DADDY. 592 00:40:51,547 --> 00:40:53,505 YEAH. WE'RE GOING NOW. 593 00:40:53,630 --> 00:40:55,672 ♪♪ TALK TO ME, BABY ♪♪ 594 00:40:55,797 --> 00:40:58,838 ♪♪ WHISPER IN MY EAR ♪♪ 595 00:40:59,004 --> 00:41:01,004 ♪♪ TALK TO ME, BABY ♪♪ 596 00:41:01,129 --> 00:41:04,463 ♪♪ WHISPER IN MY EAR ♪♪ 597 00:41:04,588 --> 00:41:06,338 HE COULD BE ALMOST LIKE A VAUDEVILLIAN 598 00:41:06,463 --> 00:41:10,171 AND DO A KIND OF A LOW HUMOR ROUTINE WITH VELMA MIDDLETON. 599 00:41:10,296 --> 00:41:12,880 HE COULD JOKE WITH THE MUSICIANS, WITH THE AUDIENCE. 600 00:41:13,004 --> 00:41:14,755 HE COULD TELL SLIGHTLY OFF-COLOR STORIES. 601 00:41:14,880 --> 00:41:16,838 AND THEN HE COULD PICK UP THE TRUMPET 602 00:41:16,964 --> 00:41:19,338 AND PLAY SOMETHING THAT WOULD BRING TEARS TO YOUR EYES. 603 00:41:19,463 --> 00:41:20,755 HE DID NOT DISTINGUISH, 604 00:41:20,880 --> 00:41:23,463 AND THIS DROVE A LOT OF PEOPLE NUTS. 605 00:41:23,588 --> 00:41:28,255 A LOT OF PEOPLE WISHED THAT HE HAD JUST, YOU KNOW, NEVER RECORDED POP TUNES. 606 00:41:28,380 --> 00:41:32,380 HE SHOULD HAVE BEEN ON SOME KIND OF IVORY TOWER, 607 00:41:32,505 --> 00:41:34,338 OCCASIONALLY SENDING FORTH A RECORDING 608 00:41:34,463 --> 00:41:36,171 OR APPEARING IN CARNEGIE HALL. 609 00:41:36,296 --> 00:41:38,107 THAT'S NOT LOUIS ARMSTRONG. 610 00:42:09,588 --> 00:42:11,463 ♪♪ OH, THERE'S DIMPLES ON HER ELBOWS... ♪♪ 611 00:42:11,588 --> 00:42:13,463 THERE WAS SOMETHING ABOUT ARMSTRONG 612 00:42:13,588 --> 00:42:15,964 THAT SEEMED TO BE A CERTAIN KIND OF SHADOW 613 00:42:16,088 --> 00:42:18,171 OF A CERTAIN KIND OF MINSTRELSY, 614 00:42:18,296 --> 00:42:23,338 AND I BELIEVE IT MADE A LOT OF BLACK PEOPLE UNCOMFORTABLE. 615 00:42:23,463 --> 00:42:25,338 THEN, TOO, HIS MUSIC, 616 00:42:25,463 --> 00:42:27,838 HE HAD MADE CERTAIN KIND OF ADAPTATIONS 617 00:42:27,964 --> 00:42:29,838 IN HIS MUSIC FOR POPULAR TASTE 618 00:42:29,964 --> 00:42:32,338 BUT NOT SIGNIFICANT ADAPTATIONS IN HIS MUSIC 619 00:42:32,463 --> 00:42:33,838 FOR BLACK POPULAR TASTE. 620 00:42:36,088 --> 00:42:39,338 ARMSTRONG JUST REALLY DIDN'T SEEM TO BE SPEAKING 621 00:42:39,463 --> 00:42:41,338 TO THAT COMMUNITY ANYMORE... 622 00:42:43,838 --> 00:42:47,547 AND I BELIEVE THAT'S WHY HE HAD SUCH TROUBLE WITH BLACK PEOPLE 623 00:42:47,672 --> 00:42:48,922 IN THE FIFTIES AND SIXTIES. 624 00:42:49,046 --> 00:42:51,004 ♪♪ YEAH, KOKEY ♪ 625 00:42:51,129 --> 00:42:52,004 ♪♪ KOKEY ♪♪ 626 00:42:52,129 --> 00:42:53,004 ♪♪ KO KO MO ♪♪ 627 00:42:56,505 --> 00:42:58,588 ♪♪ OH, YEAH ♪♪ ♪♪ OH, YEAH♪ 628 00:43:00,713 --> 00:43:07,171 HA HA HA! 629 00:43:07,296 --> 00:43:11,505 WHAT HE DID, WHAT HE PLAYED CAME FROM WITHIN. 630 00:43:11,672 --> 00:43:13,964 IT CAME FROM, UH... 631 00:43:14,088 --> 00:43:17,505 IT CAME FROM HIS OWN HEART, FROM HIS MIND, 632 00:43:17,630 --> 00:43:21,630 WHERE IT WASN'T ANYTHING CONTRIVED. 633 00:43:21,755 --> 00:43:23,588 IT WAS HIM. 634 00:43:23,713 --> 00:43:26,088 IT WAS LOUIS, WHAT HE WAS, 635 00:43:26,213 --> 00:43:28,088 THE ESSENCE OF HIS BEING. 636 00:43:28,213 --> 00:43:29,797 THAT'S THE DIFFERENCE. 637 00:43:29,922 --> 00:43:32,338 HE WAS A COMPLETELY HONEST MAN-- 638 00:43:32,505 --> 00:43:36,630 MUSICALLY AND IN EVERY OTHER WAY THAT I KNEW ABOUT. 639 00:43:46,838 --> 00:43:50,088 ON SEPTEMBER 9, 1957, 640 00:43:50,213 --> 00:43:54,004 LOUIS ARMSTRONG WAS ABOUT TO GO ONSTAGE IN GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA, 641 00:43:54,171 --> 00:43:57,129 WHEN HE SAW ON TELEVISION A CROWD OF WHITES 642 00:43:57,255 --> 00:43:59,463 JEERING AT BLACK CHILDREN 643 00:43:59,588 --> 00:44:05,630 WHO WERE TRYING TO ENTER CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL IN LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS. 644 00:44:05,755 --> 00:44:09,713 ORVAL FAUBUS, THE STATE'S SEGREGATIONIST GOVERNOR, 645 00:44:09,838 --> 00:44:12,338 DEFIED THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT 646 00:44:12,505 --> 00:44:16,255 AND ORDERED IN ARKANSAS NATIONAL GUARDSMEN WITH DRAWN BAYONETS 647 00:44:16,380 --> 00:44:20,338 TO KEEP THE STUDENTS OUT. 648 00:44:20,463 --> 00:44:22,255 ARMSTRONG WAS OUTRAGED. 649 00:44:22,380 --> 00:44:26,505 HE HAD JUST BEEN ASKED TO UNDERTAKE A GOODWILL TOUR OF THE SOVIET UNION 650 00:44:26,630 --> 00:44:28,004 FOR THE STATE DEPARTMENT. 651 00:44:28,129 --> 00:44:31,505 JAZZ HAD ALWAYS BEEN A SYMBOL OF AMERICAN FREEDOM, 652 00:44:31,630 --> 00:44:35,088 AND ARMSTRONG WOULD BE THE FIRST AMERICAN JAZZ ARTIST 653 00:44:35,213 --> 00:44:38,171 TO APPEAR BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN. 654 00:44:38,296 --> 00:44:42,838 NOW WITH LITTLE ROCK, HE WAS RELUCTANT TO GO. 655 00:44:42,964 --> 00:44:44,838 WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO TELL THE RUSSIANS 656 00:44:44,964 --> 00:44:46,171 WHEN THEY ASK YOU ABOUT 657 00:44:46,296 --> 00:44:47,380 THE LITTLE ROCK INCIDENT? 658 00:44:47,505 --> 00:44:49,964 IT ALL DEPENDS WHAT TIME THEY SEND ME OVER THERE. 659 00:44:50,088 --> 00:44:51,838 I DON'T THINK THEY SHOULD SEND ME NOW 660 00:44:51,964 --> 00:44:53,838 UNLESS THEY STRAIGHTEN THAT MESS DOWN SOUTH. 661 00:44:53,964 --> 00:44:54,838 AND FOR GOOD. 662 00:44:54,964 --> 00:44:56,880 I MEAN, NOT JUST TO BLOW OVER. 663 00:44:57,004 --> 00:44:58,463 TO CUT IT OUT, I THINK. 664 00:44:58,588 --> 00:45:02,004 BECAUSE THEY'VE BEEN IGNORING THE CONSTITUTION, 665 00:45:02,129 --> 00:45:04,129 ALTHOUGH THEY'RE TAUGHT IT IN SCHOOL. 666 00:45:04,255 --> 00:45:07,004 BUT WHEN THEY GO HOME, THEIR PARENTS TELL THEM DIFFERENT, 667 00:45:07,129 --> 00:45:09,004 SAY, "YOU DON'T HAVE TO ABIDE BY IT 668 00:45:09,129 --> 00:45:11,505 "BECAUSE WE'VE BEEN GETTING AWAY WITH IT A HUNDRED YEARS, 669 00:45:11,630 --> 00:45:14,004 "SO, UH, NOBODY TELLS ON EACH OTHER. 670 00:45:14,129 --> 00:45:15,505 SO DON'T BOTHER WITH IT." 671 00:45:15,630 --> 00:45:18,505 SO IF THEY ASK ME WHAT'S HAPPENING IF I GO NOW, 672 00:45:18,672 --> 00:45:20,505 I CAN'T TELL A LIE. THAT'S ONE THING. 673 00:45:20,630 --> 00:45:24,588 AND I WASN'T LYING, THE WAY I FEEL ABOUT IT. 674 00:45:24,713 --> 00:45:27,547 ARMSTRONG CANCELED THE TOUR. 675 00:45:27,672 --> 00:45:30,630 "THE WAY THEY'RE TREATING MY PEOPLE IN THE SOUTH," 676 00:45:30,755 --> 00:45:34,213 HE TOLD A REPORTER, "THE GOVERNMENT CAN GO TO HELL. 677 00:45:34,338 --> 00:45:38,547 IT'S GETTING SO BAD, A COLORED MAN HASN'T GOT ANY COUNTRY." 678 00:45:38,672 --> 00:45:43,004 ARMSTRONG'S WHITE ROAD MANAGER WAS APPALLED, 679 00:45:43,171 --> 00:45:45,630 AFRAID HE HAD RUINED HIS CAREER. 680 00:45:45,755 --> 00:45:49,838 HE SAID, "LOUIS ARMSTRONG NEVER SAID NOTHING LIKE THAT," 681 00:45:49,964 --> 00:45:52,255 BECAUSE HE'S THINKING ABOUT THOSE BIG FEES, YOU KNOW? 682 00:45:52,380 --> 00:45:54,672 HE SAID, "LOUIS ARMSTRONG NEVER SAID ANYTHING ABOUT THAT. 683 00:45:54,838 --> 00:45:56,421 HE DIDN'T SAY ANYTHING LIKE THAT." 684 00:45:56,547 --> 00:45:57,922 LOUIS SAID, "YES I DID. 685 00:45:58,046 --> 00:46:01,547 "I MEANT IT, AND I'LL STAND BY UNTIL MY DYING DAY. 686 00:46:01,672 --> 00:46:05,338 "ALL I ASK IS THAT THEY TAKE THOSE LITTLE KIDS INTO THE SCHOOL. 687 00:46:05,505 --> 00:46:07,672 WHY CAN'T THEY GO TO SCHOOL?" 688 00:46:07,838 --> 00:46:11,129 AND HE HAD SOME VERY DARK WORDS FOR FAUBUS. 689 00:46:11,255 --> 00:46:13,129 HE CALLED HIM AN UNEDUCATED PLOWBOY, 690 00:46:13,255 --> 00:46:14,672 AND HE CRITICIZED EISENHOWER 691 00:46:14,797 --> 00:46:17,547 FOR NOT GOING DOWN THERE AND TAKING, YOU KNOW, 692 00:46:17,672 --> 00:46:19,713 THAT LITTLE BLACK GIRL IN HIS HAND 693 00:46:19,838 --> 00:46:21,672 AND MARCHING HER INTO THAT SCHOOL. 694 00:46:21,838 --> 00:46:25,463 WELL...FROM ANY BLACK ENTERTAINER AT THAT TIME, 695 00:46:25,588 --> 00:46:26,964 THAT WAS POWERFUL STUFF. 696 00:46:27,088 --> 00:46:28,421 BUT FROM LOUIS ARMSTRONG? 697 00:46:28,547 --> 00:46:33,797 NO OTHER JAZZ MUSICIAN SPOKE OUT SO FORCEFULLY. 698 00:46:33,922 --> 00:46:38,630 NOW CRITICS, BOTH BLACK AND WHITE, ATTACKED HIM. 699 00:46:38,755 --> 00:46:43,547 EDITORIALS CALLED FOR A BOYCOTT OF HIS CONCERTS. 700 00:46:43,672 --> 00:46:55,505 LOUIS ARMSTRONG WOULDN'T BACK DOWN. 701 00:46:55,630 --> 00:46:57,338 BUT THE CONTROVERSY-- 702 00:46:57,505 --> 00:46:59,964 AND THE KILLING SCHEDULE OF ONE-NIGHTERS 703 00:47:00,088 --> 00:47:01,964 ARMSTRONG ALWAYS INSISTED ON KEEPING-- 704 00:47:02,088 --> 00:47:03,964 EVENTUALLY TOOK ITS TOLL. 705 00:47:04,088 --> 00:47:08,797 IN THE SUMMER OF 1959, ON TOUR IN ITALY, 706 00:47:08,922 --> 00:47:10,547 HE SUDDENLY COLLAPSED 707 00:47:10,672 --> 00:47:21,004 WITH WHAT WAS LATER DIAGNOSED AS A HEART ATTACK. 708 00:47:21,129 --> 00:47:23,004 ARMSTRONG TOLD THE PRESS 709 00:47:23,129 --> 00:47:25,338 THAT HIS OLD FRIEND BIX BEIDERBECKE 710 00:47:25,505 --> 00:47:29,171 HAD TRIED TO ENLIST HIM FOR GABRIEL'S BAND. 711 00:47:29,296 --> 00:47:30,547 ABOUT 2 DAYS AGO, 712 00:47:30,672 --> 00:47:32,338 THEY PRACTICALLY HAD YOU IN THE CEMETERY. 713 00:47:32,463 --> 00:47:34,380 NO, IT MUST HAVE BEEN LONGER THAN THAT. 714 00:47:34,505 --> 00:47:35,838 IT MUST HAVE BEEN LONGER THAN THAT. 715 00:47:35,964 --> 00:47:38,338 THE TROUBLE WAS THAT SIDNEY BECHET AND BIX 716 00:47:38,463 --> 00:47:40,838 TRIED TO GET ME UP THERE TO PLAY FIRST CHAIR, 717 00:47:40,964 --> 00:47:42,505 BUT I DIDN'T WANT TO. 718 00:47:42,630 --> 00:47:46,004 THEY DIDN'T WANT TO PAY ME NOTHING BUT UNION SCALE, SO... 719 00:47:46,129 --> 00:47:49,004 YOU DIDN'T HEAR GABRIEL BLOWING HIS HORN, DID YOU, LOUIS? 720 00:47:49,129 --> 00:47:51,505 WELL, I DIDN'T GET THAT FAR, SEE WHAT I'M SAYING? 721 00:47:51,630 --> 00:47:54,380 HE WAS BACK PLAYING AGAIN 2 WEEKS LATER. 722 00:48:12,922 --> 00:48:17,296 LOUIS ARMSTRONG, TO ME, IS A SMILE, 723 00:48:17,421 --> 00:48:22,797 A HANDKERCHIEF, AND SWEAT... 724 00:48:22,922 --> 00:48:34,713 AND THE CAPACITY TO MOVE ME ABOVE AND BEYOND TEARS. 725 00:48:34,838 --> 00:48:38,421 I WAS WORKING ON A FILM CALLEDA MAN CALLED ADAM, 726 00:48:38,547 --> 00:48:41,171 WHICH STARRED SAMMY DAVIS JR. 727 00:48:41,296 --> 00:48:44,505 LOUIS ARMSTRONG WAS ALSO IN THE PICTURE. 728 00:48:44,630 --> 00:48:47,713 ONE DAY AT LUNCH, EVERYBODY HAD GONE OUT. 729 00:48:47,838 --> 00:48:50,755 THE SET WAS QUIET. 730 00:48:50,880 --> 00:48:54,046 AS I CAME BACK TOWARD THE SET, I LOOKED UP, 731 00:48:54,171 --> 00:48:57,755 AND THERE WAS LOUIS ARMSTRONG SITTING IN A CHAIR, 732 00:48:57,880 --> 00:49:00,255 THE HANDKERCHIEF TIED AROUND HIS HEAD, 733 00:49:00,380 --> 00:49:04,046 LOOKING UP WITH THE SADDEST EXPRESSION 734 00:49:04,171 --> 00:49:06,964 I'VE EVER SEEN ON A MAN'S FACE. 735 00:49:07,088 --> 00:49:09,338 I LOOKED, AND I WAS STARTLED, 736 00:49:09,505 --> 00:49:12,838 AND THEN I STARTED TO BACK AWAY BECAUSE IT SEEMED SUCH A PRIVATE MOMENT. 737 00:49:13,004 --> 00:49:15,672 BUT HE HEARD ME BACKING AWAY, AND HE BROKE OUT OF IT RIGHT AWAY. 738 00:49:15,797 --> 00:49:17,129 "HEY, POPS, HEY. 739 00:49:17,255 --> 00:49:20,088 "LOOKS LIKE THESE CATS ARE GOING TO STARVE OLD LOUIS TO DEATH. 740 00:49:20,213 --> 00:49:22,004 HEY, MAN, WOW," AND EVERYTHING, YOU KNOW. 741 00:49:22,171 --> 00:49:26,004 I WENT INTO IT WITH HIM, BUT I NEVER FORGOT THAT LOOK. 742 00:49:26,171 --> 00:49:28,505 AND IT CHANGED MY CONCEPT OF LOUIS ARMSTRONG, 743 00:49:28,672 --> 00:49:30,505 BECAUSE I, TOO, AS A BOY 744 00:49:30,672 --> 00:49:32,672 HAD OBJECTED TO A LOT OF WHAT LOUIS WAS DOING. 745 00:49:32,797 --> 00:49:35,505 I FIGURED ALL THEM TEETH AND ALL THAT HANDKERCHIEF-- 746 00:49:35,672 --> 00:49:37,088 WE CALLED IT "OOFTAH," 747 00:49:37,213 --> 00:49:38,672 BY THAT WHICH WE MEANT, 748 00:49:38,797 --> 00:49:41,004 YOU DO THAT TO PLEASE THE WHITE FOLKS, DON'T YOU? 749 00:49:41,171 --> 00:49:43,004 YOU MAKE THEM HAPPY AND ALL THAT STUFF. 750 00:49:43,171 --> 00:49:44,880 YOU MAKE US LOOK LIKE FOOLS. 751 00:49:45,004 --> 00:49:48,129 BUT IT WAS ONLY THEN I BEGAN TO UNDERSTAND SOMETHING ABOUT LOUIS. 752 00:49:48,255 --> 00:49:51,380 HE COULD PUT ON THAT SHOW, HE COULD DO THAT WHOLE THING, 753 00:49:51,505 --> 00:49:54,880 BECAUSE IN THAT HORN OF HIS, YOU KNOW, 754 00:49:55,004 --> 00:50:00,880 HE HAD THE POWER TO KILL. 755 00:50:01,004 --> 00:50:04,838 THAT HORN COULD KILL A MAN. 756 00:50:04,964 --> 00:50:09,547 SO THERE WAS WHERE THE TRUTH OF LOUIS ARMSTRONG RESIDED. 757 00:50:09,672 --> 00:50:11,922 WHATEVER HE WAS... 758 00:50:12,046 --> 00:50:15,421 THE MOMENT HE PUT THE TRUMPET TO HIS LIPS, 759 00:50:15,547 --> 00:50:18,463 A NEW TRUTH EMERGED, A NEW MAN EMERGED, 760 00:50:18,588 --> 00:50:36,046 A NEW POWER EMERGED. 761 00:50:36,171 --> 00:50:40,505 AND I LOOKED ON LOUIS FOR WHAT HE TRULY WAS AFTER THAT. 762 00:50:40,630 --> 00:50:57,713 HE BECAME AN ANGELIC PRESENCE TO ME AFTER THAT MOMENT. 763 00:50:57,838 --> 00:50:59,296 LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, 764 00:50:59,421 --> 00:51:01,797 AS YOU KNOW, WE HAVE SOMETHING SPECIAL 765 00:51:01,922 --> 00:51:04,171 DOWN HERE AT BIRDLAND THIS EVENING-- 766 00:51:04,338 --> 00:51:07,838 A RECORDING FOR BLUE NOTE RECORDS. 767 00:51:07,964 --> 00:51:10,838 LET'S GET TOGETHER AND BRING ART BLAKEY TO THE BANDSTAND 768 00:51:10,964 --> 00:51:12,880 WITH A GREAT BIG ROUND OF APPLAUSE. 769 00:51:13,004 --> 00:51:15,755 HOW ABOUT A BIG HAND THERE FOR ART BLAKEY! 770 00:51:15,880 --> 00:51:18,922 THANK YOU! 771 00:51:26,338 --> 00:51:28,296 YOU COULD FEEL THE RHYTHM 772 00:51:28,421 --> 00:51:29,713 ANYWHERE YOU STOOD ON ART BLAKEY'S BANDSTAND, 773 00:51:29,838 --> 00:51:31,672 BECAUSE ART WAS SO STRONG, 774 00:51:31,797 --> 00:51:35,672 AND HIS STYLE WAS ABOUT ENERGY AND THUNDER, YOU KNOW. 775 00:51:35,797 --> 00:51:41,004 AN ART BLAKEY THUNDER. 776 00:51:41,129 --> 00:51:43,505 ART BLAKEY, LIKE ALL THE JAZZ MUSICIANS, 777 00:51:43,672 --> 00:51:48,755 IS THAT COMBINATION OF SOUL, INTELLIGENCE, AND SPIRITUALITY. 778 00:51:48,880 --> 00:51:51,088 HE COULD JUST DO THINGS NOBODY ELSE COULD DO 779 00:51:51,213 --> 00:51:52,713 AND COULD GET BY WITH IT. 780 00:51:52,838 --> 00:51:55,171 AND YOU TALK ABOUT, LIKE, DISSIPATION, GETTING HIGH, 781 00:51:55,296 --> 00:51:57,421 LYING, HANGING OUT LATE, ANY OF THAT, 782 00:51:57,547 --> 00:52:16,547 BUT YOU STILL HAD TO LOVE HIM. 783 00:52:16,672 --> 00:52:20,046 THE DRUMMER ART BLAKEY MADE IT HIS LIFE'S WORK 784 00:52:20,171 --> 00:52:32,171 TO BRING BACK TO JAZZ THE AUDIENCE IT HAD LOST TO RHYTHM AND BLUES. 785 00:52:32,296 --> 00:52:36,004 HE HAD LAUNCHED HIS OWN BIG BAND AT 15 786 00:52:36,171 --> 00:52:38,046 AND DEVELOPED HIS THUNDEROUS STYLE 787 00:52:38,171 --> 00:52:47,088 WHILE PLAYING WITH FLETCHER HENDERSON AND BILLY ECKSTINE. 788 00:52:47,213 --> 00:52:51,046 HE TWICE VISITED WEST AFRICA, FASCINATED BY ITS RHYTHMS, 789 00:52:51,171 --> 00:52:52,880 AND HE ADOPTED ISLAM 790 00:52:53,004 --> 00:53:01,046 AND SOMETIMES CALLED HIMSELF ABDULLAH IBN BUHAINA. 791 00:53:01,171 --> 00:53:03,171 BUT JAZZ, HE ONCE SAID, 792 00:53:03,338 --> 00:53:06,713 "DOESN'T HAVE A DAMN THING TO DO WITH AFRICA." 793 00:53:06,838 --> 00:53:09,588 IT WAS AN AFRICAN-AMERICAN CREATION, HE INSISTED. 794 00:53:09,713 --> 00:53:36,338 "IT COULDN'T HAVE COME FROM ANYONE BUT US." 795 00:53:50,838 --> 00:53:52,672 IN 1955, 796 00:53:52,838 --> 00:53:57,255 BLAKEY AND A YOUNG PIANIST AND COMPOSER NAMED HORACE SILVER 797 00:53:57,380 --> 00:54:13,046 ESTABLISHED A QUINTET THEY CALLED THE JAZZ MESSENGERS. 798 00:54:13,171 --> 00:54:15,630 THEY BROUGHT IN GOSPEL INFLUENCES, 799 00:54:15,755 --> 00:54:18,505 BLUES INFLUENCES, THINGS THAT PEOPLE COULD RELATE TO 800 00:54:18,672 --> 00:54:21,505 WHO WERE NOT DEEPLY INTO MODERN JAZZ, 801 00:54:21,630 --> 00:54:39,296 AND IT CAUGHT ON VERY QUICKLY. 802 00:54:39,421 --> 00:54:41,296 THE MESSAGE OF THE GROUP WAS 803 00:54:41,421 --> 00:54:43,964 "WE SWING, WE'RE EARTHY, WE PLAY THE BLUES. 804 00:54:44,088 --> 00:54:47,296 "YOU CAN WALK AWAY HUMMING IT, BUT WE'RE NOT GOING TO CHEAT 805 00:54:47,421 --> 00:54:49,880 ON THE QUALITY OF THE MUSIC OR THE CREATIVITY." 806 00:54:50,004 --> 00:54:53,838 AND THEY FOUND A WAY TO DO EVERYTHING. 807 00:54:54,004 --> 00:54:56,380 THE RECORDS THEY MADE FOR BLUE NOTE 808 00:54:56,505 --> 00:54:59,588 INCORPORATED THE SOUNDS OF GOSPEL AND RHYTHM AND BLUES 809 00:54:59,713 --> 00:55:03,088 AND WERE MEANT TO PROVIDE A SWINGING, EARTHY ALTERNATIVE 810 00:55:03,213 --> 00:55:07,255 TO THE COOL, POPULAR SOUNDS OF WEST COAST JAZZ. 811 00:55:07,380 --> 00:55:16,797 CRITICS LABELED THE MUSIC BLAKEY HAD BEGUN TO PLAY "HARD BOP." 812 00:55:16,922 --> 00:55:18,421 TUNES BY THE MESSENGERS, 813 00:55:18,547 --> 00:55:21,171 THE SOULFUL ELECTRIC ORGAN PLAYER JIMMY SMITH, 814 00:55:21,296 --> 00:55:24,421 AND A HOST OF OTHERS STARTED TURNING UP ON JUKEBOXES 815 00:55:24,547 --> 00:55:27,672 IN BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS ACROSS THE COUNTRY-- 816 00:55:27,838 --> 00:55:30,672 CHICAGO'S SOUTH SIDE, 817 00:55:30,797 --> 00:55:33,588 CENTRAL AVENUE IN LOS ANGELES, 818 00:55:33,713 --> 00:55:39,672 125th STREET IN HARLEM. 819 00:55:39,838 --> 00:55:43,380 EVEN THEIR TITLES CELEBRATED THE CULTURE FROM WHICH THEY CAME-- 820 00:55:43,505 --> 00:55:45,713 HOME COOKIN', 821 00:55:45,838 --> 00:55:47,338 CORNBREAD, 822 00:55:47,505 --> 00:55:50,338 GRITS 'N GRAVY, 823 00:55:50,505 --> 00:55:53,380 THE PREACHER, 824 00:55:53,505 --> 00:55:59,505 BACK AT THE CHICKEN SHACK. 825 00:55:59,672 --> 00:56:04,004 WHAT YOU GOT WAS BLACK MUSICIANS WHO WERE SAYING, 826 00:56:04,171 --> 00:56:07,505 "WE'RE GOING TO INVENT A MUSICAL STYLE AND FORM 827 00:56:07,672 --> 00:56:09,922 "THAT WHITE PEOPLE CAN'T COPY. 828 00:56:10,046 --> 00:56:12,547 "IT'S GOING TO BE TECHNICALLY SOMETHING THAT THEY CAN'T COPY. 829 00:56:12,672 --> 00:56:14,380 "IT'S GOING TO HAVE A CERTAIN KIND OF SWING 830 00:56:14,505 --> 00:56:16,088 "OR CERTAIN KIND OF RHYTHM THAT THEY CAN'T COPY, 831 00:56:16,213 --> 00:56:17,421 "CERTAIN KIND OF WAY OF PLAYING. 832 00:56:17,547 --> 00:56:20,588 "BUT ALSO BECAUSE IT'S GOING TO BE SO ETHNICIZED 833 00:56:20,713 --> 00:56:23,171 "THAT THEY REALLY CAN'T COPY IT 834 00:56:23,338 --> 00:56:26,964 "WITHOUT ABSOLUTELY LOOKING LIKE A MINSTREL SHOW. 835 00:56:27,088 --> 00:56:31,505 I MEAN, SO THEY CAN'T DO IT." 836 00:56:31,630 --> 00:56:35,880 ART BLAKEY'S MUSIC WAS ALWAYS FILLED WITH JOY. 837 00:56:36,004 --> 00:56:37,964 "WHEN WE'RE ON THE STAND," HE SAID, 838 00:56:38,088 --> 00:56:40,338 "AND WE SEE THAT THERE ARE PEOPLE IN THE AUDIENCE 839 00:56:40,463 --> 00:56:41,838 "WHO AREN'T PATTING THEIR FEET 840 00:56:41,964 --> 00:56:44,338 "AND WHO AREN'T NODDING THEIR HEADS TO OUR MUSIC, 841 00:56:44,463 --> 00:56:46,463 "WE KNOW WE'RE DOING SOMETHING WRONG. 842 00:56:46,588 --> 00:56:48,838 "BECAUSE WHEN WE DO GET OUR MESSAGE ACROSS, 843 00:56:48,964 --> 00:56:57,588 THOSE HEADS AND FEET DO MOVE." 844 00:56:57,713 --> 00:57:02,004 HORACE SILVER EVENTUALLY WENT ON TO FORM GROUPS OF HIS OWN, 845 00:57:02,171 --> 00:57:06,338 BUT ART BLAKEY KEPT THE NAME THE JAZZ MESSENGERS, 846 00:57:06,463 --> 00:57:10,338 AND FOR 45 YEARS, TRAVELED THE WORLD SPREADING HIS MESSAGE 847 00:57:10,463 --> 00:57:16,338 TO ANYONE WILLING TO LISTEN. 848 00:57:16,505 --> 00:57:18,505 WE USED TO CALL HIM 849 00:57:18,630 --> 00:57:21,255 THE GREATEST JAZZ UNIVERSITY AROUND. 850 00:57:21,380 --> 00:57:24,171 HE USED TO ASK PLAYERS 851 00:57:24,296 --> 00:57:27,171 THAT ANOTHER LEADER MIGHT FIND VALUABLE, INDISPENSABLE, 852 00:57:27,296 --> 00:57:29,213 AND WANT TO HOLD ON TO, 853 00:57:29,338 --> 00:57:31,713 HE USED TO TELL MUSICIANS, "WELL, YOU'RE READY NOW. 854 00:57:31,838 --> 00:57:33,588 "YOU'VE GOT THE TUNES. YOU'VE GOT THE EXPERIENCE. 855 00:57:33,713 --> 00:57:35,588 "IT'S TIME FOR YOU TO LEAD A BAND, 856 00:57:35,713 --> 00:57:39,838 GET 5 YOUNG CATS AND FEED THE TRIBUTARY OF JAZZ THAT WAY." 857 00:57:40,004 --> 00:57:42,713 WELL, HE'S THE GREATEST BANDLEADER THAT I EVER WORKED WITH. 858 00:57:42,838 --> 00:57:44,672 I NOT ONLY LEARNED SO MUCH 859 00:57:44,797 --> 00:57:47,171 ABOUT HOW TO LEAD A BAND FROM ART, 860 00:57:47,296 --> 00:57:53,213 BUT I ALSO LEARNED HOW TO GROW UP AND BE A MAN FROM ART. 861 00:57:53,338 --> 00:57:56,171 GENERATION AFTER GENERATION OF FUTURE STARS 862 00:57:56,296 --> 00:58:03,046 WOULD GET THEIR START OR HONE THEIR SKILLS WITH BLAKEY. 863 00:58:03,171 --> 00:58:05,797 JACKIE McLEAN, 864 00:58:05,922 --> 00:58:08,547 HANK MOBLEY, 865 00:58:08,672 --> 00:58:11,046 DONALD BYRD, 866 00:58:11,171 --> 00:58:13,838 BOBBY TIMMONS, 867 00:58:13,964 --> 00:58:16,171 BENNY GOLSON, 868 00:58:16,338 --> 00:58:18,880 WOODY SHAW, 869 00:58:19,004 --> 00:58:21,088 LEE MORGAN, 870 00:58:21,213 --> 00:58:23,338 FREDDIE HUBBARD, 871 00:58:23,463 --> 00:58:25,630 KEITH JARRETT, 872 00:58:25,755 --> 00:58:28,296 JOANNE BRACKEEN, 873 00:58:28,421 --> 00:58:30,547 WAYNE SHORTER, 874 00:58:30,672 --> 00:58:35,338 WYNTON MARSALIS. 875 00:58:35,505 --> 00:58:37,338 YEAH, THE MESSENGERS WERE THE TRAINING GROUND 876 00:58:37,505 --> 00:58:38,838 FOR A LOT OF GREAT MUSICIANS 877 00:58:39,004 --> 00:58:40,838 BECAUSE HE GAVE YOU A CHANCE TO PLAY 878 00:58:41,004 --> 00:58:42,338 AND TO LEARN HOW TO PLAY. 879 00:58:42,505 --> 00:58:44,505 HE WOULD PUT HIS SWING UP UNDERNEATH YOU 880 00:58:44,630 --> 00:58:45,838 SO THAT YOU COULD LEARN HOW TO PLAY, 881 00:58:46,004 --> 00:58:47,463 AND HE WOULD TELL YOU YOU WERE SAD. 882 00:58:47,588 --> 00:58:50,505 AND WHEN I FIRST SAT IN WITH HIM, I KNEW I WASN'T PLAYING NOTHING. 883 00:58:50,630 --> 00:58:52,338 HE SAID, "MAN, YOU SAD, BUT THAT'S ALL RIGHT." 884 00:58:52,505 --> 00:58:54,004 AND WHEN YOU WERE AROUND HIM, 885 00:58:54,129 --> 00:58:56,296 YOU WERE AROUND THE ESSENCE OF JAZZ MUSIC. 886 00:58:56,421 --> 00:58:58,797 SO HE PUT THAT IN US. 887 00:58:58,922 --> 00:59:00,797 IF YOU WANT TO PLAY THIS MUSIC, 888 00:59:00,922 --> 00:59:03,296 YOU HAVE TO PLAY IT WITH SOUL, WITH INTENSITY, 889 00:59:03,421 --> 00:59:07,255 AND EVERY TIME YOU TOUCH YOUR HORN, YOU PLAY YOUR HORN. 890 00:59:07,380 --> 00:59:11,838 THIS IS NOT A GAME. 891 00:59:11,964 --> 00:59:14,171 EVERYBODY HAD TO DO THEIR JOB, 892 00:59:14,338 --> 00:59:18,505 OR YOU WERE REPLACED. 893 00:59:18,630 --> 00:59:21,171 AND IN EVERY CITY THAT WE WENT TO, 894 00:59:21,296 --> 00:59:23,964 IF THERE WAS A STAR ALTO PLAYER THERE, 895 00:59:24,088 --> 00:59:27,255 HE WOULD INVITE HIM TO COME AND PLAY WITH THE BAND. 896 00:59:27,380 --> 00:59:30,338 AND THAT WAS ALWAYS TO KEEP ME ON NOTICE 897 00:59:30,463 --> 00:59:33,547 THAT THERE WAS ALWAYS SOMEBODY WAITING IN THE WINGS. 898 00:59:55,129 --> 00:59:58,838 ON THE ROAD, BLAKEY WAS INDEFATIGABLE, 899 00:59:58,964 --> 01:00:00,964 PLAYING GIG AFTER GIG 900 01:00:01,088 --> 01:00:05,505 AND OUTPLAYING MUSICIANS HALF HIS AGE. 901 01:00:05,630 --> 01:00:10,380 AND HE WAS UTTERLY FEARLESS. 902 01:00:10,505 --> 01:00:13,338 THE DRUMMER ART TAYLOR TOLD ME ONE TIME 903 01:00:13,505 --> 01:00:16,129 THAT SOME SOME GANGSTERS IN BROOKLYN TOOK HIS DRUMS 904 01:00:16,255 --> 01:00:18,046 BECAUSE HE OWED THEM SOME MONEY. 905 01:00:18,171 --> 01:00:19,630 HE SAYS-- SO ART BLAKEY SAYS-- 906 01:00:19,755 --> 01:00:22,380 AFTER A GIG, IT WAS, LIKE, 3:30 IN THE MORNING, 907 01:00:22,505 --> 01:00:24,547 ART BLAKEY SAID, "LET'S GO TO THEIR HOUSE." 908 01:00:24,672 --> 01:00:26,004 THEY KNEW WHO THESE PEOPLE WERE. 909 01:00:26,129 --> 01:00:28,630 "LET'S GO TO THEIR HOUSE AND GET YOUR DRUMS." 910 01:00:28,755 --> 01:00:31,838 SO THEY WENT UP THERE. 3:30, 4:00 IN THE MORNING, 911 01:00:31,964 --> 01:00:33,964 ART BLAKEY KNOCKS ON THE DOOR, 912 01:00:34,088 --> 01:00:37,213 AND A GUY ANSWERS THE DOOR WITH HIS GUN IN HAND. 913 01:00:37,338 --> 01:00:40,713 AND ART BLAKEY GOES, "THIS MAN IS A MUSICIAN, 914 01:00:40,838 --> 01:00:43,213 "AND YOU'VE TAKEN HIS DRUMS. 915 01:00:43,338 --> 01:00:46,004 "NOW, UH, HE OWES YOU SOME MONEY, 916 01:00:46,129 --> 01:00:49,838 "BUT THERE'S NO WAY FOR HIM TO MAKE THE MONEY 917 01:00:49,964 --> 01:00:52,171 "IF YOU DEPRIVE HIM OF A MEANS 918 01:00:52,296 --> 01:00:55,505 "OF MAKING A LIVING. HE'S A MUSICIAN. 919 01:00:55,630 --> 01:00:57,004 HE'S NOT A CRIMINAL." 920 01:00:57,129 --> 01:01:00,046 SO WHEN ART BLAKEY GOT FINISHED TALKING, 921 01:01:00,171 --> 01:01:04,004 THE GUYS WENT AND GOT HIS DRUMS AND GAVE THEM TO HIM. 922 01:01:04,129 --> 01:01:06,004 AND THAT'S HOW HE WAS. 923 01:01:06,129 --> 01:01:08,046 HE COULD JUST DO THINGS THAT OTHER PEOPLE COULD NOT DO 924 01:01:08,171 --> 01:01:09,547 BECAUSE HE BELIEVED IN IT SO MUCH. 925 01:01:09,672 --> 01:01:11,713 YOU KNOW, AND WHEN HE TOLD ME THE STORY, 926 01:01:11,838 --> 01:01:13,630 I COULD SEE ART BLAKEY DOING THAT 927 01:01:13,755 --> 01:01:16,046 BECAUSE HE COULD JUST TALK TO YOU A CERTAIN WAY, 928 01:01:16,171 --> 01:01:18,004 AND IT WOULD MAKE YOU BELIEVE 929 01:01:18,129 --> 01:01:19,713 THAT YOU COULD DO SOMETHING. 930 01:01:19,838 --> 01:01:25,004 HE HAD THAT BELIEF IN HIM. 931 01:01:25,129 --> 01:01:27,213 "FIRE-- THAT'S WHAT PEOPLE WANT," 932 01:01:27,338 --> 01:01:31,338 HE TOLD HIS YOUNG MUSICIANS AGAIN AND AGAIN. 933 01:01:31,505 --> 01:01:33,672 "JAZZ," ART BLAKEY SAID, 934 01:01:33,838 --> 01:01:49,838 "WASHES AWAY THE DUST OF EVERYDAY LIFE." 935 01:02:01,964 --> 01:02:05,505 ON DECEMBER 6, 1957, 936 01:02:05,630 --> 01:02:08,505 2 JAZZ WRITERS--WHITNEY BALLIETT AND NAT HENTOFF-- 937 01:02:08,630 --> 01:02:10,046 HELPED GATHER 938 01:02:10,171 --> 01:02:12,171 AN EXTRAORDINARY GROUP OF MUSICIANS 939 01:02:12,296 --> 01:02:15,588 FOR A ONE-TIME-ONLY LIVE PROGRAM ON CBS 940 01:02:15,713 --> 01:02:20,672 CALLED THE SOUND OF JAZZ. 941 01:02:20,838 --> 01:02:26,547 NOTHING LIKE IT HAD EVER BEEN TRIED BEFORE ON AMERICAN TELEVISION. 942 01:02:26,672 --> 01:02:29,672 IT WAS AN ALL-STAR ASSEMBLAGE-- 943 01:02:29,838 --> 01:02:31,797 JO JONES AND COUNT BASIE, 944 01:02:31,922 --> 01:02:34,004 THELONIOUS MONK AND COLEMAN HAWKINS, 945 01:02:34,171 --> 01:02:36,213 GERRY MULLIGAN AND BEN WEBSTER, 946 01:02:36,338 --> 01:02:37,630 LESTER YOUNG... 947 01:02:37,755 --> 01:02:41,129 AND BILLIE HOLIDAY. 948 01:02:41,255 --> 01:02:45,547 LESTER AND BILLIE HAD BEEN VERY CLOSE FOR YEARS. 949 01:02:45,672 --> 01:02:48,964 BUT FOR SOME REASON-- AND NOBODY COULD TELL ME WHY-- 950 01:02:49,088 --> 01:02:51,505 THEY HAD GONE WAY APART IN PRECEDING YEARS, 951 01:02:51,630 --> 01:02:53,171 AND WHEN WE WERE THERE 952 01:02:53,296 --> 01:02:55,463 FOR THE BLOCKING AND THE SOUND CHECK, 953 01:02:55,588 --> 01:02:57,505 THEY VERY CAREFULLY WERE ON DIFFERENT SIDES 954 01:02:57,630 --> 01:02:59,004 OF THE STUDIO. 955 01:02:59,129 --> 01:03:00,588 LESTER WAS NOT WELL. 956 01:03:00,713 --> 01:03:04,338 HE WAS SUPPOSED TO BE IN THE BIG BAND SECTION, IN ANOTHER SECTION, 957 01:03:04,463 --> 01:03:08,171 AND I SAID, "LOOK, WHY DON'T YOU JUST DO THE THING WITH BILLIE? 958 01:03:08,296 --> 01:03:11,004 AND YOU CAN SIT DOWN, YOU DON'T HAVE TO STAND." 959 01:03:11,129 --> 01:03:14,505 AND THE THING WITH BILLIE WAS A SMALL GROUP-- ROY ELDRIDGE, LESTER-- 960 01:03:14,630 --> 01:03:17,338 AND BILLIE WAS SINGING ONE OF THE VERY FEW BLUES 961 01:03:17,463 --> 01:03:18,630 SHE EVER DID-- 962 01:03:18,755 --> 01:03:20,838 FINE AND MELLOW, WHICH SHE WROTE. 963 01:03:26,505 --> 01:03:30,171 ♪♪ MY MAN DON'T LOVE ME ♪♪ 964 01:03:30,296 --> 01:03:37,213 ♪♪ HE TREATS ME, OH, SO MEAN ♪♪ 965 01:03:37,338 --> 01:03:39,380 ♪♪ MY MAN ♪♪ 966 01:03:39,505 --> 01:03:42,630 ♪♪ HE DON'T LOVE ME ♪♪ 967 01:03:42,755 --> 01:03:50,171 ♪♪ HE TREATS ME AWFUL MEAN ♪♪ 968 01:03:50,296 --> 01:03:55,171 ♪♪ HE'S THE LOWEST MAN ♪♪ 969 01:03:55,296 --> 01:04:10,338 ♪♪ THAT I'VE EVER SEEN ♪♪ 970 01:04:10,463 --> 01:04:13,320 BEN WEBSTER PLAYED THE FIRST SOLO. 971 01:04:36,338 --> 01:04:38,046 LESTER GOT UP, 972 01:04:38,171 --> 01:04:42,274 AND HE PLAYED THE PUREST BLUES I HAVE EVER HEARD. 973 01:05:05,156 --> 01:05:07,838 AND THEIR EYES WERE SORT OF INTERLOCKED, 974 01:05:07,964 --> 01:05:11,588 AND SHE WAS SORT OF NODDING AND HALF-SMILING. 975 01:05:11,713 --> 01:05:14,964 IT WAS AS IF THEY WERE BOTH REMEMBERING 976 01:05:15,088 --> 01:05:18,713 WHAT HAD BEEN, WHATEVER THAT WAS. 977 01:05:18,838 --> 01:05:22,088 ♪♪ TREAT ME RIGHT, BABY ♪♪ 978 01:05:22,213 --> 01:05:26,004 ♪♪ AND I'LL STAY HOME EVERY DAY ♪♪ 979 01:05:26,129 --> 01:05:28,255 AND IN THE CONTROL ROOM, 980 01:05:28,380 --> 01:05:30,463 WE WERE ALL CRYING. 981 01:05:30,588 --> 01:05:35,171 ♪♪ JUST TREAT ME RIGHT, BABY ♪♪ 982 01:05:35,338 --> 01:05:43,380 ♪♪ AND I'LL STAY HOME NIGHT AND DAY ♪♪ 983 01:05:43,505 --> 01:05:48,380 ♪♪ BUT YOU'RE SO MEAN TO ME, BABY ♪♪ 984 01:05:48,505 --> 01:05:56,838 ♪♪ I KNOW YOU'RE GONNA DRIVE ME AWAY ♪♪ 985 01:05:56,964 --> 01:06:01,838 ♪♪ LOVE IS JUST LIKE A FAUCET ♪♪ 986 01:06:01,964 --> 01:06:09,713 ♪♪ IT TURNS OFF AND ON ♪♪ 987 01:06:09,838 --> 01:06:14,171 ♪♪ LOVE IS LIKE A FAUCET ♪♪ 988 01:06:14,338 --> 01:06:21,838 ♪♪ IT TURNS OFF AND ON ♪♪ 989 01:06:21,964 --> 01:06:26,713 ♪♪ SOMETIMES WHEN YOU THINK IT'S ON, BABY ♪♪ 990 01:06:26,838 --> 01:06:38,672 ♪♪ IT HAS TURNED OFF AND GONE ♪♪ 991 01:06:38,838 --> 01:06:43,505 WHEN THE SHOW WAS OVER, THEY WENT THEIR SEPARATE WAYS. 992 01:06:50,129 --> 01:06:52,171 LESTER YOUNG WAS NOW LIVING 993 01:06:52,296 --> 01:07:02,505 IN THE ALVIN HOTEL ON 52nd STREET. 994 01:07:02,630 --> 01:07:04,838 HE HAD MOVED THERE FROM LONG ISLAND, 995 01:07:04,964 --> 01:07:07,547 TELLING HIS WIFE THAT HE COULD NOT BEAR 996 01:07:07,672 --> 01:07:10,547 TO BE SO FAR FROM THE WORLD OF JAZZ 997 01:07:10,672 --> 01:07:16,547 THAT HAD ALWAYS BEEN HIS REAL HOME. 998 01:07:16,672 --> 01:07:23,463 ALCOHOL HAD DESTROYED HIS HEALTH. 999 01:07:23,588 --> 01:07:26,004 AND I'D COME IN AND CALL PREZ'S ROOM, 1000 01:07:26,129 --> 01:07:30,463 SEE IF HE WANTED ME TO GO TO THE STORE OR ANYTHING FOR HIM. 1001 01:07:30,588 --> 01:07:33,171 EVEN WHEN I WAS 19, 20 YEARS OLD, YOU KNOW, 1002 01:07:33,296 --> 01:07:35,338 I LOVED LESTER YOUNG SO MUCH, YOU KNOW, 1003 01:07:35,463 --> 01:07:37,296 I WOULD SPEND ANY MOMENT I COULD. 1004 01:07:37,421 --> 01:07:39,338 SOMETIMES HE WOULD SAY, "YEAH, COME ON UP," 1005 01:07:39,463 --> 01:07:41,171 AND I'D GO UP TO HIS ROOM 1006 01:07:41,296 --> 01:07:44,838 AND GO BUY HIM SOME CIGARETTES OR SOMETHING LIKE THAT. 1007 01:07:45,004 --> 01:07:52,338 IT WAS KIND OF SAD. 1008 01:07:52,505 --> 01:07:54,672 HE USED TO SIT AT THE WINDOW 1009 01:07:54,797 --> 01:08:03,338 AND LOOK ACROSS AT BIRDLAND AT THE PEOPLE COMING AND GOING. 1010 01:08:03,463 --> 01:08:06,338 HE STILL PLAYED FROM TIME TO TIME 1011 01:08:06,505 --> 01:08:10,338 BUT SPENT HIS LAST DAYS MOVING FROM MOVIE HOUSE TO MOVIE HOUSE 1012 01:08:10,463 --> 01:08:11,880 ON 42ND STREET 1013 01:08:12,004 --> 01:08:14,004 OR LISTENING TO HIS RECORD PLAYER-- 1014 01:08:14,129 --> 01:08:18,338 OTHER PEOPLE'S MUSIC-- FRANK SINATRA, BILLIE HOLIDAY-- 1015 01:08:18,463 --> 01:08:25,046 NEVER HIS OWN. 1016 01:08:25,171 --> 01:08:28,338 LESTER YOUNG DIED IN HIS ROOM AT THE ALVIN HOTEL 1017 01:08:28,463 --> 01:08:33,505 ON MARCH 15, 1959. 1018 01:08:33,672 --> 01:08:38,672 HIS INFLUENCE WAS EVERYWHERE. 1019 01:08:38,797 --> 01:08:42,838 "ANYONE WHO DOESN'T PLAY LIKE LESTER," ONE MUSICIAN SAID, 1020 01:08:42,964 --> 01:08:55,672 "IS WRONG." 1021 01:09:10,171 --> 01:09:13,129 ♪♪ THEM THAT'S GOT SHALL HAVE ♪♪ 1022 01:09:13,255 --> 01:09:17,046 ♪♪ THEM THAT'S NOT SHALL LOSE ♪♪ 1023 01:09:17,171 --> 01:09:19,880 ♪♪ SO THE BIBLE SAID ♪♪ 1024 01:09:20,004 --> 01:09:24,338 ♪♪AND IT STILL IS NEWS ♪♪ 1025 01:09:24,463 --> 01:09:27,880 ♪♪ MAMA MAY HAVE ♪♪ 1026 01:09:28,004 --> 01:09:30,672 ♪♪ PAPA MAY HAVE ♪♪ 1027 01:09:30,797 --> 01:09:37,004 ♪♪ BUT GOD BLESS THE CHILD THAT'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪ 1028 01:09:37,129 --> 01:09:41,171 ♪♪ THAT'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪ 1029 01:09:41,338 --> 01:09:44,505 I KNEW SHE WAS BAD OFF. 1030 01:09:44,672 --> 01:09:52,505 BEN WEBSTER USED TO SAY, "OH, ME, THAT POOR GIRL." 1031 01:09:52,672 --> 01:09:55,797 WE DID HER LAST RECORD DATE FOR NORMAN GRANZ 1032 01:09:55,922 --> 01:09:57,630 OUT HERE AT CAPITOL RECORDS. 1033 01:09:57,755 --> 01:10:02,046 AND SHE WAS VERY WASTED. 1034 01:10:02,171 --> 01:10:05,171 AND I HAVE A PICTURE THAT WAS TAKEN 1035 01:10:05,296 --> 01:10:09,005 OF RED MITCHELL AND ME AT THE PIANO AND HER, 1036 01:10:09,129 --> 01:10:12,797 AND SHE LOOKS VERY, VERY WEAK AND FRAIL. 1037 01:10:12,922 --> 01:10:17,046 DOESN'T LOOK LIKE THE LADY DAY THAT I FIRST MET... 1038 01:10:17,171 --> 01:10:20,588 BECAUSE SHE HAD BEEN INTO SOME AWFUL DEEP STUFF. 1039 01:10:20,713 --> 01:10:23,213 ♪♪ MONEY ♪♪ 1040 01:10:23,338 --> 01:10:27,338 ♪♪ YOU'VE GOT LOTS OF FRIENDS ♪♪ 1041 01:10:27,463 --> 01:10:30,171 BY THE TIME LESTER YOUNG DIED, 1042 01:10:30,296 --> 01:10:32,463 HIS OLD FRIEND BILLIE HOLIDAY 1043 01:10:32,588 --> 01:10:35,088 WAS ALMOST UNRECOGNIZABLE. 1044 01:10:35,213 --> 01:10:38,672 ♪♪ BUT WHEN YOU'RE GONE ♪♪ 1045 01:10:38,838 --> 01:10:42,338 SOME EVENINGS SHE COULD NOT REMEMBER THE LYRICS OF SONGS 1046 01:10:42,463 --> 01:10:44,838 SHE HAD BEEN SINGING NEARLY EVERY NIGHT 1047 01:10:44,964 --> 01:10:47,338 FOR MORE THAN TWO DECADES. 1048 01:10:47,463 --> 01:10:49,505 ♪♪ RICH RELATIONS GIVE ♪♪ 1049 01:10:49,630 --> 01:10:51,380 IN MAY OF 1959, 1050 01:10:51,505 --> 01:10:53,880 2 MONTHS AFTER LESTER YOUNG'S DEATH, 1051 01:10:54,005 --> 01:10:58,672 SHE COLLAPSED AND WAS RUSHED TO THE HOSPITAL. 1052 01:10:58,797 --> 01:11:04,797 SOMEHOW, SOMEONE MANAGED TO SMUGGLE HEROIN INTO HER ROOM. 1053 01:11:04,922 --> 01:11:07,171 A NURSE DISCOVERED IT. 1054 01:11:07,338 --> 01:11:09,797 HOLIDAY WAS PLACED UNDER ARREST. 1055 01:11:09,922 --> 01:11:13,797 POLICE WERE STATIONED AT THE DOOR OF HER ROOM. 1056 01:11:13,922 --> 01:11:16,505 ♪♪ THAT'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪ 1057 01:11:16,672 --> 01:11:20,046 ♪♪ THAT'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪ 1058 01:11:20,171 --> 01:11:24,338 BILLIE HOLIDAY, PERHAPS THE GREATEST OF ALL JAZZ SINGERS, 1059 01:11:24,463 --> 01:11:29,133 DIED AT 3:10 A.M., JULY 17, 1959. 1060 01:11:33,463 --> 01:11:38,171 SHE WAS 44 YEARS OLD. 1061 01:11:38,296 --> 01:11:41,505 ♪♪ RICH RELATIONS GIVE ♪♪ 1062 01:11:41,630 --> 01:11:47,046 THE OFFICIAL CAUSE WAS CARDIAC FAILURE. 1063 01:11:47,171 --> 01:11:50,505 THE REAL CAUSE, SAID HER MANAGER JOE GLASER, 1064 01:11:50,672 --> 01:11:55,505 WAS "A CONCOCTION OF EVERYTHING SHE HAD DONE IN THE LAST 20 YEARS." 1065 01:11:55,672 --> 01:11:57,171 ♪♪ MAMA MAY HAVE ♪♪ 1066 01:11:57,296 --> 01:11:58,588 ♪♪ PAPA MAY HAVE ♪♪ 1067 01:11:58,713 --> 01:12:02,338 I GOT THE WORD FROM NEW YORK THAT SHE DIED. 1068 01:12:02,463 --> 01:12:05,922 AND IT WAS-- IT WAS JUST A TRAGEDY, 1069 01:12:06,046 --> 01:12:13,547 BUT I SURE HOPE THAT SHE'S RESTING COMFORTABLY. 1070 01:12:13,672 --> 01:12:16,463 I CAN'T THINK OF BILLIE HOLIDAY 1071 01:12:16,588 --> 01:12:20,838 WITHOUT TEARS COMING TO MY EYE. 1072 01:12:20,964 --> 01:12:25,338 THERE WAS ALWAYS SOMETHING OF PAIN, 1073 01:12:25,463 --> 01:12:27,838 ALWAYS SOMETHING... 1074 01:12:27,964 --> 01:12:33,588 THAT WAS HEARTBREAKING IN HER RENDITION. 1075 01:12:33,713 --> 01:12:36,255 AND SHE WASN'T ONLY TALKING 1076 01:12:36,380 --> 01:12:38,588 ABOUT HER OWN HEARTBREAK. 1077 01:12:38,713 --> 01:12:41,713 SHE WAS TALKING ABOUT YOURS, TOO. 1078 01:12:41,838 --> 01:12:44,672 UH, THE THING THAT JOINED US, 1079 01:12:44,797 --> 01:12:47,713 YOU KNOW, WAS THE COMMON CONCEPT 1080 01:12:47,838 --> 01:12:51,255 THAT THE MISERY SHE WAS SINGING, YOU KNOW, 1081 01:12:51,380 --> 01:12:56,755 WAS ONE THAT INCLUDED US AND EMBRACED US ALL. 1082 01:12:56,880 --> 01:13:02,672 SHE COULD, LIKE A MOTHER WITH A BIG, WARM BOSOM, 1083 01:13:02,797 --> 01:13:08,338 REACH OUT AND EMBRACE AND HOLD CLOSE-- 1084 01:13:08,463 --> 01:13:11,505 NOT IN THE GOSPEL SENSE, 1085 01:13:11,630 --> 01:13:15,005 BUT IN THE SENSE, YOU KNOW, 1086 01:13:15,129 --> 01:13:19,380 "GOD BLESS THE CHILD THAT'S GOT HIS OWN." 1087 01:13:19,505 --> 01:13:27,171 ♪♪ HE JUST DON'T WORRY 'BOUT NOTHIN' ♪♪ 1088 01:13:27,296 --> 01:13:33,547 ♪♪ 'CAUSE HE'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪ 1089 01:13:33,672 --> 01:13:45,338 ♪♪ YES, HE'S GOT HIS OWN ♪♪ 1090 01:13:56,797 --> 01:13:58,797 IN 1956, 1091 01:13:58,922 --> 01:14:04,838 MILES DAVIS FOUND STILL ANOTHER WAY TO EXPRESS HIS GENIUS... 1092 01:14:04,964 --> 01:14:07,547 AND HE DID IT WITH HIS OLD FRIEND, 1093 01:14:07,672 --> 01:14:22,171 THE ARRANGER GIL EVANS. 1094 01:14:22,296 --> 01:14:24,838 AND WHEN MILES REALLY BECAME IMPORTANT 1095 01:14:25,005 --> 01:14:28,129 AND WAS SIGNED WITH COLUMBIA RECORDS IN 1956, 1096 01:14:28,255 --> 01:14:32,171 ONE OF THE FIRST THINGS HE DID WAS TO SIGN UP GIL EVANS 1097 01:14:32,296 --> 01:14:35,296 TO WRITE AN ALBUM THAT BECAME KNOWN AS MILES AHEAD. 1098 01:14:35,421 --> 01:14:39,171 AND THIS WAS THE FIRST OF THE 3 MAJOR WORKS THEY DID TOGETHER, 1099 01:14:39,338 --> 01:14:41,838 AND THEY ARE AMONG THE MOST EXQUISITELY BEAUTIFUL 1100 01:14:42,005 --> 01:14:46,672 AND SATISFYINGLY REALIZED LPs OF THAT WHOLE ERA. 1101 01:14:46,838 --> 01:14:49,213 Narrator: MILES AHEAD, 1102 01:14:49,338 --> 01:14:51,380 PORGY AND BESS, 1103 01:14:51,505 --> 01:14:53,338 AND SKETCHES OF SPAIN 1104 01:14:53,505 --> 01:14:55,797 ARE 3 OF THE BEST-LOVED 1105 01:14:55,922 --> 01:14:58,129 JAZZ ALBUMS EVER MADE. 1106 01:14:58,255 --> 01:15:00,838 ALL OF THEM FEATURED DAVIS 1107 01:15:01,005 --> 01:15:18,838 IN LUSH ORCHESTRAL SETTINGS. 1108 01:15:23,672 --> 01:15:25,797 GIL ONCE TOLD ME THAT THE SOUNDS 1109 01:15:25,922 --> 01:15:27,171 THAT MILES MADE IN THOSE YEARS 1110 01:15:27,296 --> 01:15:28,713 WERE EXTREMELY DIFFICULT FOR HIM. 1111 01:15:28,838 --> 01:15:30,338 THEY WERE PAINFUL PHYSICALLY AND EMOTIONALLY. 1112 01:15:30,463 --> 01:15:33,505 I MEAN, IN A WAY, HE WAS A KIND OF, YOU KNOW, 1113 01:15:33,672 --> 01:15:34,838 MARLON BRANDO OF THE TRUMPET. 1114 01:15:34,964 --> 01:15:37,505 HE WAS REALLY CHANGING THE SOUND OF THE INSTRUMENT. 1115 01:15:37,672 --> 01:15:40,672 AND GIL WAS ABLE TO FIND, YOU KNOW, 1116 01:15:40,838 --> 01:15:43,171 RICH, ORIGINAL ORCHESTRATIONS 1117 01:15:43,338 --> 01:15:59,171 THAT JUST SEEMED TO WRAP THEMSELVES AROUND MILES. 1118 01:15:59,296 --> 01:16:02,338 GIL WOULD JUST CREATE A CHORD, 1119 01:16:02,505 --> 01:16:04,922 AND THEN HE WOULD THROW, YOU KNOW, 1120 01:16:05,046 --> 01:16:07,338 A COUPLE OF MINUTES OF OPEN SPACE 1121 01:16:07,505 --> 01:16:25,421 FOR MILES TO FILL IT IN. 1122 01:16:25,547 --> 01:16:28,505 AND THE CHORD WOULD ANTICIPATE WHAT MILES WOULD PLAY, 1123 01:16:28,630 --> 01:16:30,088 AND THEN THE FOLLOWING CHORD 1124 01:16:30,213 --> 01:16:35,380 WOULD PICK UP ON WHAT MILES HAD PLAYED. 1125 01:16:35,505 --> 01:16:41,838 THEY REALLY THOUGHT TOGETHER AS ONE. 1126 01:16:41,964 --> 01:16:43,755 THOSE ARE THE KINDS OF RECORDS, 1127 01:16:43,880 --> 01:16:46,505 ESPECIALLY SKETCHES OF SPAIN AND PORGY AND BESS, 1128 01:16:46,630 --> 01:16:48,880 THAT I REMEMBER A LOT OF WOMEN WOULD HAVE IN RECORD COLLECTIONS 1129 01:16:49,005 --> 01:16:50,338 THAT WERE OTHERWISE ROCK AND ROLL 1130 01:16:50,463 --> 01:16:51,838 AND A COUPLE OF CLASSICAL, 1131 01:16:51,964 --> 01:16:53,505 AND THERE WOULD BE ONE JAZZ RECORD, 1132 01:16:53,630 --> 01:16:55,421 AND IT WOULD BE THAT BECAUSE IT WAS SO SOPHISTICATED AND WORLDLY 1133 01:16:55,547 --> 01:16:58,171 AND IT WOULD SET A MOOD AND IT WAS SEXY AND EROTIC, 1134 01:16:58,296 --> 01:17:00,505 AND IF YOU WANTED TO IMPRESS SOMEBODY ON THE FIRST DATE, 1135 01:17:00,630 --> 01:17:02,713 THAT WAS ALWAYS THE RECORD THAT WOULD GO ON THE TURNTABLE. 1136 01:17:11,964 --> 01:17:13,463 MILES DAVIS WAS NOW 1137 01:17:13,588 --> 01:17:17,547 THE HIGHEST PAID MUSICIAN IN JAZZ, BLACK OR WHITE, 1138 01:17:17,672 --> 01:17:21,046 AND HE HAD BECOME A DEFIANT SYMBOL OF SUCCESS 1139 01:17:21,171 --> 01:17:25,588 FOR A NEW GENERATION OF AFRICAN AMERICANS. 1140 01:17:25,713 --> 01:17:32,421 HE WAS FOND OF FINE CLOTHES, FAST CARS, AND BEAUTIFUL WOMEN, 1141 01:17:32,547 --> 01:17:35,421 "A BLACK MAN," A FELLOW MUSICIAN SAID, 1142 01:17:35,547 --> 01:17:41,505 "WHO LIVES LIKE A WHITE MAN." 1143 01:17:41,630 --> 01:17:46,338 DAVIS CULTIVATED A COOL, TOUGH, ANGRY DEMEANOR, 1144 01:17:46,463 --> 01:17:50,338 AND HIS RUDENESS--TO FANS AND TO OTHER MUSICIANS-- 1145 01:17:50,463 --> 01:17:54,505 WAS LEGENDARY. 1146 01:17:54,630 --> 01:18:01,630 MILES DAVIS DID NOT TAKE ANYTHING FROM ANYBODY. 1147 01:18:01,755 --> 01:18:03,797 HE WAS ALSO POWERFUL ENOUGH 1148 01:18:03,922 --> 01:18:06,630 TO HAVE HIS WAY WITH WHITE MANAGEMENT. 1149 01:18:06,755 --> 01:18:08,171 IT BOTHERED DAVIS 1150 01:18:08,338 --> 01:18:11,005 THAT COLUMBIA HAD PUT A PRETTY BLONDE 1151 01:18:11,171 --> 01:18:13,255 ON THE COVER OF MILES AHEAD, 1152 01:18:13,380 --> 01:18:16,964 AND WHEN HE RELEASEDSOMEDAY MY PRINCE WILL COME, 1153 01:18:17,088 --> 01:18:20,630 HE INSISTED IT FEATURE HIS SECOND WIFE, FRANCES. 1154 01:18:20,755 --> 01:18:23,005 MILES HAD STYLE. 1155 01:18:23,129 --> 01:18:25,672 HE HAD SOMETHING THAT WAS ELECTRIC TO EVERYBODY. 1156 01:18:25,838 --> 01:18:31,421 LADIES JUST--YOU KNOW, THEY WENT CRAZY OVER HIM. 1157 01:18:31,547 --> 01:18:34,255 HE WAS ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL. 1158 01:18:34,380 --> 01:18:38,630 THE EXHILARATION OF JUST MILES WALKING ON A STAGE-- 1159 01:18:38,755 --> 01:18:41,463 IT WAS A TURN-ON FOR EVERYBODY. 1160 01:18:41,588 --> 01:18:44,964 HIS LOOK, HIS APPEAL TO THE MASSES WAS INCREDIBLE, 1161 01:18:45,088 --> 01:18:51,213 LIKE NO OTHER MUSICIAN I'VE EVER SEEN. 1162 01:18:51,338 --> 01:18:57,129 HIS PERSONALITY, HIS WHOLE PRESENCE WAS AMAZING. 1163 01:18:57,255 --> 01:18:59,338 HIS WHOLE-- I DON'T KNOW-- 1164 01:18:59,505 --> 01:19:01,338 THE VIBRATIONS IN THE ROOM CHANGED 1165 01:19:01,463 --> 01:19:03,296 WHEN HE WALKED IN THE ROOM. 1166 01:19:03,421 --> 01:19:04,964 EVERYBODY'S EYES FOCUSED ON HIM. 1167 01:19:05,088 --> 01:19:07,964 IT WAS, LIKE, HE HAD SOME MAGICAL, MYSTICAL THINGS 1168 01:19:08,088 --> 01:19:17,672 THAT WAS HAPPENING, UH, IN HIS PERSONA. 1169 01:19:17,797 --> 01:19:21,505 WE ALL USED TO ACT LIKE MILES. 1170 01:19:21,672 --> 01:19:24,505 I USED TO TALK TO GIRLS LIKE I THOUGHT THAT MILES WOULD TALK TO GIRLS. 1171 01:19:24,672 --> 01:19:26,171 YOU KNOW, WE HEARD HE HAD THIS HOARSE WHISPER, 1172 01:19:26,338 --> 01:19:28,255 SO I'D STAND UP AND TALK TO WOMEN--GIRLS, LIKE-- 1173 01:19:28,380 --> 01:19:29,755 WELL, GIRLS AT THAT TIME, 1174 01:19:29,880 --> 01:19:31,129 "HEY, BABY, WHAT'S HAPPENING? 1175 01:19:31,255 --> 01:19:35,880 WHAT'S GOING ON?" 1176 01:19:36,005 --> 01:19:37,505 BUT HE WAS THE PERSON 1177 01:19:37,630 --> 01:19:39,672 WHO WAS TALKED ABOUT, REALLY AS A PERSONALITY, 1178 01:19:39,797 --> 01:19:43,588 MORE SO THAN ELLINGTON OR MORE SO THAN ANY OF THE OTHER PEOPLE. 1179 01:19:43,713 --> 01:19:45,421 MILES. I MEAN, HE WAS KNOWN FIRST NAME. 1180 01:19:45,547 --> 01:19:47,171 MILES. MILES THIS, MILES THAT, 1181 01:19:47,338 --> 01:19:52,171 MILES WITH THE SUITS, MILES WITH THE WOMEN. 1182 01:19:52,296 --> 01:19:55,046 HE WAS THE JAZZ HERO FOR MY GENERATION, 1183 01:19:55,171 --> 01:19:58,505 AND THIS CAME ALONG AT THE TIME OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ERA, 1184 01:19:58,630 --> 01:20:01,338 WHEN MY GENERATION WAS SORT OF REJECTING LOUIS ARMSTRONG, 1185 01:20:01,463 --> 01:20:03,505 WAS SORT OF REJECTING THE WHOLE IDEA 1186 01:20:03,630 --> 01:20:05,672 OF A BLACK PERSON AS AN ENTERTAINER, 1187 01:20:05,797 --> 01:20:09,505 AND THAT WAS VERY POWERFUL FOR US. 1188 01:20:09,672 --> 01:20:14,588 HIS COOL, THE WAY HE WENT ABOUT HIS BUSINESS... 1189 01:20:14,713 --> 01:20:20,630 THE, UH, SORT OF INSIDE/OUTSIDE WAY WITH MILES. 1190 01:20:20,755 --> 01:20:22,797 BECAUSE ON ONE LEVEL, MILES WAS MR. OUTSIDE 1191 01:20:22,922 --> 01:20:24,338 IN SORT OF HIS STANCE ABOUT RACE 1192 01:20:24,463 --> 01:20:26,129 OR HIS STANCE ABOUT MUSIC 1193 01:20:26,255 --> 01:20:28,838 OR HIS SORT OF F-YOU STANCE ABOUT LIFE. 1194 01:20:29,005 --> 01:20:30,213 BUT HE WAS ALSO MR. INSIDE. 1195 01:20:30,338 --> 01:20:31,713 HE WAS POPULAR. HE WAS RESPECTED. 1196 01:20:31,838 --> 01:20:33,338 WHITES AND BLACKS LIKED HIS MUSIC. 1197 01:20:33,505 --> 01:20:35,797 I MEAN, THERE WERE LOTS OF THINGS ABOUT MILES 1198 01:20:35,922 --> 01:20:37,421 THAT MADE HIM VERY ATTRACTIVE THAT WAY. 1199 01:20:42,964 --> 01:20:45,672 BUT FOR ALL HIS GROWING FAME, 1200 01:20:45,797 --> 01:20:47,505 FOR ALL HIS SUCCESS, 1201 01:20:47,630 --> 01:20:49,672 DAVIS COULD NEVER COMPLETELY MASK 1202 01:20:49,797 --> 01:20:52,338 HIS DEEP INSECURITY... 1203 01:20:52,463 --> 01:20:58,838 OR CONTROL THE ANGER THAT WAS SO MUCH A PART OF HIS PERSONALITY. 1204 01:20:58,964 --> 01:21:02,046 NO AMOUNT OF TOUGHNESS COULD CHANGE THE FACT 1205 01:21:02,171 --> 01:21:07,838 THAT HE WAS STILL A BLACK MAN IN A WHITE WORLD. 1206 01:21:08,005 --> 01:21:11,838 HE WOULD BE AFRAID TO GO IN TO THE HOTELS HIMSELF 1207 01:21:12,005 --> 01:21:13,922 TO CHECK ON OUR RESERVATIONS, 1208 01:21:14,046 --> 01:21:16,505 THINKING BECAUSE HE IS A BLACK MAN, 1209 01:21:16,672 --> 01:21:20,255 THEY'RE GOING TO SAY, "NO, WE DON'T HAVE YOUR RESERVATION." 1210 01:21:20,380 --> 01:21:24,922 HE WOULD SEND ME IN TO TAKE CARE OF THAT PART OF IT. 1211 01:21:25,046 --> 01:21:29,005 I MEAN, HE REALLY, UM... 1212 01:21:29,171 --> 01:21:38,005 FEARED THE PREJUDICE THAT DID HAPPEN IN THIS COUNTRY THEN. 1213 01:21:38,129 --> 01:21:39,547 ONE EVENING, 1214 01:21:39,672 --> 01:21:42,005 DAVIS WAS TAKING A BREAK OUTSIDE BIRDLAND 1215 01:21:42,129 --> 01:21:47,338 WHEN A WHITE POLICEMAN TOLD HIM TO MOVE ON. 1216 01:21:47,463 --> 01:21:49,421 DAVIS REFUSED. 1217 01:21:49,547 --> 01:21:53,046 "I'M WORKING HERE," HE SAID. 1218 01:21:53,171 --> 01:21:58,505 THE OFFICER BEAT HIM BLOODY WITH HIS BILLY CLUB. 1219 01:21:58,630 --> 01:22:01,672 THAT INCIDENT AND OTHER INDIGNITIES 1220 01:22:01,797 --> 01:22:07,005 ONLY FUELED DAVIS' ALIENATION AND RAGE. 1221 01:22:07,171 --> 01:22:10,171 HE HAD FISTFIGHTS WITH CLUB OWNERS, 1222 01:22:10,296 --> 01:22:14,171 SWORE AT FANS WHO DARED SPEAK TO HIM. 1223 01:22:14,338 --> 01:22:18,005 HIS PRIVATE LIFE WAS JUST AS COMPLICATED... 1224 01:22:18,171 --> 01:22:20,255 AND VIOLENT. 1225 01:22:20,380 --> 01:22:25,088 MILES WAS VERY POSSESSIVE. I WAS HIS POSSESSION. 1226 01:22:25,213 --> 01:22:26,672 HERE I AM, 1227 01:22:26,797 --> 01:22:30,255 THIS BALLERINA WHO'D PERFORMED ALL OVER THE WORLD, 1228 01:22:30,380 --> 01:22:32,672 ON BROADWAY NOW, 1229 01:22:32,797 --> 01:22:36,755 AND HE COMES TO THE THEATER ONE EVENING IN HIS FERRARI 1230 01:22:36,880 --> 01:22:38,672 AND SAYS TO ME, 1231 01:22:38,797 --> 01:22:41,838 "FRANCES, A WOMAN SHOULD BE WITH HER MAN. 1232 01:22:41,964 --> 01:22:46,630 I WANT YOU OUT OF WEST SIDE STORY." 1233 01:22:46,755 --> 01:22:49,547 I COULDN'T EVEN MENTION ANOTHER MAN. 1234 01:22:49,672 --> 01:22:53,672 WHEN I MENTIONED THAT QUINCY JONES WAS HANDSOME, 1235 01:22:53,797 --> 01:22:57,838 AND ALL OF A SUDDEN, I WAS DOWN FOR THE COUNT. 1236 01:22:57,964 --> 01:23:01,380 I HAD TO CALL THE POLICE BECAUSE I THOUGHT, 1237 01:23:01,505 --> 01:23:04,755 "THIS IS GOING TO BE THE END OF ME." 1238 01:23:04,880 --> 01:23:06,338 IT WAS HARD, 1239 01:23:06,463 --> 01:23:12,171 BUT I WAS IN LOVE WITH HIM, SO I TOOK IT ALL. 1240 01:23:12,296 --> 01:23:15,838 I DIDN'T LOVE MILES DAVIS. I LOVED DIZZY GILLESPIE. 1241 01:23:16,005 --> 01:23:18,838 I LOVED DUKE ELLINGTON. I LOVED COUNT BASIE. 1242 01:23:18,964 --> 01:23:20,713 I REALLY LOVED THOSE PEOPLE. 1243 01:23:20,838 --> 01:23:23,505 I NEVER LOVED MILES DAVIS. 1244 01:23:23,630 --> 01:23:25,672 PEOPLE LOVED MILES DAVIS, 1245 01:23:25,797 --> 01:23:28,880 BUT IT WAS A SORT OF A MASOCHISM. 1246 01:23:29,005 --> 01:23:34,338 MILES TREATED EVERYBODY IN VERY WEIRD WAYS. 1247 01:23:34,463 --> 01:23:35,838 THERE ARE MUSICIANS OUT THERE NOW 1248 01:23:35,964 --> 01:23:38,755 THAT WORKED WITH MILES THAT ARE STILL BEING PAINS IN THE ASSES 1249 01:23:38,880 --> 01:23:42,421 BECAUSE THEY LEARNED HOW TO BE A PAIN IN THE ASS FROM MILES DAVIS, 1250 01:23:42,547 --> 01:23:45,505 AND THEY TRY TO MIMIC HIM AND IMITATE HIM. 1251 01:23:45,630 --> 01:23:47,421 AND MILES-- IT WORKED FOR MILES. 1252 01:23:47,547 --> 01:23:51,338 I WAS PROUD OF WORKING WITH MILES. I DIDN'T LOVE HIM. 1253 01:23:56,129 --> 01:23:59,171 DESPITE THE TURMOIL IN HIS PRIVATE LIFE, 1254 01:23:59,296 --> 01:24:02,338 MILES DAVIS ASTONISHED THE JAZZ WORLD ONCE AGAIN 1255 01:24:02,463 --> 01:24:05,505 IN 1959. 1256 01:24:05,630 --> 01:24:09,129 HE HAD BROUGHT HIS SEXTET INTO THE COLUMBIA STUDIOS 1257 01:24:09,255 --> 01:24:11,380 TO MAKE ANOTHER ALBUM-- 1258 01:24:11,505 --> 01:24:15,338 5 ORIGINAL TUNES BUILT ON SIMPLE SCALES, OR "MODES," 1259 01:24:15,463 --> 01:24:18,338 RATHER THAN THE COMPLICATED CHORD PROGRESSIONS 1260 01:24:18,505 --> 01:24:22,838 THAT HAD CHARACTERIZED BEBOP. 1261 01:24:23,005 --> 01:24:25,171 THIS OPENED UP THE WORLD FOR IMPROVISERS 1262 01:24:25,338 --> 01:24:28,505 BECAUSE THEY COULD GET AWAY FROM THE-- ALMOST THE GYMNASTICS 1263 01:24:28,672 --> 01:24:32,338 OF POPPING THROUGH ALL OF THESE COMPLICATED HARMONIC LABYRINTHS 1264 01:24:32,505 --> 01:24:35,255 AND JUST CONCENTRATE ON INVENTING MELODY, 1265 01:24:35,380 --> 01:24:37,797 BECAUSE THE HARMONY DIDN'T CHANGE. 1266 01:24:37,922 --> 01:24:41,046 THE GUYS WHO HAD BEEN BEBOPPING THROUGH ALL THOSE CHORDS 1267 01:24:41,171 --> 01:24:42,630 FOR ALL THOSE YEARS 1268 01:24:42,755 --> 01:24:44,547 WERE NATURALLY FALLING INTO CERTAIN CLICHES, 1269 01:24:44,672 --> 01:24:46,713 CERTAIN EASY KINDS OF PHRASES. 1270 01:24:46,838 --> 01:24:50,505 MILES FORCED THEM OUT OF IT. 1271 01:24:50,630 --> 01:24:54,338 DAVIS WAS COMMITTED TO GETTING SOMETHING SPONTANEOUS 1272 01:24:54,463 --> 01:24:56,713 OUT OF HIS MUSICIANS. 1273 01:24:56,838 --> 01:25:01,380 NONE OF HIS MEN EVER SAW ANY OF HIS NEW TUNES 1274 01:25:01,505 --> 01:25:04,713 BEFORE THEY GOT TO THE RECORDING SESSION. 1275 01:25:04,838 --> 01:25:06,463 WHEN MILES CAME IN, 1276 01:25:06,588 --> 01:25:08,838 HE COMES UP WITH LITTLE SCRAPS OF PAPER-- 1277 01:25:08,964 --> 01:25:12,005 LITTLE BITTY PIECES OF PAPER--AND SAYS, "THERE'S YOUR PART. 1278 01:25:12,129 --> 01:25:14,797 THERE'S YOUR PART. THERE'S YOUR PART. THERE'S YOUR PART." 1279 01:25:14,922 --> 01:25:16,296 BUT HE WANTED THAT TENSION, 1280 01:25:16,421 --> 01:25:18,296 AND HE KNEW THAT THEY WERE GREAT MUSICIANS. 1281 01:25:18,421 --> 01:25:21,964 HE TOLD ME THE TRICK WAS TO PICK GREAT MUSICIANS WHEN YOU DO THAT 1282 01:25:22,088 --> 01:25:24,338 BECAUSE HE HAD LEARNED THAT KIND OF TECHNIQUE FROM BIRD. 1283 01:25:24,505 --> 01:25:26,171 SO YOU PUT THEM IN THAT SPOT, 1284 01:25:26,338 --> 01:25:28,046 YOU GIVE THEM A LITTLE BIT OF SOMETHING, 1285 01:25:28,171 --> 01:25:29,964 AND THEN IF IT'S A GREAT MUSICIAN, 1286 01:25:30,088 --> 01:25:40,171 THEN THEY KIND OF PLAY BEYOND THEMSELVES. 1287 01:25:40,296 --> 01:25:43,547 THE GREAT MUSICIANS WHO ROSE TO THEIR LEADER'S CHALLENGE 1288 01:25:43,672 --> 01:25:47,547 INCLUDED TENOR SAXOPHONE STAR JOHN COLTRANE... 1289 01:25:47,672 --> 01:25:52,213 ALTO SAXOPHONIST JULIAN "CANNONBALL" ADDERLEY... 1290 01:25:52,338 --> 01:25:57,922 BASSIST PAUL CHAMBERS, JIMMY COBB ON DRUMS... 1291 01:25:58,046 --> 01:26:00,755 AND A NEW AND LITTLE-KNOWN PIANIST, 1292 01:26:00,880 --> 01:26:02,838 BILL EVANS. 1293 01:26:02,964 --> 01:26:05,171 AND THIS WAS A TIME 1294 01:26:05,296 --> 01:26:09,171 WHEN THERE WAS A GREAT DEAL OF FIERCE REJECTION 1295 01:26:09,296 --> 01:26:11,838 AMONG SOME YOUNGER BLACK MUSICIANS 1296 01:26:11,964 --> 01:26:15,296 OF THE IDEA "A," THAT WHITES COULD PLAY THE MUSIC, 1297 01:26:15,421 --> 01:26:16,838 BUT, MORE TO THE POINT, 1298 01:26:16,964 --> 01:26:20,171 THAT WHITES SHOULDN'T BE TAKING AWAY JOBS FROM JAZZ MUSICIANS. 1299 01:26:20,296 --> 01:26:23,005 AND THIS COINCIDED WITH THE GREAT POPULAR-- 1300 01:26:23,129 --> 01:26:28,005 GREAT FOR JAZZ--POPULAR INTEREST IN SO-CALLED WEST COAST JAZZ, 1301 01:26:28,129 --> 01:26:31,213 WHICH WAS ALMOST ENTIRELY WHITE, WAS PRETTY BLAND, 1302 01:26:31,338 --> 01:26:34,547 AND THOSE PEOPLE WERE MAKING A LOT OF MONEY. 1303 01:26:34,672 --> 01:26:40,005 SO HERE HE HIRES BILL EVANS. 1304 01:26:40,129 --> 01:26:42,505 WHEN IT CAME TO MUSIC, 1305 01:26:42,630 --> 01:26:50,338 COLOR DIDN'T MATTER TO MILES DAVIS. 1306 01:26:50,463 --> 01:26:52,838 EVANS' PLAYING, HE SAID, 1307 01:26:52,964 --> 01:26:57,880 ADDED A "QUIET FIRE" TO HIS GROUP. 1308 01:26:58,005 --> 01:27:00,338 IT REMINDED HIM 1309 01:27:00,463 --> 01:27:10,213 OF "SPARKLING WATER CASCADING DOWN FROM SOME CLEAR WATERFALL." 1310 01:27:10,338 --> 01:27:12,046 THE ALBUM DAVIS AND EVANS 1311 01:27:12,171 --> 01:27:15,129 AND THE OTHER MEMBERS OF THE SEXTET PRODUCED TOGETHER, 1312 01:27:15,255 --> 01:27:17,213 KIND OF BLUE, 1313 01:27:17,338 --> 01:28:03,672 IS THE BEST-SELLING JAZZ ALBUM OF ALL TIME. 1314 01:28:31,129 --> 01:28:33,588 MUSIC IS ONE OF THE FEW THINGS 1315 01:28:33,713 --> 01:28:37,255 THAT INVOLVES YOUR BODY, YOUR EMOTIONS, YOUR MIND, 1316 01:28:37,380 --> 01:28:38,880 AND YOUR SPIRIT, 1317 01:28:39,005 --> 01:28:49,672 ALL OPERATING SIMULTANEOUSLY. 1318 01:28:49,797 --> 01:28:51,672 YOU'RE PLAYING. YOUR BODY IS INVOLVED. 1319 01:28:51,797 --> 01:28:52,880 YOU'RE FEELING EMOTIONS, 1320 01:28:53,005 --> 01:28:55,171 YOU WANT TO EXPRESS SOMETHING EMOTIONALLY. 1321 01:28:55,296 --> 01:28:56,797 YOUR MIND IS ACTIVE. 1322 01:28:56,922 --> 01:28:59,547 IT'S CONSTRUCTING STRUCTURES OVER THE CHORD CHANGES 1323 01:28:59,672 --> 01:29:01,338 OF THIS PARTICULAR TUNE. 1324 01:29:01,463 --> 01:29:02,964 AND YOUR SPIRIT. 1325 01:29:03,088 --> 01:29:06,005 IF YOU'RE--IT'S A PRAYERFUL KIND OF THING, 1326 01:29:06,129 --> 01:29:10,213 SO IN THAT SENSE, IT'S A VERY RARE GIFT TO BE A MUSICIAN, 1327 01:29:10,338 --> 01:29:13,296 TO BE ABLE TO SPONTANEOUSLY, AS A JAZZ MUSICIAN, 1328 01:29:13,421 --> 01:29:14,964 HAVE CONVERSATIONS WITH OTHER PEOPLE 1329 01:29:15,088 --> 01:29:18,005 IN WHICH ALL OF THE PARTS OF THEMSELVES ARE EMBODIED 1330 01:29:18,129 --> 01:29:23,880 AND HAPPENING AT THE SAME TIME. 1331 01:29:24,005 --> 01:29:26,213 JAZZ MUSIC IS EXISTENCE MUSIC. 1332 01:29:26,338 --> 01:29:28,755 IT DOESN'T TAKE YOU OUT OF THE WORLD. 1333 01:29:28,880 --> 01:29:34,880 IT PUTS YOU IN THE WORLD AND MAKES YOU DEAL WITH IT. 1334 01:29:35,005 --> 01:29:36,838 IT'S NOT THE KIND OF THING 1335 01:29:36,964 --> 01:29:40,880 OF A RELIGIOSITY OF, YOU KNOW, "THOU MUST." 1336 01:29:41,005 --> 01:29:45,672 IT'S NOT. IT SAYS, "THIS IS," 1337 01:29:45,797 --> 01:29:47,171 AND THAT'S IT. "THIS IS." 1338 01:29:47,296 --> 01:29:50,672 IT DEALS WITH THE PRESENT. YES. ALL OF THAT IS WHAT HAPPENS. 1339 01:29:50,797 --> 01:29:53,838 THERE'S A GUY--SOMEBODY WAS LAYING OUT DRUNK IN THE STREET. 1340 01:29:53,964 --> 01:29:55,713 IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN THE CAT WHO'S PLAYING. 1341 01:29:55,838 --> 01:29:57,880 IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN CHARLIE PARKER. 1342 01:29:58,005 --> 01:30:00,005 BUT THAT FACT DOESN'T ALTER THE POWER-- 1343 01:30:00,129 --> 01:30:02,505 THAT IS THE POWER OF WHAT HE'S SAYING. 1344 01:30:02,672 --> 01:30:05,380 "YES, I DID THAT, AND I ALSO DO THIS." 1345 01:30:05,505 --> 01:30:11,213 IT'S THE RANGE OF HUMANITY THAT'S IN THIS MUSIC. 1346 01:30:11,338 --> 01:30:13,005 JOHN WILLIAM COLTRANE, 1347 01:30:13,129 --> 01:30:15,296 LIKE ALL GREAT JAZZ INNOVATORS, 1348 01:30:15,421 --> 01:30:19,338 SOUGHT TO TAKE THE MUSIC TO PLACES IT HAD NEVER BEEN 1349 01:30:19,463 --> 01:30:23,588 AND BECAME IN THE PROCESS-- TO SOME OF HIS ADMIRERS-- 1350 01:30:23,713 --> 01:30:25,838 SOMETHING LIKE A SAVIOR 1351 01:30:26,005 --> 01:30:30,171 AND AN INSPIRATION TO A WHOLE GENERATION OF YOUNG MUSICIANS. 1352 01:30:30,338 --> 01:30:33,046 COLTRANE IS LIKE THE FATHER. 1353 01:30:33,171 --> 01:30:36,463 HE IS ONE OF THE ONES THAT REALLY LED US 1354 01:30:36,588 --> 01:30:38,005 INTO THIS SPIRITUAL QUEST, 1355 01:30:38,171 --> 01:30:39,630 WHO REALLY MADE PEOPLE AWARE 1356 01:30:39,755 --> 01:30:42,005 OF THE SPIRITUALITY OF JAZZ. 1357 01:30:42,129 --> 01:30:44,380 THIS HAD EXISTED FOR YEARS BEFORE, 1358 01:30:44,505 --> 01:30:47,338 BUT COLTRANE WAS PUTTING IT ON ANOTHER LEVEL. 1359 01:30:47,463 --> 01:30:49,838 HE WAS BRINGING IT TO THE FOREFRONT. 1360 01:31:03,005 --> 01:31:05,338 HE WAS BORN IN 1926, 1361 01:31:05,463 --> 01:31:08,505 IN A LITTLE NORTH CAROLINA TOWN CALLED HAMLET, 1362 01:31:08,630 --> 01:31:10,672 GREW UP IN HIGH POINT, 1363 01:31:10,797 --> 01:31:14,838 AND MOVED TO PHILADELPHIA AS A TEENAGER. 1364 01:31:14,964 --> 01:31:16,713 THERE, HE STUDIED SAXOPHONE 1365 01:31:16,838 --> 01:31:18,421 AT 2 DIFFERENT CONSERVATORIES, 1366 01:31:18,547 --> 01:31:22,421 PLAYED RHYTHM AND BLUES, LISTENED TO LESTER YOUNG, 1367 01:31:22,547 --> 01:31:31,838 THEN GOT A JOB WITH A BIG BAND LED BY DIZZY GILLESPIE. 1368 01:31:32,005 --> 01:31:35,088 HE FIRST WON FAME PLAYING WITH MILES DAVIS, 1369 01:31:35,213 --> 01:31:38,171 BUT DAVIS LET HIM GO FOR A TIME 1370 01:31:38,338 --> 01:31:43,421 BECAUSE HE HAD BECOME ADDICTED TO HEROIN. 1371 01:31:43,547 --> 01:31:48,129 IN 1957, WHILE PLAYING WITH THELONIOUS MONK, 1372 01:31:48,255 --> 01:31:50,088 COLTRANE UNDERWENT 1373 01:31:50,213 --> 01:31:54,838 WHAT HE CALLED A "SPIRITUAL AWAKENING." 1374 01:31:55,005 --> 01:31:58,338 HE GAVE UP DRUGS, LIQUOR, CIGARETTES, 1375 01:31:58,505 --> 01:32:02,755 BEGAN TO STUDY EASTERN RELIGIONS AND EASTERN AND AFRICAN MUSIC, 1376 01:32:02,880 --> 01:32:05,672 INITIATING A RELENTLESS SEARCH FOR MEANING 1377 01:32:05,838 --> 01:32:08,505 THAT HE NEVER ABANDONED. 1378 01:32:08,672 --> 01:32:12,797 FOR THE REST OF HIS LIFE, JOHN COLTRANE SEEMED DETERMINED 1379 01:32:12,922 --> 01:32:16,630 TO FILL HIS MUSIC WITH MORE OF EVERYTHING-- 1380 01:32:16,755 --> 01:32:25,838 MORE NOTES, MORE IDEAS, MORE ENERGY. 1381 01:32:25,964 --> 01:32:29,005 JOHN COLTRANE NEVER RESTED. 1382 01:32:29,171 --> 01:32:31,171 HE ALWAYS NEEDED TO MOVE. 1383 01:32:31,338 --> 01:32:33,338 ONCE HE DISCOVERED ONE THING, 1384 01:32:33,505 --> 01:32:37,505 HE REALIZED 10, 20 MORE THINGS THAT THERE WERE TO DISCOVER. 1385 01:32:37,672 --> 01:32:39,588 HE KEPT ON PUSHING HIMSELF, 1386 01:32:39,713 --> 01:32:42,838 AND HE NEVER ALLOWED HIS ART TO EITHER STAGNATE 1387 01:32:43,005 --> 01:32:44,505 OR TO EVEN REST. 1388 01:32:44,672 --> 01:32:49,171 IT WAS CONSTANTLY MOVING. 1389 01:32:49,296 --> 01:32:52,338 JOHN COLTRANE RAISED THE STANDARDS 1390 01:32:52,463 --> 01:33:02,838 OF WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A DEDICATED MUSICIAN. 1391 01:33:02,964 --> 01:33:04,922 LIKE HIS FRIEND SONNY ROLLINS, 1392 01:33:05,046 --> 01:33:09,088 HE SEEMED UNABLE TO PUT HIS MUSIC ASIDE EVEN FOR A MOMENT. 1393 01:33:09,213 --> 01:33:11,588 HE AND ROLLINS ROUTINELY PHONED ONE ANOTHER, 1394 01:33:11,713 --> 01:33:14,630 PLAYED A PHRASE OR TWO INTO THE RECEIVER, 1395 01:33:14,755 --> 01:33:18,213 THEN HUNG UP AND WAITED FOR THE OTHER TO CALL BACK 1396 01:33:18,338 --> 01:33:20,505 WITH A MUSICAL ANSWER OF HIS OWN. 1397 01:33:33,046 --> 01:33:36,797 I CONSIDER ONE OF THE REALLY DEFINING RECORDINGS OF COLTRANE 1398 01:33:36,922 --> 01:33:40,171 TO BE CHASIN' THE TRAIN, WHICH HE MADE IN 1961. 1399 01:33:40,338 --> 01:33:47,505 HE RECORDED IT LIVE AT THE VILLAGE VANGUARD. 1400 01:33:47,630 --> 01:33:56,005 IT WAS A 16-MINUTE SOLO ON ONE SIDE OF A RECORD. 1401 01:33:56,171 --> 01:33:59,046 HE PLAYS ABOUT 80 CHORUSES. I ONCE TRIED TO COUNT. 1402 01:33:59,171 --> 01:34:01,547 IT'S ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE NOT TO GET LOST, 1403 01:34:01,672 --> 01:34:04,213 BECAUSE HE KEEPS TRYING TO BREAK THROUGH THE BOUNDARIES OF THE BLUES, 1404 01:34:04,338 --> 01:34:06,713 AND THE RHYTHM SECTION KEEPS HOLDING HIM BACK A LITTLE BIT, 1405 01:34:06,838 --> 01:34:16,171 BUT YOU CAN JUST FEEL HIM CHAMPING AT THE BIT. 1406 01:34:16,296 --> 01:34:20,672 NOW, OF COURSE, TO A LOT OF PEOPLE, THEY COULDN'T GET IT, 1407 01:34:20,838 --> 01:34:23,129 BECAUSE IT SEEMED REPETITIOUS OR MONOTONOUS. 1408 01:34:23,255 --> 01:34:26,463 THE IDEA HERE, THOUGH, WAS THE EFFUSIVENESS. 1409 01:34:26,588 --> 01:34:29,505 THAT WAS WHAT WAS--IT WASN'T ABOUT DETAIL ANYMORE. 1410 01:34:29,630 --> 01:34:33,255 IT WASN'T ABOUT, "GEE, THAT'S A PERFECT 12-BAR LOUIS ARMSTRONG SOLO 1411 01:34:33,380 --> 01:34:35,964 WHERE EVERY NOTE COUNTS AS IF IN A POEM." 1412 01:34:36,088 --> 01:34:37,505 THIS WASN'T A POEM. 1413 01:34:37,672 --> 01:34:44,338 THIS WAS A VERY LONG NOVEL. 1414 01:34:44,463 --> 01:34:49,046 AND, LIKE IN TOLSTOY, IT'S NOT ABOUT EVERY WORD BEING RIGHT. 1415 01:34:49,171 --> 01:34:51,046 IT'S THE OVERWHELMING EFFECT. 1416 01:34:51,171 --> 01:34:54,505 AND IT JUST PINNED YOUR EARS BACK, 1417 01:34:54,630 --> 01:34:58,672 AND YOU KNEW THAT YOU WERE IN A NEW WORLD, 1418 01:34:58,797 --> 01:35:01,505 A BRAVE NEW LAND FOR JAZZ. 1419 01:35:12,505 --> 01:35:17,129 IN 1961, COLTRANE FORMED A NEW QUARTET-- 1420 01:35:17,255 --> 01:35:19,505 McCOY TYNER AT THE PIANO, 1421 01:35:19,672 --> 01:35:21,547 JIMMY GARRISON ON BASS, 1422 01:35:21,672 --> 01:35:25,171 AND ELVIN JONES, A MASTER OF COMPLEX RHYTHMS, 1423 01:35:25,296 --> 01:35:33,505 ON DRUMS. 1424 01:35:33,630 --> 01:35:35,672 COLTRANE HIMSELF NOW OFTEN PLAYED 1425 01:35:35,797 --> 01:35:37,213 THE SOPRANO SAXOPHONE, 1426 01:35:37,338 --> 01:35:40,213 THE INSTRUMENT THE NEW ORLEANS MASTER SIDNEY BECHET 1427 01:35:40,338 --> 01:35:52,505 HAD INTRODUCED TO JAZZ. 1428 01:35:52,630 --> 01:35:53,922 THEIR STUNNING TRANSFORMATION 1429 01:35:54,046 --> 01:35:56,922 OF THE SENTIMENTAL HIT FROM THE SOUND OF MUSIC-- 1430 01:35:57,046 --> 01:35:58,505 MY FAVORITE THINGS-- 1431 01:35:58,630 --> 01:36:02,338 BECAME THE FIRST JAZZ CUT SINCE DAVE BRUBECK'S TAKE FIVE 1432 01:36:02,463 --> 01:36:13,505 TO RECEIVE WIDE PLAY ON THE RADIO. 1433 01:36:13,630 --> 01:36:16,755 SOON, JOHN COLTRANE WAS MAKING MORE MONEY 1434 01:36:16,880 --> 01:36:31,129 THAN ANY OTHER JAZZ MUSICIAN EXCEPT MILES DAVIS. 1435 01:36:31,255 --> 01:36:34,046 BUT COLTRANE BARELY NOTICED. 1436 01:36:34,171 --> 01:36:36,838 THE MUSIC WAS ALL THAT SEEMED TO MATTER TO HIM, 1437 01:36:36,964 --> 01:36:39,005 AND THE MEN WITH WHOM HE PLAYED 1438 01:36:39,129 --> 01:36:41,005 SHARED HIS ALMOST MYSTICAL BELIEF 1439 01:36:41,129 --> 01:36:54,171 IN THE IMPORTANCE OF WHAT THEY WERE DOING TOGETHER. 1440 01:36:54,296 --> 01:36:57,213 THE ENERGY, THE POWER THAT CAME OUT OF THAT GROUP 1441 01:36:57,338 --> 01:37:02,005 WAS JUST ASTONISHING. 1442 01:37:02,129 --> 01:37:06,880 I GUESS MY MOST VIVID MEMORIES OF BIRDLAND ARE SEEING COLTRANE. 1443 01:37:07,005 --> 01:37:08,380 IN THE PEANUT GALLERY, 1444 01:37:08,505 --> 01:37:09,880 THE TABLES WERE VERY NICELY SPACED, 1445 01:37:10,005 --> 01:37:12,046 AND I REMEMBER WE USED TO JUST GET UP 1446 01:37:12,171 --> 01:37:21,505 AND DANCE TO JOHN COLTRANE. 1447 01:37:21,630 --> 01:37:48,838 IT WAS AS CLOSE TO HAVING A RELIGION AS I EVER GOT. 1448 01:38:15,171 --> 01:38:17,588 LOUIS ARMSTRONG AND DUKE ELLINGTON, 1449 01:38:17,713 --> 01:38:20,088 CHARLIE PARKER AND DIZZY GILLESPIE, 1450 01:38:20,213 --> 01:38:23,213 SONNY ROLLINS AND MILES DAVIS AND JOHN COLTRANE 1451 01:38:23,338 --> 01:38:25,672 HAD MADE THEIR INDIVIDUAL STATEMENTS 1452 01:38:25,838 --> 01:38:28,463 WHILE WORKING WITHIN ESTABLISHED RHYTHM AND HARMONY 1453 01:38:28,588 --> 01:38:31,880 AND SEQUENCES OF CHORDS. 1454 01:38:32,005 --> 01:38:36,505 ONE MAN REJECTED ALL OF THAT. 1455 01:38:36,672 --> 01:38:40,380 JAZZ, HE SAID, MUST BE "FREE." 1456 01:38:40,505 --> 01:38:47,338 HIS NAME WAS ORNETTE COLEMAN. 1457 01:38:47,463 --> 01:38:50,463 "THE THEME YOU PLAY AT THE START OF A NUMBER 1458 01:38:50,588 --> 01:38:52,338 IS THE TERRITORY," HE SAID, 1459 01:38:52,463 --> 01:38:56,672 "AND WHAT COMES AFTER, WHICH MAY HAVE VERY LITTLE TO DO WITH IT, 1460 01:38:56,797 --> 01:39:00,505 IS THE ADVENTURE." 1461 01:39:00,630 --> 01:39:04,838 AT SOME POINT, IF YOU GO FAR ENOUGH OUT OF THE CHORDS, 1462 01:39:04,964 --> 01:39:06,421 THE QUESTION ARISES, 1463 01:39:06,547 --> 01:39:08,129 "WHY USE THE CHORDS AT ALL? 1464 01:39:08,255 --> 01:39:11,672 "WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF WE GET RID OF THE CHORDS, 1465 01:39:11,797 --> 01:39:14,129 "AND WE DON'T HAVE A HARMONIC CONTOUR? 1466 01:39:14,255 --> 01:39:16,005 WHAT IF WE JUST IMPROVISE MELODICALLY?" 1467 01:39:16,129 --> 01:39:20,880 OK. ANOTHER QUESTION IS, "WHY DO WE HAVE TO PLAY 4/4 TIME ALL THE TIME? 1468 01:39:21,005 --> 01:39:22,463 "I MEAN, WHERE IS THAT WRITTEN? 1469 01:39:22,588 --> 01:39:24,630 "WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF WE DON'T? 1470 01:39:24,755 --> 01:39:27,672 "WHAT IF THE DRUMMER COULD IMPROVISE A KIND OF TIME 1471 01:39:27,797 --> 01:39:30,547 "THAT RESPONDS MOMENT TO MOMENT TO WHATEVER THE SOLOIST 1472 01:39:30,672 --> 01:39:32,505 "OR WHATEVER THE ENSEMBLE IS PLAYING? 1473 01:39:32,672 --> 01:39:36,171 "AND IF YOU DON'T HAVE CHORDS AND IF YOU DON'T HAVE STANDARD TIME, 1474 01:39:36,296 --> 01:39:38,046 "WHAT DOES THE BASS PLAYER DO? 1475 01:39:38,171 --> 01:39:42,838 "HOW DOES HE FIND HIS PLACE? 1476 01:39:42,964 --> 01:39:47,046 AND ORNETTE COLEMAN PUT TOGETHER A QUARTET THAT DID THAT. 1477 01:39:47,171 --> 01:39:49,338 IT PLAYED A FREE MUSIC. 1478 01:39:57,296 --> 01:39:59,338 IN A LOS ANGELES GARAGE, 1479 01:39:59,463 --> 01:40:00,838 ORNETTE COLEMAN BROUGHT TOGETHER 1480 01:40:00,964 --> 01:40:05,922 A GROUP OF LIKE-MINDED BUT MUCH YOUNGER MUSICIANS-- 1481 01:40:06,046 --> 01:40:10,129 THE TRUMPET PLAYER DON CHERRY, 1482 01:40:10,255 --> 01:40:13,630 THE DRUMMER BILLY HIGGINS, 1483 01:40:13,755 --> 01:40:17,129 AND A 22-YEAR-OLD BASS PLAYER FROM THE OZARKS 1484 01:40:17,255 --> 01:40:21,213 WHO HAD ONCE PLAYED ON THE STAGE OF THE GRAND OLE OPRY, 1485 01:40:21,338 --> 01:40:26,713 CHARLIE HADEN. 1486 01:40:26,838 --> 01:40:31,005 HE INVITED ME OVER TO HIS APARTMENT, AND WE ARRIVED. 1487 01:40:31,129 --> 01:40:34,463 HE OPENED THE DOOR. MUSIC WAS EVERYWHERE-- 1488 01:40:34,588 --> 01:40:37,046 ON THE RUG, ON THE BED, ON THE TABLES. 1489 01:40:37,171 --> 01:40:39,672 I UNCOVERED MY BASS. HE REACHED DOWN, 1490 01:40:39,797 --> 01:40:43,171 AND HE PICKED UP A MANUSCRIPT, AND HE SAID, "LET'S PLAY THIS." 1491 01:40:43,296 --> 01:40:45,672 I SAID, "OK." I WAS REAL SCARED, YOU KNOW. 1492 01:40:45,797 --> 01:40:47,838 HE SAYS, "NOW, I'VE WRITTEN THE MELODY HERE. 1493 01:40:47,964 --> 01:40:49,880 "UNDERNEATH IT ARE THE CHORD CHANGES. 1494 01:40:50,005 --> 01:40:53,380 "THOSE ARE THE CHORD CHANGES I HEARD WHEN I WROTE THIS MELODY, 1495 01:40:53,505 --> 01:40:54,838 "BUT WHEN WE START TO PLAY, 1496 01:40:54,964 --> 01:40:57,838 "AFTER I PLAY THE MELODY AND I START TO IMPROVISE, 1497 01:40:58,005 --> 01:41:01,171 "YOU PLAY THE CHANGES. YOU MAKE UP NEW CHANGES THAT YOU'RE HEARING 1498 01:41:01,296 --> 01:41:13,005 FROM WHAT I'M PLAYING AND FROM THE TUNE." 1499 01:41:13,171 --> 01:41:17,005 AND I THOUGHT TO MYSELF, "SOMEBODY'S FINALLY GIVING ME PERMISSION 1500 01:41:17,171 --> 01:41:25,046 TO DO SOMETHING THAT I'VE--WHAT I'VE BEEN HEARING ALL THIS TIME." 1501 01:41:25,171 --> 01:41:27,005 AND WE STARTED TO PLAY, 1502 01:41:27,129 --> 01:41:31,838 AND A WHOLE NEW WORLD OPENED UP FOR ME. 1503 01:41:31,964 --> 01:41:36,964 IT WAS LIKE, UH, BEING BORN AGAIN. 1504 01:41:37,088 --> 01:41:42,505 I WAS HEARING MUSIC SO MUCH MORE DEEPLY THAN I'D EVER HEARD. 1505 01:41:42,672 --> 01:41:45,755 IT'S LIKE A DESPERATE URGENCY 1506 01:41:45,880 --> 01:41:52,338 TO IMPROVISE COMPLETELY NEW. 1507 01:41:52,463 --> 01:41:55,129 WE USED TO TALK ABOUT IT AS IF-- 1508 01:41:55,255 --> 01:42:05,005 PLAYING MUSIC AS IF YOU'VE NEVER HEARD MUSIC BEFORE. 1509 01:42:05,129 --> 01:42:08,505 AND WE PLAYED ALL NIGHT, ALL DAY, ALL NIGHT, ALL DAY. 1510 01:42:08,672 --> 01:42:12,338 I THINK WE TOOK A BREAK TO GO GET SOME FOOD, 1511 01:42:12,463 --> 01:42:17,005 AND WE PLAYED FOR ABOUT 2 DAYS. 1512 01:42:17,129 --> 01:42:26,505 THAT WAS MY FIRST EXPERIENCE PLAYING WITH ORNETTE. 1513 01:42:26,630 --> 01:42:30,505 COLEMAN MANAGED TO FIND A SMALL LABEL WILLING TO BACK HIM, 1514 01:42:30,630 --> 01:42:33,838 AND HE MADE 2 ALBUMS. 1515 01:42:33,964 --> 01:42:41,338 SLOWLY, HIS REPUTATION BEGAN TO GROW. 1516 01:42:41,463 --> 01:42:44,380 IN NOVEMBER OF 1959, ORNETTE COLEMAN 1517 01:42:44,505 --> 01:42:46,296 BROUGHT HIS NEW SOUND 1518 01:42:46,421 --> 01:42:49,046 TO THE CENTER OF THE JAZZ WORLD-- 1519 01:42:49,171 --> 01:42:53,338 NEW YORK CITY. 1520 01:42:53,463 --> 01:42:54,838 THE FIVE SPOT, 1521 01:42:54,964 --> 01:42:56,505 IN MANHATTAN'S EAST VILLAGE, 1522 01:42:56,630 --> 01:42:58,171 WAS A FAVORITE HANGOUT 1523 01:42:58,296 --> 01:43:00,213 FOR THE ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONIST PAINTERS-- 1524 01:43:00,338 --> 01:43:05,421 FRANZ KLINE, WILLEM DE KOONING, JACKSON POLLOCK. 1525 01:43:05,547 --> 01:43:07,838 ITS MANAGEMENT PRIDED ITSELF 1526 01:43:07,964 --> 01:43:11,922 ON FEATURING THE MOST ADVENTUROUS MUSICIANS IN TOWN, 1527 01:43:12,046 --> 01:43:14,672 AND NOTHING WAS MORE ANTICIPATED 1528 01:43:14,797 --> 01:43:18,046 THAN THE ARRIVAL OF THE ORNETTE COLEMAN QUARTET. 1529 01:43:31,755 --> 01:43:34,547 THE FIRST NIGHT I PLAYED AT THE FIVE SPOT, 1530 01:43:34,672 --> 01:43:37,838 I WAS UNCOVERING MY BASS, BILLY WAS PUTTING UP HIS DRUMS, 1531 01:43:37,964 --> 01:43:41,505 AND CHERRY WAS GETTING HIS HORN, ORNETTE WAS GETTING HIS HORN OUT, 1532 01:43:41,630 --> 01:43:43,838 AND I LOOKED UP AT THE BAR, 1533 01:43:43,964 --> 01:43:45,630 WHICH WAS FACING THE STAGE, 1534 01:43:45,755 --> 01:43:49,380 AND STANDING ALONG THE BAR WAS WILBUR WARE, UH... 1535 01:43:49,505 --> 01:43:52,338 CHARLIE MINGUS, PAUL CHAMBERS, PERCY HEATH, 1536 01:43:52,505 --> 01:43:55,838 EVERY GREAT BASS PLAYER IN NEW YORK CITY WAS STANDING THERE, 1537 01:43:55,964 --> 01:43:57,838 STARING ME RIGHT IN THE FACE. 1538 01:43:57,964 --> 01:44:05,171 AND I SAID, FROM THAT MOMENT ON, I CLOSE MY EYES. 1539 01:44:05,296 --> 01:44:10,213 I THINK WE PLAYED THERE FOR 4 MONTHS, 6 NIGHTS A WEEK, 1540 01:44:10,338 --> 01:44:14,630 AND EVERY NIGHT, THE PLACE WAS PACKED. 1541 01:44:14,755 --> 01:44:16,838 ONE NIGHT I WAS PLAYING WITH MY EYES CLOSED AGAIN, 1542 01:44:16,964 --> 01:44:18,380 AND I'M PLAYING, 1543 01:44:18,505 --> 01:44:20,505 AND ALL OF A SUDDEN, I OPEN MY EYES, 1544 01:44:20,672 --> 01:44:22,046 AND SOMEBODY'S UP ON THE STAGE 1545 01:44:22,171 --> 01:44:24,129 WITH HIS EAR TO THE "F" HOLE OF MY BASS. 1546 01:44:24,255 --> 01:44:26,005 AND I LOOKED OVER AT ORNETTE, 1547 01:44:26,129 --> 01:44:28,005 AND I SAID, I SAID, "COLEMAN, WHO IS THIS? 1548 01:44:28,129 --> 01:44:29,672 MAN, GET HIM OFF THIS BANDSTAND." 1549 01:44:29,797 --> 01:44:36,713 HE SAYS, "THAT'S LEONARD BERNSTEIN." 1550 01:44:36,838 --> 01:44:39,505 BERNSTEIN PRONOUNCED ORNETTE COLEMAN A GENIUS, 1551 01:44:39,630 --> 01:44:42,338 AND LIONEL HAMPTON ASKED TO SIT IN... 1552 01:44:42,463 --> 01:44:44,171 BUT TRUMPETER ROY ELDRIDGE 1553 01:44:44,296 --> 01:44:48,713 SAID HE'D LISTENED TO HIM DRUNK AND HE'D LISTENED TO HIM SOBER 1554 01:44:48,838 --> 01:44:53,005 AND HE COULDN'T UNDERSTAND HIM EITHER WAY. 1555 01:44:53,129 --> 01:44:56,672 MILES DAVIS DECLARED HIM "ALL SCREWED-UP INSIDE," 1556 01:44:56,797 --> 01:45:03,171 BUT JOHN COLTRANE CAME TO PLAY WITH HIM BETWEEN SETS. 1557 01:45:03,296 --> 01:45:08,672 COLEMAN SAW HIMSELF AS SOLIDLY IN THE JAZZ TRADITION. 1558 01:45:08,797 --> 01:45:11,463 "BIRD WOULD HAVE UNDERSTOOD US," HE SAID. 1559 01:45:11,588 --> 01:45:14,005 "HE WOULD HAVE APPROVED OF OUR ASPIRING 1560 01:45:14,129 --> 01:45:29,296 TO SOMETHING BEYOND WHAT WE INHERITED." 1561 01:45:29,421 --> 01:45:33,463 A LOT OF PEOPLE IN THE MID-FIFTIES 1562 01:45:33,588 --> 01:45:37,630 WERE ALREADY PLAYING MUSIC THAT HAD AN OPEN CONCEPT, 1563 01:45:37,755 --> 01:45:40,213 WHAT I CALL THE "BIG ROOM," 1564 01:45:40,338 --> 01:45:43,547 A PLACE WHERE YOU COULD CROSS A THRESHOLD 1565 01:45:43,672 --> 01:45:46,171 AND HAVE NO BARRIERS, YOU KNOW, 1566 01:45:46,296 --> 01:45:48,588 NO KEY SIGNATURES, NO CHORD PROGRESSIONS, 1567 01:45:48,713 --> 01:45:50,838 NO PARTICULAR FORM, YOU KNOW, 1568 01:45:50,964 --> 01:45:52,338 AND LATER ON, 1569 01:45:52,463 --> 01:45:55,171 ORNETTE CAME TO NEW YORK WITH HIS QUARTET 1570 01:45:55,296 --> 01:45:56,672 AND STOOD HIS GROUND 1571 01:45:56,797 --> 01:45:59,171 AND MADE THIS MUSIC REALLY SINK IN 1572 01:45:59,296 --> 01:46:00,672 AND WORK, YOU KNOW, 1573 01:46:00,838 --> 01:46:03,672 AND THAT'S THE THING THAT I ADMIRE ABOUT ORNETTE, 1574 01:46:03,797 --> 01:46:05,713 NOT ONLY HIS WRITING AND PLAYING, 1575 01:46:05,838 --> 01:46:08,338 BUT THE FACT THAT HE STOOD HIS GROUND 1576 01:46:08,463 --> 01:46:12,338 AND STOOD BY HIS MUSIC AND TOOK THE SLINGS AND ARROWS 1577 01:46:12,463 --> 01:46:15,463 OF ALL THE CRITICISM THAT CAME TOWARDS HIM, 1578 01:46:15,588 --> 01:46:18,838 BECAUSE A LOT OF MUSICIANS FROM THE BEBOP SCHOOL 1579 01:46:19,005 --> 01:46:22,255 THOUGHT THAT THEY WERE JUST PLAYING ANY OLD THING. 1580 01:46:32,797 --> 01:46:36,255 IN 1961, ORNETTE COLEMAN ISSUED 1581 01:46:36,380 --> 01:46:39,672 A RECORD CALLED FREE JAZZ. 1582 01:46:39,797 --> 01:46:45,838 THE COVER ART INCLUDED A PAINTING BY JACKSON POLLOCK. 1583 01:46:45,964 --> 01:46:49,838 JUST ONE PIECE FILLED BOTH SIDES OF THE RECORD. 1584 01:46:49,964 --> 01:46:52,338 IT WOULD HELP PROVOKE A DEBATE 1585 01:46:52,463 --> 01:47:00,046 ABOUT THE DEFINITION OF JAZZ THAT HAS NEVER ENDED. 1586 01:47:00,171 --> 01:47:04,005 ORNETTE COLEMAN CAME UP AND SAYS, "THIS IS FREE JAZZ." 1587 01:47:04,129 --> 01:47:07,338 BUT WHAT IS FREER THAN JAZZ? 1588 01:47:07,463 --> 01:47:11,005 AS SOON AS YOU SAY JAZZ, YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT FREEDOM OF IMPROVISATION. 1589 01:47:11,129 --> 01:47:13,046 THE WHOLE THING IS ABOUT FREEDOM, 1590 01:47:13,171 --> 01:47:17,005 ABOUT AMERICAN FREEDOM. 1591 01:47:17,129 --> 01:47:20,547 SO WHY ANYBODY WOULD WANT TO FREE IT 1592 01:47:20,672 --> 01:47:25,129 BECAUSE THE WHOLE IDEA OF ART IS TO CREATE A FORM 1593 01:47:25,255 --> 01:47:32,338 THAT IS A BULWARK AGAINST ENTROPY, OR CHAOS. 1594 01:47:32,463 --> 01:47:34,505 YOU SEE, THAT'S THE FUNCTION OF JAZZ. 1595 01:47:34,630 --> 01:47:39,672 IT'S NOT TO BE FORMLESS AND ABSOLUTELY SELF-INDULGENT. 1596 01:47:39,838 --> 01:47:41,547 "I WANT TO GO THIS WAY, I'LL GO THIS WAY, I'LL GO THAT WAY." 1597 01:47:41,672 --> 01:47:46,547 THAT'S LIKE EMBRACING THE WAVES IN THE SEA, YOU KNOW. 1598 01:47:46,672 --> 01:47:51,005 AND SO IT'S LIKE, YOU CANNOT EMBRACE ENTROPY. 1599 01:47:51,129 --> 01:47:53,255 YOU CANNOT EMBRACE CHAOS. 1600 01:47:53,380 --> 01:47:57,505 WE WANTED PEOPLE TO LIKE OUR MUSIC. WE REALLY DID. 1601 01:47:57,630 --> 01:48:01,046 BUT I REALLY BELIEVE THAT MOST GREAT MUSICIANS ARE FREE MUSICIANS. 1602 01:48:01,171 --> 01:48:05,005 IF YOU LISTEN TO COLEMAN HAWKINS PLAY, TO IMPROVISE, 1603 01:48:05,129 --> 01:48:07,005 IF YOU LISTEN TO THELONIOUS MONK IMPROVISE, 1604 01:48:07,129 --> 01:48:08,505 IF YOU LISTEN TO BUD POWELL, 1605 01:48:08,630 --> 01:48:11,838 THEY IMPROVISED ON A LEVEL THAT I CALL BEYOND CATEGORY, 1606 01:48:12,005 --> 01:48:15,046 PLAYING SO FREE AND SO DEEPLY 1607 01:48:15,171 --> 01:48:20,046 AT A LEVEL OF, YOU KNOW, I CALL IT "WITH YOUR LIFE INVOLVED." 1608 01:48:20,171 --> 01:48:23,338 AND THAT'S WHAT WE DID. 1609 01:48:23,463 --> 01:48:25,338 BEING WILLING TO GIVE YOUR LIFE-- 1610 01:48:25,505 --> 01:48:27,338 TO GIVE UP YOUR LIFE, 1611 01:48:27,505 --> 01:48:31,505 RISKING YOUR LIFE, IT'S ALMOST LIKE BEING ON THE FRONT LINE IN A BATTLE. 1612 01:48:31,630 --> 01:48:34,005 BEING ABLE... 1613 01:48:34,129 --> 01:48:43,005 WANTING TO GIVE YOUR LIFE FOR WHAT YOU'RE DOING. 1614 01:48:43,129 --> 01:48:45,005 FOR THE NEXT 40 YEARS, 1615 01:48:45,171 --> 01:48:49,630 THE AVANT-GARDE MUSIC THAT ORNETTE COLEMAN AND MANY OTHERS PLAYED 1616 01:48:49,755 --> 01:48:53,005 WOULD CONTINUE TO INSPIRE AND TO DIVIDE 1617 01:48:53,129 --> 01:48:55,942 THE WORLD OF JAZZ. 128816

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.