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In 1959, four major jazz albums were made that changed music forever.
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Miles Davis, Kind Of Blue.
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Dave Brubeck's Time Out.
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Charles Mingus, Mingus Ah Um.
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And Ornette Coleman's The Shape Of Jazz To Come.
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1959 was a very important jazz year for me in my own development,
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and the evolution of jazz up until now and beyond.
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It was the year that saw the biggest selling jazz album, and single, of all time.
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Time Out was going where I envisioned jazz should go.
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I said, "Boy, this is fine. This is gonna work."
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Jazz was pushed to new heights of innovation, beauty, and groove.
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You know, the things would swing. He'd lift you right out of your seat.
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It was the end of the Eisenhower era, 2.5 children,
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and the white picket fence, in 1959 jazz is reaching white America in a big way.
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# Why are they so sick and ridiculous?
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# Two four six eight! They brainwash and teach you hate... #
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Jazz musicians didn't really, like, join the civil rights movement. The civil rights movement joined them.
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And with Ornette Coleman's The Shape Of Jazz To Come, 1959 saw the birth of a whole new free jazz movement.
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When you talk about somebody speaking through their instrument,
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like actually hear it as a human, that's Ornette.
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He changed everything.
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1959 was a phenomenon. It was on another level, that's all you can say.
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'The machine's on. Miles, where you gonna work now?
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'Right here.
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'OK, cos if you move back, we don't get you.
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'When I play I'm gonna raise my horn a little bit.
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'OK, just you four guys on this, right, Miles?
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'Ready?'
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Miles Davis, Kind Of Blue, is the biggest selling jazz album ever made.
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Shifting over five million copies.
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It regularly tops best jazz album polls,
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as well as featuring high in lists of the greatest albums of any category.
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Kind of Blue continues to convert more people to jazz than any other recording.
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All this 50 years after it was released.
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- 'Yeah.
- Let's hear a little bit of it.
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'Right, OK.'
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MUSIC PLAYS
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When they walked into the studio, they did not see this as their ultimate statement.
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They did not see this as the birth of a classic.
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It was a session that was scheduled for that day.
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'At the cannonball, you play again and we'll come in and end it.'
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They go over by the piano and he's giving them instructions
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about the tunes they're gonna play, you know.
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So there wasn't a whole lot of music, I didn't have any music.
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You know, just a piece of manuscript paper with some chords scribbled on it.
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Miles tells me, uh, "Make this sound like it's floating."
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'Here we go. No title.'
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MUSIC PLAYS
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'Start again, please. Sorry, we gotta watch it because there's noises all the way through, this is so quiet.'
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First time I did it, engineer said, "The drums are makin' like a surface noise,"
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Miles hollered back it him, says, "That's part of it!"
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- 'That goes with it.
- What?
- All that goes with it.
- All right.'
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Amazingly, Miles and his band spent a total of just seven hours recording Kind Of Blue.
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All but one of the tracks are first takes.
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Any time they completed a tune, that's what they were gonna stick with.
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You know, it really is propelled by the idea that first thought is best thought.
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Try it again, Irvine.
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We would be hard pressed to find any album opener that could compare to the opening of So What.
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This misty, unclear idea of where is the music going, where are we?
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The intro from So What was totally improvised.
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Had no time reference, no beat yet.
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It's the piano and the bass sort of having this little conversation,
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and out of this musical cloud comes the riff.
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The grand riff, the one that says, "So what?"
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Baum ba do ba do baum...
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And then just when the energy is sort of getting to the point where it needs to be kicked up a notch,
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Jimmy Cobb comes in with this incredible cymbal crash.
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When we got to the place where the solos were supposed to start,
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I hit the cymbal, and I thought I had over-played it for the room,
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- I thought I had hit it too hard.
- But bang. It hits.
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You know, you can't plan on stuff like that happening.
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Miles' solo kicks off. So simple.
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Almost like a whispered confession.
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You know, by someone very intimate to you.
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When Miles did Kind Of Blue, it opened up a whole new direction in jazz.
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More introspective, a new way of thinking about the creation of jazz
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and the creation of jazz compositions.
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Part of Kind Of Blue's enormous influence on music is the legacy of the band members.
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Many of them went on to become leaders in their own right, like saxophone virtuoso,
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John Coltrane.
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But Kind Of Blue is defined by Miles' incredibly hip trumpet sound.
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He had this sound that was kind of like, um...
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haunting kind of voice.
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It was really individual. Very unique, very special.
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The way he plays sometimes, it makes you feel life so deeply,
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that you could almost cry, you know?
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And it didn't really sound like a trumpet any more.
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Miles' trumpet technique on Kind Of Blue was something he'd painstakingly developed
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since he first hit the scene in the late 1940s.
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Back then, the music had been changing.
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In the 1940s, if you were a player, if you were an instrumentalist
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who was really starting to make the move, be-bop was the music.
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Be-bop was a fast and frenetic style of jazz.
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It reflected jazz musicians' desire to be accepted as virtuoso artists, masters of their instruments.
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Be-bop's greatest exponent was Charlie Parker.
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Miles Davis is a very precocious, musical youngster.
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What he really wants to learn is be-bop, and where he's gonna learn it is on 52nd Street,
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up at Minton's, up in Harlem, playing with the be-bop leader of that time, Charlie Parker.
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Aged only 18, Miles became a member of Charlie Parker's band.
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As Miles traded solos with his hero, he was learning about be-bop from the source.
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Miles is not gonna be a side band for long.
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Miles, like many other musicians of that day were trying to deal with the language of be-bop.
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"Where do we take be-bop?"
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Miles said, "The music has become cluttered."
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Part of his genius as a musician was that he edited what he heard Charlie Parker play.
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So if Charlie, for instance, used ten notes
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to make a certain kind of statement,
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Miles Davis might figure out how to use three.
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Miles used what they call the harmonic bomb, you hit this note that nobody expects you to hit,
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and it has a great weight of power than just running up through the notes another kind of a way.
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There's a connection, a connective between these four artists.
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Charles Mingus, Dave Brubeck, Miles Davis and Ornette Coleman,
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in that they're all dealing with be-bop. The continuation of be-bop.
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Where do we take this language, what do we do with it?
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Another direction jazz took in 1959 was the rhythmic experimentation of pianist Dave Brubeck's Time Out.
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A highly unusual record, each track is in a different tempo and time signature.
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The single Take Five is in 5/4 time, and built around a drum solo.
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Yet it rose up the pop charts, becoming the best selling jazz 45 ever released.
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Brubeck had spent years building the line-up of his quartet that would go on to record Time Out.
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I put together gradually this dream group,
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cos some bass players and some drummers
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didn't wanna play in different time signatures,
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didn't wanna follow where it went.
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But Take Five drummer Joe Morello was originally unhappy
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coming into a band dominated by Brubeck and saxophonist Paul Desmond.
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On the marquis, on any kind of sign, it was,
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"The Dave Brubeck Quartet featuring Paul Desmond",
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and the other guys were nothing, you could have been zilch.
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I said, "Joe, I'll feature you," so the first night he joined, I gave him a drum solo.
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I did the drum solo and the place went wild and people just stood up and clapped and all this nonsense.
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Paul Desmond, it's the end of the song, he just walks off the stand and runs in the dressing room.
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And Paul said, "Either he goes, or I go,"
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and I said, "Paul, he's not going."
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Which was a shock you know. Because he was the star in the group, not Dave, it was Paul.
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Well, he felt that way, anyway!
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He never talked to be for about five months.
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OK, now we gotta work on the ending.
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Did I play too many things for you?
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I sat in the crossfire between these two wonderful players,
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keeping everything going.
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Giving in or not giving in.
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That quartet just started making real headway.
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By the time they signed to Columbia Records in the mid-'50s,
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the Dave Brubeck quartet were one of America's top jazz bands.
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His music was easily accessible to the average person,
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it was not too complicated.
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And the group was quite appealing because here you had
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four all-American young boys to watch as well as to listen to.
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Dave was quite easy to sell to middle-America because he LOOKED like middle-America,
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he talked like middle-America. He was a nice guy that you were glad your daughter was going out with.
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As Brubeck's success widened, parts of the jazz community accused him of being not only a sell-out,
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but effectively a racist who diluted black music for mass consumption.
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Jazz came out of black America. Later of course, white America catches up, it always does.
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But there definitely was a resentment amongst black musicians regarding Dave Brubeck.
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In the '50s, the people who got successful from cool jazz were primarily white musicians.
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He had broken in to another audience that nobody really had.
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That's when people started gettin' mad at him.
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The thing about Dave, it's kind of strange for a guy who is light-years away from a racist, right,
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who is light-years away from a commercial guy...
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who doesn't make recordings with any intention of pandering to the public, but the public likes HIM!
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Brubeck himself was more concerned with fine-tuning the rhythm section of his quartet,
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and tackling his ideas about where jazz should be headed.
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And then Eugene Wright joined us
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and finally I had this dream group.
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But the addition of bassist Eugene Wright didn't pass unnoticed
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when they toured universities in the southern states of America.
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We were playing in a university and they said, "You can't go on stage with an African-American."
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I said, "Well, we're not going on stage."
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And then the students were stamping on the floor up above the dressing room,
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and the louder and wilder it got,
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the more concerned the president of the college was getting.
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So he told me,
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"You can go on, but you have to put your bass player way in the back
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"where he won't be too noticeable."
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When we walked on stage, the audience just went wild, they were so happy.
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The second tune, I told Eugene,
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"Your microphone's broke, come out here and play your solo
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"and use my speaker's mic, in front of the band."
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Gene didn't know how I was plotting all this.
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He came out and we tore that place up.
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Oh, it was so wonderful.
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Yeah, oh...
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The classic line-up of the Dave Brubeck Quartet that would go on to record Time Out, was now in place.
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Bass player and composer, Charles Mingus,
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saw the question of how to take jazz forward in a different way.
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Mingus had risen throught the ranks, playing in the bands of jazz legends
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like Louie Armstrong, Duke Ellington and Charlie Parker.
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But for the notoriously opinionated and hot-tempered Mingus,
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jazz wasn't a calendar history of styles,
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so much as an ever-present "now".
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Charles Mingus had a very strong sense that there was no past,
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there was no present, there was no future.
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All of the time was alive at the same moment.
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He was a great, great thinker about music.
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He didn't buy anything about that, you know,
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a style lasted from 1920 to 1930, Mingus didn't buy that.
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His thing was that, if it was good then, it's good now.
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He wanted the freedom to play in, to write in,
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to encourage his musicians to know how to improvise in every style.
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In 1959, Mingus recorded and released Mingus Ah Um.
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It was one of four albums he made that year, not unusual in this prolific artist's long career.
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But Mingus Ah Um was a tightly focused master work.
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The title of the album sounds like a stutter,
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while he's getting himself together to make his grand statement.
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Ah Um? You know, what's that about?!
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What's really, really devastating about Ah Um, is the consistency.
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Tune by tune by tune.
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I mean, it's Mingus at his best.
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Mingus was diggin' deep into that roots thing
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with that incredible opening track, Better Git It In Your Soul.
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It's like a gospel choir. It's like a pentacostal performance on a Wednesday night prayer meeting.
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But the incredible magic of it is not just the influences,
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it's how Mingus works it all together and makes it into its own new thing.
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Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, remember no applause and keep it down.
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Don't rattle the ice in your glasses and don't ring the cash register.
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You got it covered? All right.
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He had these enormous hands, and that made it possible
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for him to do certain things technically
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that other bass players just couldn't do.
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In fact, he was one of the greatest bassists in jazz,
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well, he was one of the greatest players of the bass, period.
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I can hear him now!
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He was powerful, powerful.
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You shut up when he played.
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APPLAUSE
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Charlie Mingus was a big man, with a big talent and a big temper.
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And if people bugged him in the audience for some reason,
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someone did, he got very angry, took his bass, and he smashed it through the light up there,
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and broke it. The light's still there, the Mingus Light, that's what it's become.
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He ripped the front door off once,
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and some little gal, this big, dragged it home, as I recall!
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They say a lot of musicians never played better in their life
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than when they play with Mingus because he was SO demanding.
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And he used everything, he used anger,
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he used insults, he used flattery.
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Whatever he could use. He would fire musicians and hire them back, you know, 20 minutes later.
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Nothing was out of bounds.
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He wanted you to understand his,
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play his music and be yourself in it.
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So often, on a nightclub stand he would stop and say to somebody,
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"You're not playing yourself, you're playing notes."
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I knew that Mingus was playing in this little club on West 4th Street,
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and I went into the club, there was an argument on the bandstand, they weren't even playing,
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and I heard Mingus yelling at somebody, and it turned out to be the piano player.
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Mingus put his arm inside the piano,
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and he grabbed the strings and pulled them out.
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With one fist.
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I said, "Man, it's time for me to get out of here."
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I never seen anything like that in my life.
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Well, I'm gonna shoot it.
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GUNSHOT
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A gun.
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People are always telling me stories I don't wanna hear,
254
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about moments of Charles's volatility or things that took place,
255
00:26:25,440 --> 00:26:29,880
and take place they did. And Charles created scenes,
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he was called jazz's angry man,
257
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and he had plenty to be angry about.
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He had a lot to confront in those days
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for a man of his sensitivity and his sensibility and his talent,
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and unrecognised in many places,
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merely because he had the wrong skin colour.
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He wasn't dark enough and he wasn't light enough.
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He called himself a mongrel, or a mutt.
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Like many jazz artists, Mingus was an extraordinary player and improvisor,
265
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but with Mingus Ah Um, he began to assume his position as one of jazz's greatest composers.
266
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I love Self Portrait In Three Colours.
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A little through composed piece without any solos,
268
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just a little jam, beatiful, this multi-faceted, um, composition.
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Charles once said that he was,
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through his music, trying to express who he was.
271
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And he said the reason it was difficult was because he was changing all the time.
272
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But through his music you hear every...
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You hear the fear, you hear the spirituality, the tenderness, the passion,
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everything that he was comes out in his music.
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In 1959, Ornette Coleman made his spectacular musical statement
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in one quantum leap with the audaciously titled The Shape Of Jazz To Come.
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But before he formed his quartet,
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Coleman, based in Los Angeles,
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had trouble finding anyone who was interested in his wildly unorthodox music.
280
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Went over to this club by MacArthur Park on Wiltshire
281
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and Gerry Mulligan was playing there.
282
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They started their first set, and after they begin to play,
283
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a guy came in and asked if he could sit in.
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He got up on the band stand, and proceeded to take out his horn,
285
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and the horn was white, it was plastic.
286
00:29:17,880 --> 00:29:21,080
I'd never seen a plastic horn before.
287
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When this gut started to play,
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it was like the heavens opened up for me.
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00:29:28,120 --> 00:29:32,320
Because I saw, and I heard, something that I'd been feeling.
290
00:29:39,440 --> 00:29:44,280
To me, they were playing as if the music was written,
291
00:29:44,280 --> 00:29:47,760
like, when they was improvising, it sounded to me like, oh,
292
00:29:47,760 --> 00:29:50,160
they've already learned that. You know?
293
00:29:50,160 --> 00:29:51,840
So I said, I wanna play like that,
294
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I wanna play directly from something that inspired me.
295
00:29:54,760 --> 00:29:58,240
And they said, "What are you doing?" And I said, "I'm improvising."
296
00:29:58,240 --> 00:30:00,400
They said, "You ain't playing shit.
297
00:30:00,400 --> 00:30:01,840
"You can't play like that,"
298
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I said, "Play like what?" "The way you playing."
299
00:30:07,920 --> 00:30:11,080
And all of a sudden, Gerry Mulligan asked him to stop.
300
00:30:11,080 --> 00:30:17,720
So, he stopped, and got off the band stand and went to the back door.
301
00:30:17,720 --> 00:30:21,280
So I rushed through the crowd, trying to reach him,
302
00:30:21,280 --> 00:30:25,280
and by the time I got to the back door, he'd disappeared down the alley. He was gone.
303
00:30:27,520 --> 00:30:32,360
Blown away by Ornette's playing, Charlie Haden soon tracked him down.
304
00:30:34,800 --> 00:30:38,760
I said, "I heard you play the other night, man. You sounded so brilliant."
305
00:30:38,760 --> 00:30:42,120
He said, "Thank you, not many people tell me that."
306
00:30:42,120 --> 00:30:45,720
I said, "Man, I just wish that we could play music together sometime."
307
00:30:45,720 --> 00:30:48,960
And he said, "Well, what about now?"
308
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And so we went to his apartment.
309
00:30:52,120 --> 00:30:55,320
That's how I met him. And we played, and played and played.
310
00:30:55,320 --> 00:30:58,440
We maybe stayed in there three or four days, I don't know.
311
00:30:58,440 --> 00:31:01,920
So, that's when the quartet started.
312
00:31:04,880 --> 00:31:08,960
They're a bunch of young players, players who are just starting to break out,
313
00:31:08,960 --> 00:31:14,040
and whose minds and approaches are still flexible enough that Ornette can work with them.
314
00:31:30,560 --> 00:31:36,800
I never worried about chords, melodies or keys. Only sound.
315
00:31:36,800 --> 00:31:43,040
And the thing about it, there's only 12 notes that satisfy in the whole world.
316
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12 notes that satisfy in the whole world.
317
00:31:46,240 --> 00:31:52,800
And I said, "Oh, man." And then I realised that this note don't have a style.
318
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Either you make something out of it, or you don't.
319
00:32:00,240 --> 00:32:03,360
Ornette Coleman's The Shape Of Jazz To Come
320
00:32:03,360 --> 00:32:09,600
didn't initially make the bold impression it has done in the years since 1959.
321
00:32:14,160 --> 00:32:18,200
At first I didn't know what to make of it. I didn't know which pocket to put it in.
322
00:32:18,200 --> 00:32:21,000
Because I hadn't heard anything quite like that.
323
00:32:29,680 --> 00:32:34,160
It was a new, far-out approach.
324
00:32:37,640 --> 00:32:42,200
The Shape Of Jazz To Come is definitely an audacious title, you know?
325
00:32:42,200 --> 00:32:46,880
It's putting yourself out there and saying, you know, this is where jazz is going.
326
00:32:55,280 --> 00:32:57,840
Lonely Woman has been a favourite song of mine,
327
00:32:57,840 --> 00:33:01,120
and Willner, ever since I heard it when it first came out.
328
00:33:04,720 --> 00:33:07,880
It was one of the greatest compositions ever.
329
00:33:07,880 --> 00:33:14,160
I mean, combined with the way his quartet and Ornette played it,
330
00:33:14,160 --> 00:33:16,840
everything music could be.
331
00:33:16,840 --> 00:33:19,960
And not a day goes by when I'm not humming that.
332
00:33:26,280 --> 00:33:28,280
HE HUMS "LONELY WOMAN"
333
00:33:35,880 --> 00:33:40,600
It's not your standard jazz thing where this guy solos and this one solos and this one solos,
334
00:33:40,600 --> 00:33:43,240
this is a real composition,
335
00:33:43,240 --> 00:33:50,600
that brings all of them together, and they're all such staggeringly great players.
336
00:34:07,760 --> 00:34:13,400
Born from oppression, jazz is, at its heart, political,
337
00:34:13,400 --> 00:34:15,520
and throughout his career,
338
00:34:15,520 --> 00:34:19,680
Charles Mingus often integrated his political beliefs with his music.
339
00:34:19,680 --> 00:34:23,640
Charles used his band stand as a soap box at all times.
340
00:34:23,640 --> 00:34:27,280
He spoke out about his beliefs, about racism,
341
00:34:27,280 --> 00:34:31,800
about the iniquities in society and the record industry.
342
00:34:31,800 --> 00:34:34,840
Whatever was on his mind, he expressed.
343
00:34:34,840 --> 00:34:39,840
The most timely, and influencial track on Mingus Ah Um,
344
00:34:39,840 --> 00:34:42,720
Fables Of Faubus, was no exception.
345
00:34:42,720 --> 00:34:47,480
The track spoke of events that took place after the outlawing of segregation,
346
00:34:47,480 --> 00:34:51,440
two years earlier, in 1957.
347
00:34:51,440 --> 00:34:55,280
'President Eisenhower, signing the Civil Rights Bill.
348
00:34:55,280 --> 00:35:00,720
'It was Monday morning, ten past eight. Kids going to school all over the country as the President signs.
349
00:35:00,720 --> 00:35:03,800
'And in Little Rock at ten past eight,
350
00:35:03,800 --> 00:35:08,800
'Arkansas National Guardsmen, under orders of Governor Faubus, challenging the law of the land,
351
00:35:08,800 --> 00:35:13,760
'preventing nine negro youngsters from attending the Central High School in Little Rock.'
352
00:35:13,760 --> 00:35:17,120
There was an attempt to intergrate a high school
353
00:35:17,120 --> 00:35:18,960
in Little Rock, Arkansas,
354
00:35:18,960 --> 00:35:23,040
according to the law, according to the Supreme Court Of The United States.
355
00:35:23,040 --> 00:35:27,280
Governor Orval Faubus, the Governor of Arkansas,
356
00:35:27,280 --> 00:35:29,400
would not allow integration.
357
00:35:29,400 --> 00:35:33,200
CROWD CHANT: Two, four, six, eight! We don't want to integrate!
358
00:35:33,200 --> 00:35:37,000
Two, four, six, eight! We don't want to integrate!
359
00:36:19,680 --> 00:36:25,920
Mingus was outraged by what he saw happening to people.
360
00:36:25,920 --> 00:36:31,600
And the irony of The Fables Of Faubus, is that it's kind of a comic tune.
361
00:36:38,200 --> 00:36:40,680
It has a theatrical quality, you know,
362
00:36:40,680 --> 00:36:43,600
you're expecting this character that's going to be...
363
00:36:43,600 --> 00:36:48,640
um, well, not very fit for public display.
364
00:36:48,640 --> 00:36:55,760
And that's certainly the way he felt about this white supremacist governor of Arkansas.
365
00:37:02,120 --> 00:37:04,360
'Then came the Eisenhower-Faubus meeting.
366
00:37:04,360 --> 00:37:06,440
'Finally, Faubus withdrew the guardsmen
367
00:37:06,440 --> 00:37:09,680
'and the negroes entered the hitherto forbidden white school.
368
00:37:09,680 --> 00:37:11,880
'A riot started.
369
00:37:11,880 --> 00:37:14,480
'Confronted with what he called anarchy,
370
00:37:14,480 --> 00:37:17,760
'the President ordered United States soldiers into Little Rock.
371
00:37:17,760 --> 00:37:23,080
'The regular army troops, para troops, escorted the negro children to and from school,
372
00:37:23,080 --> 00:37:26,960
'gave them full protection from the threatening crowds.'
373
00:37:26,960 --> 00:37:30,560
Charles wrote some smokin' lyrics about this,
374
00:37:30,560 --> 00:37:37,560
and Columbia Records would not let Charles include these political words on the album.
375
00:37:37,560 --> 00:37:42,800
"Tell me someone who's ridiculous," and then his drummer would respond, "Governor Faubus,"
376
00:37:42,800 --> 00:37:45,800
and Charles would say, "Why is he so sick and ridiculous?"
377
00:37:45,800 --> 00:37:49,760
And Danny would say, "Two, four, six, eight, brainwash and teach you hate."
378
00:37:49,760 --> 00:37:51,920
# Oh, Lord! No more Klu Klux Klan!
379
00:37:51,920 --> 00:37:55,920
# Name someone who's ridiculous, Danny
380
00:37:55,920 --> 00:37:59,600
# Governor Faubus!
381
00:37:59,600 --> 00:38:03,880
# Oh why are they so sick And ridiculous?
382
00:38:03,880 --> 00:38:09,080
# Two, four, six, eight, They brainwash and teach you hate. #
383
00:38:09,080 --> 00:38:14,000
Fables Of Faubus, even without the lyric, just the fact that he's using the name Faubus,
384
00:38:14,000 --> 00:38:16,640
is gonna have a very strong message
385
00:38:16,640 --> 00:38:21,280
to many of the people who were listening to that album in 1959.
386
00:38:21,280 --> 00:38:26,680
Fables Of Faubus opened up a lot of the pent-up feelings
387
00:38:26,680 --> 00:38:30,800
we all had as African-American musicians
388
00:38:30,800 --> 00:38:33,080
against racism in America.
389
00:38:33,080 --> 00:38:40,800
Kind of, set the stage for each of our own individual expression of that opposition to racism.
390
00:38:45,160 --> 00:38:49,200
BARACK OBAMA'S VOICE: Three words - yes, we can.
391
00:38:52,160 --> 00:38:54,960
Barack Obama may not know it,
392
00:38:54,960 --> 00:39:00,240
but jazz was one of the reaons he was elected president.
393
00:39:00,240 --> 00:39:04,520
and Charles Mingus, and all of these musicians,
394
00:39:04,520 --> 00:39:10,080
they helped to create the atmosphere that led to people
395
00:39:10,080 --> 00:39:13,880
respecting a person beyond the distinctions of colour.
396
00:39:18,160 --> 00:39:20,440
In the years leading up to Kind Of Blue,
397
00:39:20,440 --> 00:39:25,160
Miles Davis had begun to make an impact with his own defiant demands for respect,
398
00:39:25,160 --> 00:39:28,560
both as a black man, and as an artist.
399
00:39:28,560 --> 00:39:33,480
I remember seeing him in Los Angeles, at the club.
400
00:39:33,480 --> 00:39:37,080
People who turned up were gamblers,
401
00:39:37,080 --> 00:39:39,360
pimps, drug dealers,
402
00:39:39,360 --> 00:39:41,520
hustling-type guys.
403
00:39:41,520 --> 00:39:45,240
Bragging about who got the most hos and who got the prettiest hos,
404
00:39:45,240 --> 00:39:48,200
and your hos should be picked up by the dog catcher,
405
00:39:48,200 --> 00:39:50,080
and just all that kind of stuff.
406
00:39:55,400 --> 00:39:59,440
Now, when Miles Davis came on the bandstand, though, they shut up.
407
00:39:59,440 --> 00:40:02,320
They didn't make any noise after he came out there.
408
00:40:02,320 --> 00:40:04,400
See, I'd never seen that before,
409
00:40:04,400 --> 00:40:08,320
because these are not the kind of people you can just shut up.
410
00:40:08,320 --> 00:40:12,160
They knew if they got loud and irritated him,
411
00:40:12,160 --> 00:40:16,440
he would turn round and leave and that would be it. He wouldn't come back.
412
00:40:16,440 --> 00:40:20,320
Nobody was gonna entreat him. "Oh, Miles, but you won't get paid!"
413
00:40:21,560 --> 00:40:24,320
"I'm not broke."
414
00:40:24,320 --> 00:40:28,640
He always made his point that when I come in here,
415
00:40:28,640 --> 00:40:32,360
I have some kind of artistic goals I'm trying to accomplish
416
00:40:32,360 --> 00:40:37,160
and they do not include you talking while we're playing.
417
00:40:42,920 --> 00:40:47,000
Miles struck me as somebody who would sell a lot of records
418
00:40:47,000 --> 00:40:52,560
because his cool, almost disdainful, demeanour on stage
419
00:40:52,560 --> 00:40:56,680
worked absolutely in his favour to become a talked-about artist.
420
00:40:59,280 --> 00:41:04,080
Columbia had a very powerful publicity department.
421
00:41:04,080 --> 00:41:08,640
They realised what we have to do is we have to create this image
422
00:41:08,640 --> 00:41:14,680
of the distant, remote jazz musician who's not available to everybody.
423
00:41:14,680 --> 00:41:16,160
We're gonna sell them that!
424
00:41:20,840 --> 00:41:27,840
And of course being remote and unavailable just made everyone dig Miles all the more.
425
00:41:27,840 --> 00:41:31,120
Miles was not just a musical pioneer,
426
00:41:31,120 --> 00:41:34,600
he was a pioneer as far as American culture in general.
427
00:41:34,600 --> 00:41:41,400
He was an important black figure who made it within this American system.
428
00:41:41,400 --> 00:41:44,560
He's reaching white America in a big way.
429
00:41:51,800 --> 00:41:55,120
Freddie Hubbard said, when he was in the Village Vanguard,
430
00:41:55,120 --> 00:42:00,240
he noticed this repeatedly, that when Miles David would play a ballad
431
00:42:00,240 --> 00:42:06,120
and put the Harmon mute in the bell of the horn and play in the lower register,
432
00:42:06,120 --> 00:42:09,920
he said every woman's legs in the club opened.
433
00:42:11,240 --> 00:42:16,040
And he said first time he thought he was hallucinating, that it was not really happening.
434
00:42:16,040 --> 00:42:20,240
He said that he'd look and they all... They didn't even know they were doing it.
435
00:42:20,240 --> 00:42:22,120
He said they would all just open up.
436
00:42:32,920 --> 00:42:36,560
He was a dude, man! A dude! But beautiful.
437
00:42:37,920 --> 00:42:41,160
So sexy, if you really want to know the truth!
438
00:42:41,160 --> 00:42:45,320
He's got a very elegant, low-key sound.
439
00:42:45,320 --> 00:42:50,160
Women liked him a lot, look at all the wives he had!
440
00:42:51,840 --> 00:42:56,680
While 1959 saw America beginning to find its groove...
441
00:42:58,080 --> 00:43:03,920
..beneath the shiny surface lay deep fears brought about by the Cold War with Russia.
442
00:43:05,280 --> 00:43:09,080
As part of a programme of cultural detente,
443
00:43:09,080 --> 00:43:16,400
the American government asked Dave Brubeck to take jazz and its American values to the East.
444
00:43:16,400 --> 00:43:20,040
Our government wanted to impress people
445
00:43:20,040 --> 00:43:25,680
that were right on the border of Russia about our culture.
446
00:43:25,680 --> 00:43:31,880
President Eisenhower wanted us to go along the perimeter of Russia
447
00:43:31,880 --> 00:43:38,760
and we opened in Poland and then went to Turkey, Afghanistan,
448
00:43:38,760 --> 00:43:42,760
Pakistan, India, Iran, Iraq.
449
00:43:49,520 --> 00:43:54,840
We were gonna represent our country and we talked about how difficult it is
450
00:43:54,840 --> 00:44:01,000
to go and be the voice of freedom when you don't really have freedom yet,
451
00:44:01,000 --> 00:44:06,000
because of the old unwritten laws of segregation.
452
00:44:11,360 --> 00:44:15,680
A great thing jazz has done for our country
453
00:44:15,680 --> 00:44:20,200
and here we're being sent out to do it for the world.
454
00:44:22,960 --> 00:44:25,480
The tour was to begin in Poland,
455
00:44:25,480 --> 00:44:28,320
but this meant travelling through East Germany.
456
00:44:28,320 --> 00:44:33,320
East Berlin was not recognised by the United States.
457
00:44:33,320 --> 00:44:37,000
so they assigned a woman
458
00:44:37,000 --> 00:44:41,400
that for some reason could go through the Brandenburg Gate.
459
00:44:42,400 --> 00:44:46,520
The whole scene was like a spy movie.
460
00:44:48,240 --> 00:44:51,840
She told me to get in the trunk of her car.
461
00:44:51,840 --> 00:44:55,160
I said I won't get in the trunk of her car,
462
00:44:55,160 --> 00:45:00,920
I'll get in the back seat and if I get questioned, I'm gonna tell them the truth.
463
00:45:00,920 --> 00:45:03,160
But she got through.
464
00:45:08,120 --> 00:45:11,560
She brought us to a police station...
465
00:45:13,360 --> 00:45:21,000
..and this man walked into the room and said, "You are Mr Coolu,"
466
00:45:21,000 --> 00:45:24,000
and I said, "No, I'm Mr Brubeck."
467
00:45:24,000 --> 00:45:26,960
And he said, "No, you're Coolu."
468
00:45:29,800 --> 00:45:35,280
Then he pulled out a Polish paper with a picture of me
469
00:45:35,280 --> 00:45:43,240
and the caption said Mr Coolu and I realised I was Mr Cool
470
00:45:43,240 --> 00:45:45,320
and that was my name.
471
00:45:50,760 --> 00:45:55,800
Many of the ideas that we developed for Time Out
472
00:45:55,800 --> 00:45:58,880
came from touring in these countries.
473
00:45:58,880 --> 00:46:01,160
Like Blue Rondo A La Turk,
474
00:46:01,160 --> 00:46:07,840
- that's a Turkish folk beat.
- HE TAPS AND SINGS THE RHYTHM
475
00:46:07,840 --> 00:46:09,440
HE PLAYS THE PIANO
476
00:46:16,680 --> 00:46:18,800
And then it goes into a blues.
477
00:46:34,960 --> 00:46:38,120
Brubeck returned to the US with a complete vision
478
00:46:38,120 --> 00:46:42,200
of the time signature experiments for Time Out.
479
00:46:59,160 --> 00:47:02,960
For his album of cool rhythmic innovation,
480
00:47:02,960 --> 00:47:07,840
Brubeck decided that drummer Joe Morello was to be given a showcase.
481
00:47:09,240 --> 00:47:14,680
I heard Joe playing this beat backstage...
482
00:47:14,680 --> 00:47:16,960
HE TAPS THE BEAT
483
00:47:18,760 --> 00:47:23,280
..and I said, well, I have something in 5/4.
484
00:47:23,280 --> 00:47:25,680
One, two, three, four, five...
485
00:47:41,680 --> 00:47:45,080
5/4, that's right up my alley, man, you know?
486
00:47:48,280 --> 00:47:54,240
It's just spontaneous. I was looking for more colours, you know, different textures of sound.
487
00:48:12,280 --> 00:48:14,280
APPLAUSE
488
00:48:19,480 --> 00:48:24,240
I said, "Boy, this is fine. This is gonna work."
489
00:48:24,240 --> 00:48:30,600
Time Out was going where I envisioned Jazz should go.
490
00:48:36,960 --> 00:48:40,400
Jazz history had been written in 4/4 time
491
00:48:40,400 --> 00:48:46,800
and you get Dave Brubeck doing a whole album with the idea of using different time signatures.
492
00:48:50,280 --> 00:48:56,440
Columbia told me, "All these crazy time signatures, that'll never sell."
493
00:49:01,760 --> 00:49:06,800
But the disc jockeys started playing us. We had a big hit.
494
00:49:07,840 --> 00:49:14,840
The idea that jazz could actually make it on to pop radio in America in the late '50s -
495
00:49:14,840 --> 00:49:17,200
that was totally unheard of.
496
00:49:23,680 --> 00:49:27,640
What really works well with Time Out is that it provides
497
00:49:27,640 --> 00:49:32,400
an easy introduction for mainstream America to deal with new musical ideas.
498
00:49:47,560 --> 00:49:53,720
Towards the end of 1959, the Ornette Coleman Quartet came to New York for the very first time,
499
00:49:53,720 --> 00:49:57,640
with the prophetically titled The Shape of Jazz To Come.
500
00:49:57,640 --> 00:49:59,440
They were all but unknown,
501
00:49:59,440 --> 00:50:06,120
but those who were hip to the scene were there to check out the band's New York debut at the Five Spot.
502
00:50:08,440 --> 00:50:11,960
We couldn't wait. We went down to the Five Spot
503
00:50:11,960 --> 00:50:15,840
and had a rehearsal one afternoon and then we opened up.
504
00:50:15,840 --> 00:50:20,560
There were lines around the block, the place was packed with people, so it was quite a deal.
505
00:50:23,840 --> 00:50:28,920
Opening night, they had everybody, everybody was there.
506
00:50:28,920 --> 00:50:33,640
So he was, he was kind of on auditory trial so to speak.
507
00:50:33,640 --> 00:50:38,640
We couldn't wait to get to work and play because the music was so great and new and fresh.
508
00:50:38,640 --> 00:50:44,520
And that's when The Shape of Jazz to Come is dropped on the New York jazz scene.
509
00:50:54,680 --> 00:51:00,840
That first night of Ornette's was a "socko!" impact,
510
00:51:00,840 --> 00:51:02,720
and unforgettable. Unforgettable.
511
00:51:02,960 --> 00:51:09,840
I don't think I ever heard four musicians who gave me the impression of surrounding me,
512
00:51:09,840 --> 00:51:12,480
I was in the middle of it. Bang.
513
00:51:16,360 --> 00:51:21,560
'We all know the atomic bomb is very dangerous. We must get ready for it
514
00:51:21,560 --> 00:51:25,880
'Duck and cover! Attaboy, Tony, act fast!'
515
00:51:39,720 --> 00:51:46,680
Coleman spoke the paranoia that existed in the nuclear age.
516
00:51:49,560 --> 00:51:56,760
The reaction that many people had just to this idea that the entire world could be blown up.
517
00:52:08,680 --> 00:52:16,040
To play music with this urgency, this desperate urgency to make something that's never been before,
518
00:52:16,040 --> 00:52:21,840
as if you're on the frontline and you're risking your life for every note you play.
519
00:52:24,840 --> 00:52:30,040
I was there the opening night and I was really unprepared for the hostility!
520
00:52:32,800 --> 00:52:37,720
I was sitting next to Roy Eldridge, and Roy was a warm generous guy,
521
00:52:37,720 --> 00:52:44,080
and he was listening to Ornette and he said "He's just jiving, man, that's not music!"
522
00:52:44,080 --> 00:52:48,080
People will say it was random, it was chaotic, it was this and that.
523
00:52:48,080 --> 00:52:55,840
There were people who became angry at the music and let it be known that they hated it.
524
00:53:01,400 --> 00:53:04,240
'In New York, everything was under suspicion,
525
00:53:04,240 --> 00:53:07,520
'and I didn't know about being under suspicion,'
526
00:53:07,520 --> 00:53:10,440
I just thought about picking up my horn
527
00:53:10,440 --> 00:53:14,080
and activating the idea that's going through my nervous system.
528
00:53:16,360 --> 00:53:23,000
This guy had extreme nerve. The things that Ornette would play, even today,
529
00:53:23,000 --> 00:53:30,360
you actually can not believe that he played some of them. Just the sheer audacity of it.
530
00:53:33,520 --> 00:53:40,480
In New York, Ornette Coleman playing his white plastic sax was considered pretty out there too.
531
00:53:42,520 --> 00:53:45,200
It looked kind of funny because people said,
532
00:53:45,200 --> 00:53:49,280
"What happened to the candy that was inside it when you bought it?"
533
00:53:49,280 --> 00:53:55,400
He got a great sound out of this instrument. You wouldn't think it was plastic. I'd say,
534
00:53:55,400 --> 00:54:00,520
"Oh my God I hope this horn don't melt, this cat's playin'." It was heavy stuff, you know?
535
00:54:17,720 --> 00:54:21,200
It's hard to understand a negative reaction to that.
536
00:54:22,840 --> 00:54:30,520
Something so fabulous. I mean, what would people object to in it? I can't even imagine it.
537
00:54:36,120 --> 00:54:39,560
He changed everything. He changed everything.
538
00:54:39,560 --> 00:54:44,640
The whole approach, the way of looking at it, the style of it, the sound.
539
00:54:44,640 --> 00:54:50,760
He influenced people that don't even know he influenced them. Like, think they hated the music,
540
00:54:50,760 --> 00:54:56,000
you know. It gets into you, you can't help it. Maybe that's what upset them so much.
541
00:55:00,160 --> 00:55:03,360
I'm not trying to prove anything to anybody,
542
00:55:03,360 --> 00:55:06,480
I want to be as human as I can get. Believe me.
543
00:55:06,480 --> 00:55:09,640
And I know there's nothing I'm trying to hide,
544
00:55:09,640 --> 00:55:12,640
there's nothing I'm trying to climb above,
545
00:55:12,640 --> 00:55:15,360
there's nothing I'm trying to destroy.
546
00:55:17,440 --> 00:55:21,040
No one is going to suffer from what the human race does,
547
00:55:21,040 --> 00:55:23,880
because it's not going to destroy itself.
548
00:55:23,880 --> 00:55:27,080
It's gonna improve itself.
549
00:55:28,120 --> 00:55:32,000
Music is something that, to me,
550
00:55:32,000 --> 00:55:37,200
is nothing but the sound of your emotions.
551
00:55:37,200 --> 00:55:41,280
It's your heart, it's your feelings,
552
00:55:41,280 --> 00:55:46,480
it's your belief, it's your ability, and, most of all, it's your love.
553
00:55:46,480 --> 00:55:51,440
And what's so beautiful about it is that it's not destructive.
554
00:55:51,440 --> 00:55:54,840
It's always something that gets better.
555
00:56:06,240 --> 00:56:09,840
1959 was a really important year in jazz,
556
00:56:09,840 --> 00:56:15,040
because you had some of the greatest musicians in the world playing
557
00:56:15,040 --> 00:56:20,840
a response to what had been played, but was also a response to what COULD be played.
558
00:56:20,840 --> 00:56:27,920
The art was advanced in 1959, another set of choices were provided for everybody.
559
00:56:31,480 --> 00:56:34,560
Miles Davis, Kind Of Blue,
560
00:56:34,560 --> 00:56:37,760
has become jazz's best selling album,
561
00:56:37,760 --> 00:56:43,280
hugely influential from its 1959 release right up until today.
562
00:56:43,280 --> 00:56:47,600
Kind Of Blue difinitely changed music, it just kind of opened up
563
00:56:47,600 --> 00:56:50,880
the horizon for jazz expression.
564
00:56:53,840 --> 00:56:58,240
Miles would go on to influence the course of jazz many more times.
565
00:57:01,520 --> 00:57:05,280
Dave Brubeck still continues to follow his own groove
566
00:57:05,280 --> 00:57:09,440
and Time Out remains a high point of jazz innovation.
567
00:57:09,440 --> 00:57:15,760
With Time Out, it finally happened the way we all dreamt of it.
568
00:57:16,240 --> 00:57:19,320
It stood the test of time, this one
569
00:57:21,320 --> 00:57:24,800
Charles Mingus, a political as well as musical force,
570
00:57:24,800 --> 00:57:30,200
is now recognised as being amongst the 20th century's most important composers.
571
00:57:30,200 --> 00:57:35,320
Mingus Ah Um remains a prime work by the unpredictable genius.
572
00:57:35,320 --> 00:57:41,040
He was sharing his emotions about life.
573
00:57:41,040 --> 00:57:44,720
The message he always said to his side-men was "Play yourself",
574
00:57:44,720 --> 00:57:49,120
and you could extend that to all of us, "Play yourself, be who you are."
575
00:57:50,160 --> 00:57:54,720
But the record that has most changed jazz this last half-century
576
00:57:54,720 --> 00:57:58,000
is Ornette Coleman's The Shape of Jazz to Come.
577
00:57:58,000 --> 00:58:03,840
It came out of nowhere and fired a starting gun on new forms of music.
578
00:58:03,840 --> 00:58:06,480
The LP still sounds radical.
579
00:58:09,560 --> 00:58:16,280
He's divisive even to this day. Being divisive is a defining element almost to Ornette Coleman's music.
580
00:58:17,400 --> 00:58:22,280
The legacy of The Shape of Jazz to Come will be to create no boundaries,
581
00:58:22,280 --> 00:58:27,600
to play new music as much as you can, not to be satisfied with the status quo.
582
00:58:45,920 --> 00:58:48,960
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd
583
00:58:48,960 --> 00:58:52,000
Email subtitling@bbc.co.uk
55366
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