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Art Blakey Quotes Art Pepper Quotes Art Tatum Quotes Artie Shaw Quotes Ben Webster Quotes Benny Carter Quotes Benny Goodman Quotes Bill Evans Quotes Billie Holiday Quotes Bix Beiderbecke Quotes Branford Marsalis Quotes Buddy Rich Quotes Cab Calloway Quotes Cannonball Adderley Charles Mingus Quotes Charlie Haden Quotes Charlie Hunter Quotes Charlie Parker Quotes Chet Baker Quotes Chick Corea Quotes Chuck Mangione Quotes Coleman Hawkins Quotes Count Basie Quotes Danny Barker Quotes Dave Brubeck Quotes Dexter Gordon Quotes Diana Krall Quotes Dizzy Gillespie Quotes Django Reinhardt Quotes Duke Ellington Quotes Eberhard Weber Quotes Ella Fitzgerald Quotes Fats Waller Quotes Freddie Hubbard Quotes George Benson Quotes George Gershwin Quotes Glenn Miller Quotes Harry Connick Jr. Quotes Herbie Hancock Quotes Herbie Mann Quotes Horace Silver Quotes Jaco Pastorius Quotes Jelly Roll Morton Quotes Joe Pass Quotes John Coltrane Quotes John McLaughlin Quotes Keith Jarrett Quotes Ken Burns Quotes Kenny G Quotes Les Paul Quotes Lester Young Quotes Lionel Hampton Quotes Louis Armstrong Quotes Madeleine Peyroux Quotes Max Roach Quotes Mel Torme Quotes Michael Buble Quotes Miles Davis Quotes Miroslav Vitous Quotes Nat King Cole Quotes Nina Simone Quotes Norah Jones Quotes Norman Granz Quotes Ornette Coleman Quotes Oscar Peterson Quotes Pat Metheny Quotes Paul Desmond Quotes Ray Brown Quotes Ron Carter Quotes Roy Ayers Quotes Sarah Vaughan Quotes Sonny Rollins Quotes Stan Getz Quotes Stanley Clarke Quotes Sun Ra Quotes Sweets Edison Quotes Thelonious Monk Quotes Trombone Shorty Quotes Wayne Shorter Quotes Wes Montgomery Quotes Wynton Marsalis Quotes

Ken Burns Quotes

"Wynton told us that Miles sold out, just wanted to make more money, just wanted to sell more records. I don't believe that Miles sold out but I'm not in a position to say." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"We're having a hard time understanding where jazz is going. What happened to jazz?" - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"To say that an artist sells out means that an artist is making a conscious choice to compromise his music, to to weaken his music for the sake of commercial gain." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"The stories from 1975 on are not finished and there is no resolve. I could spend 50 hours on the last 25 years of jazz and still not do it justice." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"The genius of our country is improvisation, and jazz reflects that. It's our great contribution to the arts." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"The flame is not out, but it is flickering." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"Louis Armstrong is quite simply the most important person in American music. He is to 20th century music (I did not say jazz) what Einstein is to physics and the Wright Brothers are to travel." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"Jazz is a very accurate, curiously accurate accompaniment to 20th century America." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"I think the problem with a lot of the fusion music is that it's extremely predictable, it's a rock rhythm and the solos all play the same stuff and they play it over and over again and there's a certain musical virtuosity involved in it." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"I read cover to cover every jazz publication that I could and in the New York Times, every single day reading their jazz reviews even though I didn't put them in the films. I wanted to know what is going on." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"In a sense I've made the same film over and over again. In all of them I've asked, 'Who are we as Americans?" - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"I have made a film about jazz that tries to look through jazz to see what it tells us about who we are as a people. I think that jazz is a spectacularly accurate model of democracy and a kind of look into our redemptive future possibilities." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"I can understand why some of these drummers and bass players become cult figures with all of their equipment and the incredible amount of technique they have. But there's very little that I think satisfies you intellectually or emotionally." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"I am passionately interested in understanding how my country works. And if you want to know about this thing called the United States of America you have to know about the Civil War." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"History's just been made for sale to an inside deal." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"History is malleable. A new cache of diaries can shed new light, and archeological evidence can challenge our popular assumptions." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"Good history is a question of survival. Without any past, we will deprive ourselves of the defining impression of our being." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"By its very nature, no one person can ever be the center of Jazz." - Ken Burns

Ken Burns Quotes

"A jazz beat is a dynamic changing rhythm." - Ken Burns

John McLaughlin Quotes

"You can have the greatest player in terms of mastering an instrument and you could be yawning your head off when you hear them. So, it's not what you do, but the way you're doing it and in the end that's all that we have." - John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin Quotes

"There are two kinds of success. One is musical or artistic and the other is commercial." - John McLaughlin
"The moment you start to talk about playing music, you destroy music. It cannot be talked about. It can only be played, enjoyed and listened to." - John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin Quotes

"The mathematics of rhythm are universal. They don't belong to any particular culture." - John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin Quotes

"Only in spontaneity can we be who we truly are." - John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin Quotes

"Interplay and interaction are the integral parts of music - they're as important as the notes." - John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin Quotes

"I find Indian music very funky. I mean it's very soulful, with their own kind of blues. But it's the only other school on the planet that develops improvisation to the high degree that you find in jazz music. So we have a lot of common ground." - John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin Quotes

"I don't have any message in the music. Music will be fine as long as you take care of yourself." - John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin Quotes

"At the risk of sounding hopelessly romantic, love is the key element. I really love to play with different musicians who come from different cultural backgrounds." - John McLaughlin

Jelly Roll Morton Quotes

"Jazz music is to be played sweet, soft, plenty rhythm." - Jelly Roll Morton

Jelly Roll Morton Quotes

"I have been robbed of three million dollars all told. Everyone today is playing my stuff and I don't even get credit. Kansas City style, Chicago style, New Orleans style hell, they're all Jelly Roll style." - Jelly Roll Morton

Jelly Roll Morton Quotes

"Get up from that piano. You hurtin' its feelings." - Jelly Roll Morton

Jay McShann Quotes

"We used to play the Savoy Ballroom, and we always had a boogie tune in the set. Bands like Tommy Dorsey used to do a little boogie woogie. The big bands." - Jay McShann

Jay McShann Quotes

"We had an old Victrola with the old bulldog they used to have there. The horn would come out." - Jay McShann

Jay McShann Quotes

"We didn't let a night go by that we didn't play." - Jay McShann

Jay McShann Quotes

"My family was a Christian family. But I had to get to Kansas to play the blues." - Jay McShann

Jay McShann Quotes

"I was listening to all those lyrics and trying to take in everything that was happening. I was completely excited. It was one of the greatest times that I had listening to music." - Jay McShann

Jay McShann Quotes

"It was my first time in Kansas City. In about two or three days I had a gig at a place called The Monroe Inn." - Jay McShann

Jay McShann Quotes

"I had listened to Joe Turner. When they'd book Joe there, I'd play the blues behind him." - Jay McShann

Jay McShann Quotes

"As long as Pete and Joe are there, it's gonna be jumping." - Jay McShann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"You have to be concerned with yourself because if you're not on it all the time, nobody else is going to be." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"You don't have to live the blues to play the blues." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"Why do you have to retire at 65? Why can't you start at 70? You know, like wine. Why can't music be that way? My new band, we're playing stuff that's never been done before." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"When you get cancer, it's like really time to look at what your life was and is, and I decided that everything I've done so far is not as important as what I'm going to do now." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"What I try to do is produce an atmosphere where musicians want to invest in what they do and give to the recording. I hire those musicians who I know will play something creative and interesting." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"To most jazz critics I was basically Kenny G." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"Think about it: Look at the strides of awareness and treatment and tests that women have had with breast cancer, that the gay community has had with AIDS, because they're active and they talk about it." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"The reality is that what you find out is that your head is the medicine. If your head is not in the right place and you don't think positively, all the medicine technology in the world is not going to work." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"The music we're playing now is based on my heritage, which is Russian, Romanian and Hungarian." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"One of the advantages of not having a record contract is that you can make your own mistakes, you don't need somebody else to organize them for you." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"My youngest son, who is now the drummer in my band, lives in Brooklyn. My oldest son is about to move out to California, and my daughters are both out of town." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"My father's father came from Russia; my mother came from Romania." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"My ego is controlled enough that I don't have to be the focus." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"Music allows the great opportunity to play with people who turned you on and you love." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"I was raised in Brooklyn, and I lived there for 59 years." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"I recently formed a foundation to raise awareness for prostate cancer. I feel it's very necessary that men be more aware about prostate cancer and their health in general." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"I loved the Brazilian music I played. But this is finally me. For the first time I think it's really me." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"I had sat in one day in Central Park with Bonnie and Delaney, and Duane was playing with them, so I asked if he wanted to work on an album. You never had to say to him how to play the guitar." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"If you want to play somebody's music, you'd better go into his house." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"I always say, if you keep your head in the sand, you don't know where the kick's coming from." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"For me Brazilian music is the perfect mix of melody and rhythm. It just bubbles rhythmically. If I had to pick just one music style to play if would be Brazilian." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"By the time I'm 90, I hope to have it together." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"But when I first got cancer, after the initial shock and the fear and paranoia and crying and all that goes with cancer - that word means to most people ultimate death - I decided to see what I could do to take that negative and use it in a positive way." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"Being stubborn has helped, being selfish is not a bad thing." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann Quotes

"Being selfish to me means that you have to look out for yourself and you don't have to sacrifice." - Herbie Mann

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"You would not exist if you did not have something to bring to the table of life." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"You can practice to learn a technique, but I'm more interested in conceiving of something in the moment." -Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"You can practice to attain knowledge, but you can't practice to attain wisdom." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Without wisdom, the future has no meaning, no valuable purpose." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"While knowledge may provide useful point of reference, it cannot become a force to guide the future." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"When I was in my early teens, I remember coming to the conclusion that your life never ends." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"When I was coming up, I practiced all the time because I thought if I didn't I couldn't do my best." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"We are eternally linked not just to each other but our environment." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"The value of music is to be able to play one note at the right time in the right way." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"The value of music is not dazzling yourself and others with technique." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"The thing that we possess, that machines don't, is the ability to exhibit wisdom." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"The spirit of jazz is the spirit of openness." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"The music becomes something that is it's own entity." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Since time is a continuum, the moment is always different, so the music is always different." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"See, there were certain rules I'd always used, and people like Trane, they would break those rules." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"One thing that attracted me to Buddhism was the support for this larger vision of values." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"One thing I like about jazz is that it emphasized doing things differently from what other people were doing." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Nobody told me I was a child prodigy." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Music is the tool to express life - and all that makes a difference." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Music happens to be an art form that transcends language." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Miles' sessions were not typical of anybody else's sessions. They were totally unique." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Jazz is about being in the moment." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Jazz has borrowed from other genres of music and also has lent itself to other genres of music." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"I've been a religious, spiritual person for a long time." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"It's not the style that motivates me, as much as an attitude of openness that I have when I go into a project." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"It's not exclusive, but inclusive, which is the whole spirit of jazz." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"I try to practice with my life." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"I try stuff. I synthesize what's of value with some of the other things I have at my disposal." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"It pulled me like a magnet, jazz did, because it was a way that I could express myself." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"It is people's hearts that move the age." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"I think there's a great beauty to having problems. That's one of the ways we learn." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"I think I was supposed to play Jazz." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"In the past, there's always been one leader that has led the pack to development of the music." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"I'm always interested in looking forward toward the future. Carving out new ways of looking at things." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"I feel a lot more secure about the directions I take, than I might have, had I not practiced Buddhism." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Getting the Oscar had the biggest impression on me." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Creativity shouldn't be following radio; it should be the other way around." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Creativity and artistic endeavors have a mission that goes far beyond just making music for the sake of music." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"But, the truth is that everyone is somebody already." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"But I have to be careful not to let the world dazzle me so much that I forget that I'm a husband and a father." - Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock Quotes

"Being a musician is what I do, but it's not what I am." - Herbie Hancock

Harry Connick Jr. Quotes

"Safety's just danger, out of place." - Harry Connick, Jr.

Harry Connick Jr. Quotes

"Everything that I have professionally, and so much of what I have personally, is because of this great, fair city, and to see it being drowned like this is almost unbearable." - Harry Connick, Jr.

Glenn Miller Quotes

"Why do you judge me as a musician? All I'm interested in is making money." - Glenn Miller

Glenn Miller Quotes

"I thought I had swell ideas, and wonderful musicians, but the hell of it, no one else did." - Glenn Miller

Glenn Miller Quotes

"I haven't a great jazz band, and I don't want one." - Glenn Miller

Glenn Miller Quotes

"By giving the public a rich and full melody, distinctly arranged and well played, all the time creating new tone colors and patterns, I feel we have a better chance of being successful. I want a kick to my band, but I don't want the rhythm to hog the spotlight." - Glenn Miller

George Gershwin Quotes

"Why should I limit myself to only one woman when I can have as many women as I want?" - George Gershwin

George Gershwin Quotes

"True music must repeat the thought and inspirations of the people and the time. My people are Americans and my time is today." - George Gershwin

George Gershwin Quotes

"Life is a lot like jazz... it's best when you improvise." - George Gershwin

George Benson Quotes

"The greatest guitar player in the world today for me is Paco de Lucia, who is actually Spanish." - George Benson

George Benson Quotes

"My whole career from the early 70s on has been mind-blowing. I didn't imagine in my life that I would ever be considered a guitar player first of all because I started off as a singer." - George Benson

George Benson Quotes

"I listen to other guitar players, yeah. It gives me new concepts and shows me where the instrument is going for the future and it is going some places. There are some musicians who are really putting out a good vibe with new theories. I try and keep up." - George Benson

George Benson Quotes

"I have been doing music all my life so everyday when I get up I expect music will be part of it." - George Benson

George Benson Quotes

"As my career has progressed, I've had the pleasure of playing with the baddest jazz cats on the planet. But that doesn't change my desire to entertain folks. That's really who I am." - George Benson

Gary Burton Quotes

"I've made more than 50 records with a wide range of music. I've often veered to check something out." - Gary Burton

Gary Burton Quotes

"Certainly one of the more common experiences in the jazz field is discovering someone new. Improvising musicians are capable of being musical travelers, voyagers. We want to join in on whatever we hear. There is a freedom to wander the musical landscape." - Gary Burton

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"Yes, I can play. I can play. I can't play as long as I did and as hard, but I don't think I have to." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"When I got started in New York, it wasn't like it is now. If you were different from Miles and Dizzy, it was very difficult to make gigs and make money with your own style." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"Well, my sister played trumpet. Can you imagine having a sister blowing the trumpet around the house? And my brother, he played piano. Everybody was playing some kind of music, so it was natural for me to get into it." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"We all kind of grew up together with Art Blakey because we all were young and he gave us a chance to write. We had to write something that was good and to sit up with a great guy like Art Blakey and watch him." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"They always want to sell me as a hard bopper." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"I quit drinking, so I can think clear. When you have chop trouble, drinking doesn't help the healing process." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"That was the biggest thrill, going over to these guy's houses and having them want me to practice with them and they would show me a lot of stuff, which was really advanced stuff to me at my age." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"I'm going to Yoshi's. I'm taking a few gigs. I'm playing. I'm not going to play all the time. I'm going to take it easy and take it slow and warm up so I can come back." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"I had heard Ornette a couple of times, but I didn't really know where he was coming from until we started the record and it was beautiful. It opened up my mind." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"I am in discussions with a label. We are talking about doing something." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"I advise all the young kids to not overwork. You can't be out there blowing hard. You have to pace yourself." - Freddie Hubbard

Freddie Hubbard Quotes

"Dizzy used to tell me that I am playing too hard. He used to say to not give everything. Miles used to tell me that too." - Freddie Hubbard

Fats Waller Quotes

"If you don't know what it is, don't mess with it." - Fats Waller

Ella Fitzgerald Quotes

"The only thing better than singing is more singing." - Ella Fitzgerald

Ella Fitzgerald Quotes

"Just don't give up trying to do what you really want to do. Where there is love and inspiration, I don't think you can go wrong." - Ella Fitzgerald

Ella Fitzgerald Quotes

"It isn't where you came from, its where you're going that counts." - Ella Fitzgerald

Ella Fitzgerald Quotes

"I stole everything I ever heard, but mostly I stole from the horns." - Ella Fitzgerald

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"When I think back now to the recording sessions, there is more improvisation than one hears. It's an ideal combination of arrangements and improvisation. Only a few people are able to listen and say what is composed and what is improvised. It's a unit." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"When I started to pick up the bass, it was purely by random chance." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"Whenever I release a record, it's my record. It's not a selfish thought. I may work all year 'round for other people. So, finally, when I come out with my own album, it should be me with the creative help of other musicians." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"The way to compose for me is to have lots of time." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"There are always some doubts when you do a new album though. You wonder whether you succeeded or not, especially when you waited as long as I did for this one - seven years. You're never really sure if it will be a nice record or not." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"The problem is that I don't want to add another record to the world that is not necessary to be published, except to make some business. There has to be a musical reason." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"Orchestras are not used to playing the kind of stuff jazz musicians like to play. It requires a lot of rehearsal and recording time, so it's much easier to do on a synth or sampler. So, we came up with that idea." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"Orchestra had a little brass ensemble on two tracks as well, but the rest was me. I knew I couldn't continue in this direction, even if people liked it, because I can only duplicate myself." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"On the other hand, when I give it closer thought, I realize I'm not enough of a dictator to conduct an orchestra because it requires a pretty awful person. When you read these biographies of famous conductors, they are all awful people who fail in their private relationships." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"On the other hand, I'm very tolerant as well. I expect that everybody can play what they want. I'm only not tolerant when it comes to myself and what is presented on my album that I have to listen to for the rest of my life." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"I was afraid the other musicians might want to present themselves too much, though I see in the coverage I've received of the album that the musicians got wonderful reviews for their contributions and abilities. I think the four musicians played freely within my limits." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"It's better to finish at the peak or soon after it, than to wait until the audience notices a decline." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"It is probably very necessary to present your ego at some point." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"I realized pretty soon that I have to do more than just play bass in the background way. So, I developed a kind of playing which only a handful of musicians accepted." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"I played cello in my high school orchestra." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"In 1972, I got my first electric bass and started playing the kind of instrument I play now. I found that the majority of musicians couldn't bear that. They are not used to listening to the bass because they think the bass is in the background to support them." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"I like to create the music I hear in my interior. As a conductor, you have the ability to squeeze the sounds and interpretation you asked for from 50 to 80 people." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"If there is a good musical reason, I think it might draw more attention and sell, though it is not guaranteed. To make a record without a musical reason, you have to either be a pop star who sells automatically or just be lucky." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"I am a classical music lover - not necessarily the contemporary stuff, but the old stuff." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"At the time, I didn't know that bass would not be enough for me. I'm not a bass player because bass is always a background instrument even to this very day." - Eberhard Weber

Eberhard Weber Quotes

"As a result, I had to get my own playground which was my band Colours. This band lasted for about eight years and then the air was out of it and it was time to finish." - Eberhard Weber

Earl Hines Quotes

"I don't think I think when I play. I have a photographic memory for chords, and when I'm playing, the right chords appear in my mind like photographs long before I get to them." - Earl Hines

Earl Hines Quotes

"I always challenge myself. I get out in deep water and I always try to get back. But I get hung up. The audience never knows, but that's when I smile the most, when I show the most ivory." - Earl Hines

Django Reinhardt Quotes

"Jazz attracted me because in it I found a formal perfection and instrumental precision that I admire in classical music, but which popular music doesn't have." - Django Reinhardt

Django Reinhardt Quotes

"It doesn't matter all that much. It's just that when you're playing, Stephane, you've got both Chaput and me backing you, but when I'm soloing I've only got one guitar behind me!" - Django Reinhardt

Dizzy Gillespie Quotes

"They're not particular about whether you're playing a flatted fifth or a ruptured 129th as long as they can dance to it." - Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie Quotes

"Men have died for this music. You can't get more serious than that." - Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie Quotes

"It's taken me all my life to learn what not to play." - Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie Quotes

"I think the idea is now for blacks to write about the history of our music. It's time for that, because whites have been doing it all the time. It's time for us to do it ourselves and tell it like it is." - Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie Quotes

"I don't care much about music. What I like is sounds." - Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie Quotes

"I'd like to play for you one of my compositions, my only composition." - Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie Quotes

"I always try to teach by example and not force my ideas on a young musician. One of the reasons we're here is to be a part of this process of exchange." - Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie Quotes

"How do I know why Miles walks off the stage? Why don't you ask him? And besides, maybe we'd all like to be like Miles, and just haven't got the guts." - Dizzy Gillespie

Bix Beiderbecke Quotes

"We have great times traveling about, the boys are airplane crazy and movie-shy. We have a new Travelair plane and several are learning to pilot. Might come in handy sometimes, in case we oversleep and miss the train." - Bix Beiderbecke

Bix Beiderbecke Quotes

"The boys told me to put more American punch into melodies. A copy of 'Yes, We Have No Bananas' was put before me and I was told play like a he-man." - Bix Beiderbecke

Bix Beiderbecke Quotes

"The humor of jazz is rich and many-sided. Some of it is obvious enough to make a dog laugh. Some is subtle, wry-mouthed, or back-handed. It is by turns bitter, agonized, and grotesque. Even in the hands of white composers it involuntarily reflects the half-forgotten suffering of the negro. Jazz has both white and black elements, and each in some respects has influenced the other. It's recent phase seems to throw the light of the white race's sophistication upon the anguish of the black." - Bix Beiderbecke

Bix Beiderbecke Quotes

"The jazz band's chief stimulus, of course, was the rise of the negro "blues" and their exploitation by the negro song-writer, W. C. Handy." - Bix Beiderbecke

Bix Beiderbecke Quotes

"Jazz is musical humor. The noun jazz describes a modern American technique for the playing of any music, accompanied by noise called harmony, and interpolated instrumental effects. It also describes music exhibiting influence of that technique which has as its traditional object to secure the effects of surprise, or in the broadest sense, humor." - Bix Beiderbecke

Bix Beiderbecke Quotes

"One of the things I like about jazz, kid, is I don't know what's going to happen next. Do you?" - Bix Beiderbecke

Glossary of Jazz Terms

by Darius Brotman

An arbitrary list of common jazz terms from the perspective of the jazz piano student.

A Section: The first section of a tune, typically 8 bars; the main theme.

AABA: the most common form in pop music. Typical of songs by Gershwin, Cole Porter, Harold Arlen, etc. See Song Form.

Alteration: The raising or lowering of a tone by a half-step, from its diatonic value in a chord. In jazz usage, the fifth and ninth may be raised (augmented) or lowered (diminished); the fourth (or eleventh) may be augmented; the thirteenth may be diminished. The expression 'diminished seventh' is used solely as the name of a chord. Of course, in general music theory, any interval may be augmented or diminished.

Altered scale: The dominant 7th scale with a lowered 9th, raised 9th, raised 11th, no fifth, and lowered 13th, along with the usual root, 3rd and 7th. So-called because every possible alteration has been made.

Augmented: Raised by a half-step. See 'Alteration'.

Augmented 7th: A dominant 7th chord with a raised 5th added. The name is misleading because it is not the 7th that is augmented. Written ' +7 '.

Axe: one's instrument. Even said of the voice.

B Section: Same as bridge.

Back-beat: Beats 2 and 4 in 4/4 time, particularly when they are strongly accented. A term more used in rock 'n roll.

Ballad: a slow tune. Ballad playing is replete with its own idiomatic devices.

Bebop: the style of jazz developed by young players in the early 40s, particularly Parker, Gillespie, Kenny Clarke, Charlie Christian and Bud Powell. Small groups were favored, and simple standard tunes or just their chord progressions were used as springboards for rapid, many-noted improvisations using long, irregular, syncopated phrasing. Improv was based on chordal harmony rather than the tune. The 'higher intervals' of the chords (9th, 11th and 13th) were emphasized in improv and in piano chord voicings, and alterations were used more freely than before, especially the augmented 11th. The ground beat was moved from the bass drum to the ride cymbal and the string bass, and the rhythmic feel is more flowing and subtle than before. Instrumental virtuosity was stressed, while tone quality became more restrained, less obviously 'expressive'. The style cast a very long shadow and many of today's players 60 years later could be fairly described as bebop.

Block Chords: a style of playing, developed by Milt Buckner and George Shearing, with both hands 'locked' together, playing chords in parallel with the melody, usually in fairly close position. It is a technical procedure requiring much practice; the fundamental idea is to alternate between close diatonic chord voicings, and diminished chords that link between them. The bass (lowest) line is the same as the melody, one octave lower. Tends to sound dated. Also called locked hands.

Blow: the usual term for 'improvise'. Also, simply to play an instrument.

Blowing changes: the chords of a tune, particularly those intended specifically for improvising which may vary somewhat from the changes of the head. Sometimes written on a separate page.

Blues: (1) A form normally consisting of 12 bars, staying in one key and moving to IV at bar 5. (2) A melodic style, with typical associated harmonies, using certain 'blues scales', riffs and grace notes. (3) A musical genre, ancestral to jazz and part of it. (4) A feeling that is said to inform all of jazz.

Boogie (boogie-woogie): a style of piano playing very popular in the thirties. Blues, with continuous repeated eighth note patterns in the left hand and exciting but often stereotyped blues riffs and figures in the right hand.

Break: a transitional passage in which a soloist plays unaccompanied.

Bridge: The contrasting middle section of a tune, especially the 'B' section of an AABA song form. Traditionally, the bridge goes into a different key, often a remote key. Thelonious Monk once remarked that the function of a bridge is 'to make the outside sound good'.

Broken time: a way of playing in which the beat is not stated explicitly. Irregular, improvised syncopation. Especially applied to bass and drum playing.

Cadence: A key-establishing chord progression, generally following the circle of fifths. A turnaround is one example of a cadence. Sometimes a whole section of a tune can be an extended cadence. In understanding the harmonic structure of a tune, it's important to see which chords are connected to which others in cadences.

CESH: Contrapuntal Elaboration of Static Harmony, a foolish term used in some jazz textbooks. The use of moving inner voices to give propulsion to a chord that lasts for a while.

Changes: (1) The chords of a tune. 'Playing' or 'running' the changes means using suitable scales, etc., over each given chord of the tune. Determining the exact changes to use is a big part of preparing a tune for performance. (2) Rhythm Changes (q.v.) for short.

Channel: an old term for the bridge.

Chase: two soloists, such as the trumpet and sax, taking alternating 4-bar phrases (or 8, or 2). See Trading 4s.

Chart: (1) any musical score. (2) a special type of score, used by jazz musicians. Only the melody line, words (if any) and chord symbols are given. Clef, key signature and meter are given once only, at the beginning. The standards of musical notation and calligraphy are low. Details are often scanty or inaccurate, which encourages the musician to amend and elaborate the chart for his own purposes. Every jazz musician has his own book of miscellaneous charts.

Chops: technical ability, to execute music physically and to negotiate chord changes. Distinct from the capacity to have good ideas, to phrase effectively and build a solo.

Chord: The harmony at a given moment. Loosely, a group of 3 or more notes played together. Strictly, a chord is the basic unit of harmony, regarded abstractly as having a given root and specifying some other tones at certain intervals from the root, without regard to the actual voicing of the notes on the piano (see Voicing andScale).

Chord tones: the root, third, fifth and seventh of a chord, as opposed to extensions. (An illogical term.)

Chromatic: Pertaining to or derived from the chromatic scale, which includes all 12 tones to the octave. Chromatic harmony is a vague term referring either to the use of many altered tones in the chord, or to the use of chromatic root-movement in between the given chords.

Chorus: One complete cycle of a tune, one time through from top to bottom.

Close voicing: one in which the chord tones are bunched together, generally within an octave range.

Coda: (1) A portion of a tune which seems like a tail, or extra measures, added to the last A section. It is repeated for every chorus, however. (2) An ending for a tune, used only once after the final chorus. There is often confusion in written charts as to whether a coda is 'every time' or 'out-chorus only'. Some charts, to save space, are written so that the tune appears to have a coda, but it's really just a normal part of the tune.

Cool: the style of the early 50s, taken up by many white musicians and popular on college campuses. The basis was bebop, but the fastest tempos were not used and the sound was quiet and understated. Miles Davis was one of the main originators.

Counting off: giving the tempo and meter by counting aloud. One must learn to count off correctly.

Cross-rhythm: a passage in which a different meter is temporarily expressed or implied, while the prevailing meter continues underneath (see meter). Not particularly a jazz term, but cross-rhythms are universal in jazz performance. In ballad playing, for example, there is commonly a triplet-quarter-note rhythm that implicitly continues through the 4/4 meter and is "tapped-into" from time to time.

Crush: on the piano, a half-step played simultaneously.

Diatonic: the contrary of 'chromatic'. Said of melody or harmony using only the unaltered major (or sometimes minor) scale.

Diminished: Lowered by a half-step. See 'Alteration'.

Diminished triad: triad composed of two stacked minor thirds—root, minor third, and diminished fifth.

Diminished seventh (dim. 7): chord composed of 4 notes, stacked in minor thirds. The symbol is a small raised circle. Since an additional minor third on top will be the octave of the bottom note, inversions of a dim. 7 will have the same interval structure—in other words, they will also be diminished 7th chords in their own right. The extensions of a dim. 7 are a ninth (or whole step) above each chord tone. Effective modern voicing requires using at least one extension; plain dim. 7 chords sound remarkably old-fashioned. If the chord tones and extensions are put together within an octave, the diminished scale results. Often called just 'diminished' with '7th' being implied.

Diminished Scale: a scale of 8 notes to the octave in alternating whole-steps and half-steps. There are just three different diminished scales. Quite a complicated system of voicings and motivic patterns for diminished has been developed by modern players.

Dot time: a cross-rhythm based on dotted quarter notes, extending through a passage.

Double time: A tempo twice as fast, with the time feel, bar lines and chords moving at twice the speed.

Double time feel: A time feel twice as fast, so that written eighth notes now sound like quarter notes, while the chords continue at the same speed as before.

Eight to the bar: continuous eighth-note rhythm, as in boogie-woogie left hand patterns.

Extensions: the ninth, eleventh and thirteenth of a chord.

Fake Book: a collection of jazz charts, published without paying royalties and thus illegal. For decades, a book called '1000 Standard Tunes' circulated; you can still see its grossly simplified charts, written three to a page. In the 70s the "Real Book" appeared, out of the Berklee School of Music, with some 400 tunes in excellent calligraphy. This has become the standard and all jazz musicians are still expected to have a copy. The 'Monster Book' is very good. Others are a series called 'Spaces', and the 'Real Book Vol. II'. In recent years a large number of legal fake books have been published. They have much higher standards of accuracy but usually don't have as many tunes.

Free: without rules. Especially, improvising without regard to the chord changes, or without any chord changes. Usually there is an implied restriction in 'free' playing preventing one from sounding as if chord changes are being used.

Free Jazz: a style of the early and middle sixties, involving 'free' playing and a vehement affect. It was originally associated with black cultural nationalism. Sometimes two drummers and/or two bass players were used. Some free jazz was profound, and some not very good. Some who played it later denounced it, but the style became an ingredient in future styles and still has many proponents despite its lack of general popularity.

Fusion: a style developed in the late 60s by Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Miles Davis, Chick Corea and others, partly as a reaction to the eclipse of jazz on the music scene by rock. Incorporated elements of rock into jazz and made greater use of repetition and non-improvised passages. Harmonic language was simplified; key feeling tended to be established by repetition rather than harmonic movement. Straight-8 time and a strong back-beat predominated.

Front: 'in front' means before the top, as an intro.

Front line: the horn players in a combo, those who aren't in the rhythm section.

Go out: Take the final chorus, end.

Groove: an infectious feeling of rightness in the rhythm, of being perfectly centered. This is a difficult term to define. A Medium Groove is a tempo of, say, 112, with a slinky or funky feeling.

Ground beat: the basic metric beat, most often in quarter-notes, whether explicitly stated or not.

Half-diminished: the chord with a minor third, a lowered (diminished) fifth, and a minor seventh. Formally called 'minor 7 flat 5'. This chord evolved from the IV minor 6th chord, which was common in the swing period; if its sixth is taken to be the root, a half-diminished chord results. The symbol is a small O with a diagonal slash. It is most often the harmony of the II in a II-V-I progression in a minor key. Two different scales have been commonly used for this chord; one with a flat 9th, the 'locrian', and one with an unflatted ninth, the latter scale being more modern.

Half time: a tempo half as fast.

Half time feel: a time feel half as fast, while the chords go by in the same amount of time. Occurs in the intro to Chick Corea's Tones for Joan's Bones.

Hard Bop: the style of the late 50s, engineered by Horace Silver, Art Blakey, etc. Still essentially bebop, the style used hard-driving rhythmic feel and vehement, biting lines and harmony drenched with urban blues, rhythm 'n blues and gospel. Original compositions were stressed over the old standards used in bebop, ranging from simple riff-based blues to elaborate compositions, sometimes using whole-tone scales. Hard bop had a black, street flavor—a reaction, in part, to the intellectuality of the Cool School.

Harmonic rhythm: the structural organization of chord progressions in time; the rate at which the chords pass by. Since this may not be related to the rhythms of the actual notes, it is an abstract concept.

Head: The first (and last) chorus of a tune, in which the song or melody is stated without improvisation or with minimal improvisation.

Horn: A wind instrument; or any instrument.

Improvisation (improv): the process of spontaneously creating fresh melodies over the continuously repeating cycle of chord changes of a tune. The improviser may depend on the contours of the original tune, or solely on the possibilities of the chords' harmonies, or (like Ornette Coleman) on a basis of pure melody. The 'improv' also refers to the improvisational section of the tune, as opposed to the head.

Inner voice: a melodic line, no matter how fragmentary, lying between the bass and the melody.

Interlude: an additional section in a tune, especially one between one person's solo and another's. The Dizzy Gillespie standard A Night In Tunisia has a famous interlude.

Intro: Introduction. A composed section at the beginning of a tune, heard only once.

Inversion: (1) In traditional music theory, a chord with a note other than the root in the bass. (2) With regard to any particular voicing, especially a left-hand rootless voicing, a rearrangement of the voicing by moving the bottom note up an octave. Or, any one octavewise arrangement of a voicing.

Jazz: in a big band chart, a rhythm indication for medium to up-tempo swing (as opposed to latin).

Jazz Standard: A well-known tune by a jazz musician. See Standard.

Jump: a very fast 4/4, usually in a dance-band context.

Latin: (1) Afro-Cuban, Brazilian or other South American-derived. There are many special terms used in Latin music and I haven't tried to include them here. (2) Played with equal eighth notes as opposed to swung (see swing def. 2). Also 'straight-8'. The feel of bossa novas and sambas.

Lay out: Not play. See stroll.

Left hand rootless voicing ('LHRV'): A close-position voicing without a root, played mainly in the top part of the bass range (centering roughly around A below middle C). In a style perfected by Bill Evans, these left-hand chords are sprinkled in irregular syncopations under the right-hand melody. The absence of roots both frees the bass player and allows a richer harmony in the voicing. This has become the mainstream style of left-hand playing.

Legit: the jazz musician's somewhat ironic term for music, or a gig, that is not jazz.

Line: (1) A melody of successive, single notes. (2) A composed melody over predetermined chord changes, such as 'a line on Cherokee'. (3) One of the different voices, such as the bass or the melody.

Line-up: the personnel of a band.

Long Meter: a chart in 4 / 4 time is said to be written in long meter when a written eighth-note feels like a quarter-note, and a written half-measure feels like a whole measure. In this way, for example, a 64-bar tune can be written as if it were a 32-bar tune, which may make it easier to read. The term, though useful, is little-known.

Lydian: a major scale or chord with a raised 4th; the mode of the major scale built on 4. Regarded as the most fundamental jazz scale by influential theorist George Russell.

Lydian Dominant: a dominant 7th scale with a raised 4th (11th). One of the fundamental forms of the dominant chord; also sometimes called 'lydo-mixian'. The scale/chord most appropriate for non-V dominants, suich as II7 or bVII7.

Mainstream: the style of jazz regarded by the average player as today's norm, as opposed to fusion, rock, avant-garde, etc.; sometimes the term implies a somewhat conservative, relatively diatonic vocabulary exemplified by Oscar Peterson. Mainstream jazz is in a highly evolved state, having incorporated virtually the entire harmonic language of 20th century tonal music. In timbre, phrasing, form and rhythmic feel mainstream jazz still rests on a basis of bebop, which is why 'modern' jazz is considered to have started with bebop in the early 40s.

Medium: one of the standard jazz tempos, neither 'up' nor 'ballad'.

Melodic minor: in jazz, a scale with a minor 3rd but a major 6th and 7th (both up and down). This scale and its modes (Altered, Half-diminished and Lydian Dominant are the familiar ones) make up a realm called melodic minor harmony. I prefer the term 'tonic minor'.

Melody: specifically, the topmost line or voice.

Meter: a basic music term, but sometimes not fully understood. The organization of the beats of time (or ground beat), moving at a certain rate (the tempo), into groupings which are heirarchical, that is, there is a unit of a stated number of beats (the bar) which includes strong and weak beats in an organized pattern. All this is implied by a 'meter' of 4/4, 3/4, etc.

Modal: (1) Said of a section, or a whole tune, having static harmony (using one chord) and using scales from a particular mode, most typically the Dorian. (2) Having a key feeling derived not from dynamic chord progressions (like circle-of-fifths) but rather from repetition, monotony, and weight. (3) Loosely, a harmonic style that is diatonic and makes use of quartal harmony.

Mode: An incarnation of a scale in which a certain note is taken as the root. Thus, each scale has as many different modes as it has different tones. In common usage, the major scale and the melodic minor scale are regarded as 'given' and the scales constructed with other notes as the root are called modes. The modes of the major scale have names (Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, and Locrian); these names were applied in the Renaissance and have no relationship to the Greek originals. Some of the melodic minor scale's modes have names in today's theory: mode 3, the augmented major 7th; mode 4, the lydian dominant; mode 6, the half-diminished; mode 7, the altered.

Modern: the styles of jazz since 1945. Especially applied to bebop, cool jazz, and hard bop.

Modulation: The establishment of a new key. This is mainly a matter of harmonic progression, but expectation, emphasis and phrasing also enter into determining whether a new key has really been established. In standards, a modulation to the beginning of the bridge is strongly expected. Typically, a II - V or a III - VI - II - V progression in the new key is used.

Moldy Fig: A term used by the beboppers to deride players and fans of older styles, especially trad. Someone whose tastes are not up to date.

Monster: a superior player.

Montuno: a term of Latin music which crops up in other jazz. (1) An indefinitely repeated pattern of 1, 2 or 4 bars in the piano, typically with ingeniously syncopated moving inner voices and a differently syncopated bass line. (2) Incorrectly, a pyramiding vamp in which one instrument enters alone, then another is added, and so on at regular intervals.

Moving inner voice: a momentarily prominent line played by a voice in between the melody and the bass.

Neo-bop: the conservative bebop style of several successful players in the 90s, like Roy Hargrove.

Open voicing: one in which the chord tones are spread out over a greater range.

Original: a tune composed by a jazz musician and played by him but perhaps not well-known to others.

Out: the last chorus of a tune, when the head is played for the last time. On the stand the gesture of a raised clenched fist or a finger pointing to the head indicates that the out chorus is coming up.

Outer voice: the melody line or the bass, the top or bottom line.

Outro: a jocular term for coda; an added ending section.

Outside: (1) The A sections of a tune, the parts other than the bridge. (2) A manner of playing over changes that avoids using the normal scales, or has no relationship to the changes. (3) A style of playing without using conventional jazz chords.

Pattern: a pre-planned melodic figure, repeated at different pitch levels. Something played automatically by the fingers without much thought. Reliance on patterns is the hallmark of a weak player.

Pedal: A bass line that stays mainly on one note (or its octaves) under several changes of harmony. Also pedal-point. The most typical situation is when a dominant pedal (bass on V) underlies a turnaround progression like I - VI - II - V. The root of the I chord can also act as a pedal.

Pentatonic: Pertaining to scales of 5 notes to the octave, in particular 1-2-3-5-6 of the major scale. Pentatonic melodies are typical of much indigenous music around the world, and these scales are also an important part of the modern jazz sound. Pentatonic melodies and patterns were especially typical of jazz and fusion in the seventies.

Pickup: a phrase beginning that comes before the beginning of the first bar. A pickup can be one note or a longer phrase.

Pocket: in the pocket means perfectly in time, especially bass playing that is 'in the center' of the beat (rather than slightly leading or dragging the beat).

Polytonality: the use of two different keys simultaneously. Despite much loose talk, true polytonality is rare. Upper structures (q.v.) and outside playing do not usually qualify because there is always a strong single underlying tonality.

Progression: a definite series of chords, forming a passage with some harmonic unity or dramatic meaning. One speaks of the progressions that crop up repeatedly in different tunes, and studies how to negotiate them. Chords in progressions are labelled with Roman numerals (I, II, etc.) while scale degrees, and upper structures (q.v.), are labelled with arabic numerals (1, 2, etc.).

Quality: the character of a chord given by its third, fifth, and seventh. The qualities are major, dominant, minor, tonic minor, half-diminished and diminished. In theory augmented major and augmented (dominant) would also be 'qualities' but they are usually just considered alterations.

Quartal: based on fourths. Chords built up of fourths were, famously, developed by McCoy Tyner in the John Coltrane Quartet in the 60s.

Quote: a snatch of some other well-known tune thrown into a solo. A good quote is unexpected, incongruous and yet seems to fit perfectly. Some quotes are clichés, as 'Grand Canyon Suite' in 'All the Things You Are'.

Remote key: A key distant on the circle of fifths from the original one, such as E major compared to C major.

Riff: (1) A relatively simple, catchy repeated phrase. May be played behind a soloist or as part of a head. Often in a bluesy style. Riff tunes are made up of riffs, characteristic of the black bands of the 30s. (2) A pre-packaged phrase used by an improviser when he can't think of anything else, especially one which is especially catchy.

Root: the fundamental pitch on which a chord is based, from which the chord takes its name, and to which the other tones of the chord are referred to intervallically—the third, seventh, and so on, regardless of their actual intervallic relationship in an actual keyboard voicing. Note that the root is often absent in jazz piano, both in voicings and in r.h. patterns and lines. This avoidance of the obvious is part of the character of jazz.

Rhythm Changes: the chords to 'I Got Rhythm' (Gershwin), somewhat modified and simplified. Many jazz tunes use these changes and every player must know them. There are several variations.

Rhythm Section: the piano, bass and drums in a combo, those who play throughout the tune, behind the soloists. Might also include guitar or vibes, or there might be no piano.

Run: a rapid descending, or ascending, usually right-hand passage on the piano in the form of a continuous scale, or a scale with variations.

Scale: (1) A selection of tones in the octave, arranged in ascending or descending order, usually but not always using intervals of half- or whole-steps, and using the same notes in every successive octave. One tone is usually thought of as being the root, but it need not be the first note played. Most scales have 5, 6, 7 or 8 notes to the octave but any number from 2 to 12 is possible. (2) The same group of tones regarded abstractly as a 'pool' of available notes. In this sense, scale really means the same as chord. There is a maxim: 'Scales are chords and chords are scales.' (3) A section of melody in the form of a scale.

Shed: short for Woodshed, to practice diligently.

Shell: a two-note structure in the left hand, consisting of the root and one other note, usually the 7th, the 3rd or 10th, or the 6th. A simple, open left-hand style, used by Bud Powell and many of his imitators and followers.

Shout chorus: a special, complete, through-composed chorus played just before the final out-chorus. Also pep chorus. Used in classic (20s) jazz, some bebop, and a few modern compositions, such as Wayne Shorter's This Is For Albert.

Side-slipping: to play a passage, a melody or chord, a half-step up or down from its expected place or in relation to the given harmony.

60s Blue Note style: I have invented this term, for lack of any other, for the style developed in the early and middle sixties by such players as Wayne Shorter, Lee Morgan, Hank Mobley, Bobby Hutcherson, Freddie Hubbard, and others. They were recorded on the Blue Note label by engineer Rudy Van Gelder. The style extended the explorations of hard bop in original composition, moving away from the earthier side of hard bop toward more advanced harmonic and melodic ideas. Many compositions had the gravity and richness of "classical" music while remaining true to jazz style. New types of chords were introduced to the language of jazz. The style flowered just as jazz became marginalized by rock 'n' roll, and as a result has been somewhat overlooked in jazz history. Many of its players went on to become involved in avant-garde or free jazz, while some (notably Wayne Shorter) developed fusion.

Solo: any one player's improvisation over one or more choruses of the tune (occasionally, especially in ballads, less than one chorus). A sharp distinction is made between soloing, and playing the head.

Song form: a musical form with two contrasting themes A and B, thus-- A (8 bars); A repeated; B (8 bars); A repeated. The three A's have slightly different endings (turnarounds). Another common form may be called song form also, ABAB' (the second B starting like the first but ending differently). Most older standards are in song form.

Stand: the bandstand or stage.

Standard: A tune universally accepted and played by many jazz musicians. Many standards are tin pan alley and Broadway songs from the 30s, 40s and 50s. Others are strictly jazz compositions by such as Monk, Parker, Coltrane and Davis which have become accepted as standards (these are called jazz standards). A professional jazz musician is expected to know many, many standards.

Stop time: a rhythm device where certain beats aren't played, e.g. 1 2 3 (rest) 1 2 3 (rest).

Straight 8s: with equal, even 8th notes. Same as 'Latin'.

Stride: the typical piano style of the 30s, tending towards virtuosity. The left hand plays alternating low-register bass notes (or octaves, fifths or tenths) and middle register rootless voicings, giving an 'oom-pah' effect, interspersed with step-wise parallel tenths. The right hand often employs busy runs, arpeggios and octaves or full chords. Suggestions of stride remained in the playing of many modernists, especially Thelonious Monk and Oscar Peterson.

Stroll: Omit the piano. A soloist (playing a horn) strolls when he plays for a time with bass and drums only (or maybe the pianist strolls outside to have a smoke).

Substitution: A chord put in the place of a different chord. A substitution can be made throughout a tune, or just ad lib at a particular moment. Usually the operative idea is that the root of the chord is changed, while the other voices are common to both chords. Typical examples—bII 7 for V7, and III for I.

Swing: (1) The style of the 30s, when the big band was the dominant form of jazz. The style implies certain types of harmony (use of added 6ths rather than 7ths in major and minor chords, of un-embellished diminished chords, frequent use of the augmented 5th and little use of the augmented 11th, etc.) and a rhythmic organization that states the beat explicitly, puts more weight on 1 and 3 and tends to obey the bar-line phrasing. (2) A rhythmic manner, unique to jazz, in which the first of a pair of written 8th notes is played longer than the second, even twice as long, while the second tends to receive a slight accent, though the distribution of accents is irregular and syncopated. (The degree of this effect depends on the overall tempo, and is modified by the requirements of expression and phrasing.) (3) As a direction in a chart, played with a swing feel, as opposed to latin. (4) A mysterious, unexplainable quality in any music, but especially jazz, which makes one 'feel that shit all up in your body' (Miles Davis).

Syncopation: the process of displacing 'expected' beats by anticipation or delay of one-half a beat. The natural melodic accent which would fall, in 'square' music, on the beat, is thus heard on the off-beat. This adds a flavor of ambiguity as to where the beat is (not an actual ambiguity, only a flavor).

Tenor: the voice above the bass, often that played by the thumb of the left hand. Not a jazz term.

Tetrachord: a four-note portion of a scale. For example, the diminished scale is composed of two tetrachords with identical interval constructions.

Third stream: a term coined by Gunther Schuller in the early 50s. The supposed confluence of jazz and classical music.

Thumb line: the jazz term for 'tenor' (q.v.). A line played by the pianist's left thumb.

Timbre: [pronounced tamb'r] Tone quality, characteristic instrumental sound. Not especially a jazz term, but note that timbre is one of the basic dimensions of music along with rhythm, melody and harmony. Students sometimes have trouble developing a real jazz timbre. For the piano the word 'touch' is more usual.

Time feel: (1) the subjective impression of which time unit constitutes one beat and how long a bar is. May or may not correspond to the written music. (2) Theemotional quality of the rhythm.

Tonic minor: a scale / chord with a minor 3rd and a major 6th and 7th, generally used for the tonic or home chord in minor keys. Distinguished from other minor chord functions.

Top: The beginning point of each chorus, the first beat of the first measure.

Trad: the style of the jazz of the 20s, known retrospectively as Dixieland. Used a marked 4/4 beat, triadic harmony, 'sectional' tunes (with numerous separate sections), simultaneous improvisation, largely I - IV - V type harmonies, etc.

Trading 4s (or 8s, 2s): A form of discontinuous drum solo in which 4 measure sections are alternately played solo by the drummer, and by the band with another soloist (who goes first). The latter can be one particular soloist throughout, or it can cycle through the different instruments. Also, two different instrumental soloists can trade 4s with each other, such as the trumpet and the sax. This is called a chase. Trading 4s usually goes on for one or two choruses.

Triad: (1) Concretely, a chord of three notes - the root, 3rd and 5th - played together in close position in one of the three inversions. (2) Abstractly, a chord with a root, 3rd and 5th but no 7th. Might be decorated with the 6th or 9th. Triadic harmony is characteristic of Dixieland and rock.

Tritone: the interval of three whole steps, i.e. an augmented 4th or diminished 5th.

Tritone substitution: See 'Substitution'. The substitution of a chord whose root is a tritone away. In turnarounds it's common to do this for any of the chords.

Tune: A single jazz composition or jazz performance, a piece. The word 'song' is frowned on.

Turnaround: A sequence of chords, or the portion of a tune that they occupy, that forms a cadence at the end of a section of a tune, definitively establishes the tonic key and leads back to the opening chord of the next section, or to the top. Typically the turnaround chords are I - VI - II - V, with half a measure apiece. With possible substitutions and alterations, the variations are infinite. There are also entirely different progressions possible. If the opening chord of the next section is not a I chord, the turnaround must be suitable. Learning to negotiate turnarounds is essential to making a coherent solo. It's often effective to play a phrase that starts partway through a turnaround and continues past the beginning of the next section.

Up: in a fast tempo.

Upper structure: a triad used in the upper register over a chord of a different root, such as an A major triad over a C7 chord. From the standpoint of C7, the A triad consists of the 13th, the flat 9th, and the 3rd; at the same time it has the unified sound of a major triad.

Vamp: a simple section like a riff, designed to be repeated as often as necessary, especially one at the beginning of a tune. Also a constantly repeated bass line over which a solo is played.

Verse: in many older standard songs, an introductory section, often rubato, that leads up to the 'chorus' or main strain, which is the tune as generally recognized. Jazz players (and fakebooks) usually omit the verse, though singers like to use them.

Voice: any one of the melodic lines formed by the flow of the music. The bass line and the melody form the two outer voices, and the tones in between may, to a greater or lesser extent, form melodic lines of their own called inner voices.

Voice-leading: Getting the succession of harmonic tones in the inner voices to form coherent melodic lines of their own, or, at least, to move in a smooth, mainly step-wise motion. The perfection of voice-leading was in Bach, where 4 or more independent melodies can mesh to form perfect chordal harmony.

Voicing: a chord, played in a particular way on the keyboard. A particular arrangement of the notes of a chord.

Walk: in bass playing, to play mostly one note per beat, making a smooth, continuous quarter-note line. A fulfillment of the time-keeping function of bass playing, which many bass players have transcended since around 1960. The pianist can also walk with his left hand.

West Coast School: a much criticized label for the 'cool' style (q.v.) as it was taken up in California in the early 50s by mostly white players, like Dave Brubeck, Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker and many lesser figures like pianist Russ Freeman. In addition to the typical features of cool jazz, the style experimented with 'classical' instruments and complex counterpoint.

Whole-tone: a 6-note scale, of which there are two, made up entirely of whole-step intervals, or the harmonies derived from it. Used by Debussy and suggestive of 'impressionism'. In jazz, associated with Thelonious Monk and explored in a number of hard bop originals.

Woodshed: to practice diligently. Also 'shed'.

X: 'time'. Thus ' 4X ' on a chart means '[play] four times'.

Diana Krall Quotes

"That's why these songs have lasted as long as they have because they're just about feelings that don't change. They are love songs, they are not specific, those kinds of feelings don't change." - Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"So much of what we do as artists is a combination of personal experience and imagination, and how that all creeps into your work is not so linear." - Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"Sometimes I can't get out of the character because the story is very intense." - Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"It was probably when I met Jeff Hamilton, the drummer I've been working with for the last 20 years. He's the one who brought Ray Brown to hear me sing at a restaurant in my hometown." - Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"I think that I was being much more uptight about those things before. I feel like I really don't have to prove anything at this point other than what I'm doing." - Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"I'm not really on a mission to tell anybody anything. I'd rather be figured out." - Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"I mean, I don't think I would call Claus to do an album of big band tunes. You know, just like arrangers write for the artist they have in mind; you have to keep in mind if you're going to work with Claus Ogerman. You invite him to do what he does." - Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"I love music so much. I love what I do. I work very hard at being the best musician I can be, because I love it." -Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"But the greatest thing about music is putting it out there for people to figure out. You want the listener to find the song on their own. If you give too much away, it takes away from the imagination." - Diana Krall

Diana Krall Quotes

"I like to interpret 'Call me a River', as if I'm saying, 'Now you're telling me you love me after all that, and I'm telling you to shove off.' That's my interpretation. But I would never 'say' that because somebody else might interpret the song in another way." - Diana Krall

Bill Evans Quotes

"There is a Japanese visual art in which the artist is forced to be spontaneous. He must paint on a thin stretched parchment with a special brush and black water paint in such a way that an unnatural or interrupted stroke will destroy the line or break through the parchment. Erasures or changes are impossible. These artists must practice a particular discipline, that of allowing the idea to express itself in communication with their hands in such a direct way that deliberation cannot interfere. The resulting pictures lack the complex composition and textures of ordinary painting, but it is said that those who see well find something captured that escapes explanation. This conviction that direct deed is the most meaningful reflections, I believe, has prompted the evolution of the extremely severe and unique disciplines of the jazz or improvising musician." (liner notes to Miles Davis' album, 'Kind of Blue') - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"I'm a rather simple person with a limited talent and perhaps a limited perspective." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"I believe that all people are in possession of what might be called a 'universal musical mind.'" - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"Especially, I want my work – and the trios, if possible – to sing." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"I'm using the insides of sounds to move around in a very subtle way which, I think, ends up being inevitable. I feel it's the only solution to that particular problem that I presented myself." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"It's performing without any really set basis for the lines and the content as such emotionally or, specifically, musically. And if you sit down and contemplate what you're going to do, and take five hours to write five minutes of music, then it's composed music. Therefore, I would put it in the classical or serious, whatever you want to call it, written-music category. So there's composed music and there's jazz. And to me anybody that makes music using the process that we are using in Jazz, is playing Jazz." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"When you begin to teach jazz, the most dangerous thing is that you tend to teach style. I had eleven piano students, and I would say eight of them didn't even want to know about chords or anything - they didn't even want to do anything that anybody had ever done, because they didn't want to be imitators. Well, of course, this is pretty naive, but nevertheless it does bring to light the fact that if you're going to try to teach jazz, you must abstract the principles of music which have nothing to do with style, and this is exceedingly difficult. So there, the teaching of jazz is a very touchy point. It ends up where the jazz player, ultimately, if he's going to be a serious jazz player, teaches himself." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"Technique is the ability to translate your ideas into sound through your instrument. This is a comprehensive technique, a feeling for the keyboard that will allow you to transfer any emotional utterance into it. What has to happen is that you develop a comprehensive technique and then say, Forget that. I'm just going to be expressive through the piano." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"A guy is influenced by hundreds of people and things, and all show up in his work. To fasten on any one or two is ridiculous. I will say one thing, though. Lennie Tristano's early records impressed me tremendously. Tunes like 'Tautology,' 'Marshmallow,' and 'Fishin' Around.' I heard the fellows in his group building their lines with a design and general structure that was different from anything I'd ever heard in jazz." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"I believe in things that are developed through hard work. I always like people who have developed long and hard, especially through introspection and a lot of dedication. I think what they arrive at is usually a much deeper and more beautiful thing than the person who seems to have that ability and fluidity from the beginning. I say this because it's a good message to give to young talents who feel as I used to." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"My creed for art in general is that it should enrich the soul; it should teach spirituality by showing a person a portion of himself that he would not discover otherwise, a part of yourself you never knew existed." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"First of all, I never strive for identity. That's something that just has happened automatically as a result, I think, of just putting things together, tearing things apart and putting it together my own way, and somehow I guess the individual comes through eventually." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"Perhaps it is a peculiarity of mine that despite the fact that I am a professional performer, it is true that I have always preferred playing without an audience." - Bill Evans

Bill Evans Quotes

"To the person who uses music as a medium for the expression of ideas, feelings, images, or what have you; anything which facilitates this expression is properly his instrument." - Bill Evans

Benny Green Quotes

There is no accounting for jazz singers, that is to say, singers who suffer from the dangerous delusion that they are jazz singers.

Benny Green Quotes

"A jazz musician is a juggler who uses harmonies instead of oranges." - Benny Green

Art Tatum Quotes

"Tell the New York cats to look out. Here comes Tatum! I mean every living tub with the exception of Fats Waller and Willie the Lion." - Art Tatum (1930)

Art Tatum Quotes

"I don't think I'm ready for New York." - Art Tatum (1928)

Art Tatum Quotes

"Look, you come in here tomorrow, and anything you do with your right hand I'll do with my left." (to Bud Powell)

Art Tatum Quotes

"You have to practice improvisation, let no one kid you about it!" - Art Tatum

Art Tatum Quotes

"There is no such thing as a wrong note."

Art Blakey Quotes

"Opinions are like assholes, everyone's got one." - Art Blakey

Art Blakey Quotes

"There's nothing wrong with it. It's only a word. What's in a name? Nothing! Cats say, 'Call me Muhammed so-and-so.' But what's the difference? A name doesn't make the music. It's just called that to differentiate it from other types of music. Jazz is known all over the world as an American musical art form and that's it. No America, no jazz. I've seen people try to connect it to other countries, for instance to Africa, but it doesn't have a damn thing to do with Africa." - Art Blakey

Art Blakey Quotes

"We're here to have a ball." - Art Blakey

Art Blakey Quotes

"Music washes away the dust of every day life." - Art Blakey

Artie Shaw Quotes

Dance music, as I keep saying, you can dance to a windshield wiper... a windshield wiper that's fairly steady gives you a beat and all you need is an out-of-tune playing 'Melancholy Baby' and you've got dance music.

Artie Shaw Quotes

Somebody asked me once, 'Do you think that swing will ever come back?' And I said, 'Do you think the 1938 Form will ever come back?'"

Artie Shaw Quotes

There's such a cynicism about the phrase 'I laughed all the way to the bank.' It's as though money is what you're doing, rather than playing music. If you're playing a money game, why not get into banking?

Artie Shaw Quotes

No matter how carefully and assiduously and how deeply you bury shit, the American public will find it and buy it in large quantity. It's true, absolutely true.

Artie Shaw Quotes

"I was really running a music school back then, because my band wasn't making any money. I keep talking about money, because most people don't understand the part of money in running a band." - Artie Shaw

Artie Shaw Quotes

"Swing is an adjective or a verb, not a noun. All jazz musicians should swing. There is no such thing as a swing band in music." - Artie Shaw

Artie Shaw Quotes

"I can't understand these guys who just have to have your autograph. I asked one of them 'What do you do when you get home, take it out and look at it?'" - Artie Shaw

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"To have a little recognition, that is very nice, you dig. It is good for the ego, for the psyche." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"When you know the lyrics to a tune, you have some kind of insight as to it's composition. If you don't understand what it's about, you're depriving yourself of being really able to communicate this poem." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"What I'm doing, I prefer to call that jazz, because it is a beautiful word - I love it." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"The music scene is more competitive in the States." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"Music is a reservoir... of sounds." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"Jazz to me is a living music. It's a music that since its beginning has expressed the feelings, the dreams, hopes, of the people." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"In jazz, there is a lot of European influence harmonically." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"If you can't play the blues, you might as well hang it up." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"If I were to call it black music, that would be untrue. I don't know what that is, unless it would be some African drums or something." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"Darlin... be-bop is the music of the future." - Dexter Gordon

Dexter Gordon Quotes

"A lot of times I go back to record and to make a tour, but I'm very happy to do it, because it gives me an opportunity to dig and hear what's going on." - Dexter Gordon

Dave Holland Quotes

"The whole point in developing your own style is to find your own voice." - Dave Holland

Dave Holland Quotes

"I think there is great interest amongst the younger people in this music. I think that there is a lot of them that are looking for interesting situations and music that is stimulating." - Dave Holland

Dave Holland Quotes

"I think that what is important is that the music be honest and direct and that it is relevant to today. I think music needs to be of its time and speak to that time." - Dave Holland

Dave Holland Quotes

"In fact, jazz has such a great feeling and great emotional content that it really doesn't require you to have technical understanding of it. I think you just have to allow your feelings to go with the music and you will find yourself carried along by it fairly quickly." - Dave Holland

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"With four people you can create one very strong kind of energy, but if you can get 65 people working together, and swinging together, that's a whole other kind of energy." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"Whether it's string writing or whatever, I try to write for what each instrumentalist can do best." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"What's happened - in our country, anyhow - is that the young people have shied away from the formality of the concert hall, that tie - and - tails philharmonic image." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"We may play in a contemporary rock vein, use standard bebop themes, and many other things besides." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"To pay 60 musicians for rehearsal and performance is quite something, and I decided I wouldn't be able to handle that kind of situation financially again, unless somebody else was taking care of that end of it." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"To do it always right, that is what music is to me." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"There's not much in the way of written-down arrangements - just things that Gerry and I have worked out, from playing spontaneously together and hanging on to whatever seems to fall in right." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"Then I loved the fact that we were actually recording live." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"The hiatus you spoke about happened in 1998. I was somewhat numb from being out on the road every night. I had to stop because I was emotionally and physically drained." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"Not with the Rochester Philharmonic, but I formed my own orchestra, made up of musicians from the Eastman School, where I'm on the faculty now, direct the Jazz Ensemble and teach improvisation classes." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"Not compromising the music, but there is a way, by just showing the people that you're sincere and honest with what you're doing, and by talking to them." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"My music has always been strong in melodic content." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"My goal was never to sell many records." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"My brother had a big band in high school; after that we continued to play together, eventually forming a group called the Jazz Brothers, that recorded for Riverside Records." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"Music is meant to be a beautiful thing." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"Most recently we've been working in concert situations rather than clubs. because there aren't too many rooms there like Ronnie Scott's, that are pure music rooms, where people come specifically to listen to music." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I write music people enjoy playing and listening to, and I have a group that loves playing the music." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I was blessed to work with The Jazz Messengers when the two piano players were Keith Jarrett and Chick Corea." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I tend to not want to put labels or categories on the music, only because people come with preconceived ideas about what they're going to hear, or won't come for this reason." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"In 1994, I started touring again and I recorded two albums for Chesky Jazz." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I made many studio albums and I think the danger of studio recording is that if you do not watch out, you come out with a perfectly sterile performance." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I have been recording for five decades now." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I find it very difficult to compose when I'm not playing." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I do not mind having written the song at all. I just wish that I had written it in a different key, as the high d is hard to play." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I can count on one hand the number of instrumental hits there have been over the last ten years." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I am glad that I wrote something that brought joy to millions of people." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"Brazilian music has many of the ingredients that I strive for in my own music: Strong melodies and a disciplined but intense rhythmic concept, and interesting harmonies." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"I don't believe music can be free unless it has something to be free from." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"A studio recording is perfection, but emotion and passion come only when you turn on the machine and go for the groove. If you do that with no mistakes, it sounds beautiful." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"As for the symphonic activities... when I was a student at the Eastman School of Music, I became exposed to a lot more musical forms, elements, opportunities, and I fell in love with strings and their uses." - Chuck Mangione

Chuck Mangione Quotes

"1972 was a year of many pleasant and rewarding experiences for me." - Chuck Mangione

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"Yeah, well, it did earlier - but as Bobby and I have played together, our thing as a unit has become so strong that they kind of had to get in where they fit in. And most people do." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"Yeah, it's more like playing what you think is appropriate for the moment. It's not about trying to force any particular style within the parameters - and the parameters we play in are pretty large!" - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"Ultimately, at the end of it, it's just trying to get into that space where you feel like you're hitting the right thing and you're making music. And it feels intuitive rather than being counterintuitive." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"The market didn't define the music; the music defined the market." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"That's the thing that we said about the horn before: it's a focus issue. It's like a singer versus a drummer. If a drummer's playing a drum beat, and a singer starts singing, what do you think the audience is going to do?" - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"That's the exact concept behind the music: to take that kind of, I guess whatever you want to call it, jazz sensibility - but not have it be about solos." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"So it's really hard for a horn player to comp. But I'm totally into trying to switch those paradigms around and find a little magic space where that works, and try to mine that." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"Now, when we first started, I would be playing something good and then feel like I wasn't doing the right thing and launch into some idiotic cliche. Luckily for me, Bobby was patient." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"It's just a way of trying to get to a third thing that's not particular to any quote-unquote genre. It's been great for me; it's really opened me up and gotten me to use that part of my imagination. It's very scary in a lot of ways, and just as exciting." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"I mean, in the course of an evening, people will take a solo here and there, but generally it's all about the rhythm of that music. Dealing with the rhythm with everything. That's essentially at least my concept of what that group is." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"If we really wanted to be cool, and everyone in the world had Pro Tools, we could just put it up on the internet and everyone could make their own record out of it." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"I do dig the White Stripes. I like the record they have out now." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"Everything we did, we did live - and then Bobby took it home and chopped it up and edited it. Which is pretty much what they did with every jazz record you've ever heard." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"But that kind of falls in line; when you think about it, James Brown was a funk minimalist. All of those parts create a sum that's larger than than the individual parts." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"But I've come to the point in my evolution on the instrument where I realize that I can't play the same stuff that just a guitar player or organ player would play - and I need to embrace that in a big way." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"But I just think we've got such a continuity with what we're doing that most people come in and fill in the blanks. And sometimes we leave a lot of blanks to be filled." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"Bobby is really the one who did all the editing on that stuff. And he did all the mixing. I particularly like the record we did with Logic because Scott Harding did a great job mixing it. He's really a killing engineer." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"Anyone playing with you is going to change where your direction is." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter Quotes

"And then as we played more and more as a trio, it became more and more of a situation where we realized we really knew how to use the fourth member of the group - that space. The thing about the trio is that it's the biggest sound you can have with the smallest unit." - Charlie Hunter

Charlie Haden Quotes

"When we first started playing we did a lot of rehearsing. We used to write out everything. In fact, that's the way everybody rehearses: we play the tunes and improvise." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"We're here to bring beauty to the world and make a difference in this planet. That's what art forms are about." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"There's like a special group of people that come from different parts of the planet to study with me. It's nice. I just gave a workshop in Boston at the New England Conservatory, which was really nice." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"The bass, no matter what kind of music you're playing, it just enhances the sound and makes everything sound more beautiful and full. When the bass stops, the bottom kind of drops out of everything." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"Some tracks are with quartet and some tracks are with synthesizer." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"James Cotton is a real blues guy, and he played with Muddy Waters, and it surprised me that they would want me to make a record with them, that he called me to do this record. I'd never done anything like that before. But I love blues, so I was very happy." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"I want them to come away with discovering the music inside them. And not thinking about themselves as jazz musicians, but thinking about themselves as good human beings, striving to be a great person and maybe they'll become a great musician." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"I've got a collection of songs that I've had, I keep adding to and they're all great American composers. I wanted to showcase American composers and I've done that on a lot of my records and played things by American composers that I really respect." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"It used to be that creative music was most of the music that you heard back in the '30s and '40s, and now it's like 3 percent. So, its kind of a struggle getttin' it out there." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"I just try to play music from my heart and bring as much beauty as I can to as many people as I can. Just give them other alternatives, especially people who aren't exposed to creative music." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"I just sit down at the piano and rattle it off." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"I just see myself as a human being that's concerned about life." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"I have music inside me and I'm very lucky to be able to play music and that's the way that I try to do it." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"I always told the people at Cal Arts that if they wanted me to do Jazz studies, first of all, there couldn't be a big band within 500 miles and that I could do what I wanted to do. And they said I could." - Charlie Haden

Charlie Haden Quotes

"As long as there are musicians who have a passion for spontaneity, for creating something that's never been before, the art form of jazz will flourish." - Charlie Haden

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"You've got to realize. In the western world, regardless of what color you are, what title the music is, it's all played by the same notes." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"You don't have to worry about being a number one, number two, or number three. Numbers don't have anything to do with placement. Numbers only have something to do with repetition." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"To me, human existence exists on a multiple level, not just on a two-dimensional level, not just having to be identified with what you do and what you say." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"That's why I haven't been so anxious. But now, lots of people write and say, 'I want to find out what you're doing.' So I know that this book will enlighten them." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"That's what I was trying to say when we were talking about sound. I think that every person, whether they play music or don't play music, has a sound - their own sound, that thing that you're talking about." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"So, for instance, if you came to me, I'd ask, 'Do you want to write? Do you want to improvise? Why do you want to play this instrument? What do you want to do?'" - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"Originally, I wanted to be a composer. I always tell people, 'I think of myself as a composer.'" - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"No one has to learn to spell to talk, right? You see a little kid holding a conversation with an adult. He probably doesn't know the words he's saying, but he knows where to fit them to make what he's thinking logical to what you're saying." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"Most of my relationships have been like that - with record companies. I've never had a legitimate business relationship with a company. I've always had a personal relationship with someone in the company." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"Jazz is the only music in which the same note can be played night after night but differently each time." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I've never had a relationship with a record executive. I always went to the record company by someone that liked my playing. Then they would get fired, and I'd be left with the record company. And then - because they got fired - the record company wouldn't do anything for me." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I've had those people very interested in my writing. Since I think of myself as a composer, I feel really good. I've had lots of guys call me up. I've gotten two or three commissions to write things. I've written lots of movie scores." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I've been playing with Blackwell over 20 years. We used to play when I first went to Los Angeles. Blackwell plays the drums as if he's playing a wind instrument. Actually, he sounds more like a talking drum." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"It was when I found out I could make mistakes that I knew I was on to something." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"It's just someone has labelled us as having a different label to do what you do. I find that labels are the worst thing in the world for artistic expression." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"It seems to me that in the western world, culture has something to do with appearance. A person that's out creating good stuff has got to appreciate someone when they take the time to have an appearance that goes with what they're doing." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"It just makes that person feel that what his work is is going to be more valid. But who wants to see a guy standing in front, looking like a bum, doing something that a bums don't do? This don't make sense." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I think that those elements - light and sound - are beyond democratic. They're into the creative part of life." -Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I remember once, we got an interview, and he said, 'Dad, these people are writing about me like I'm an adult. Don't they know I'm a kid?' I have never tried to encourage him to get a music image like other musicians have." -Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I remember once I read a book on mental illness and there was a nurse that had gotten sick. Do you know what she died from? From worrying about the mental patients not being able to get their food. She became a mental patient." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I'm having this conversation with you now. I'm talking, but I'm thinking, feeling, smelling, and moving. Yet I'm concentrating on what you're saying. So that means there's more things going on in the body than just the present thing that the person's got you doing." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I mean, if you decided to go out today and get you an instrument and do whatever it is that you do, no one can tell you how you're going to do it but when you do it." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I had a really good time in New Orleans, although I had some very tragic times in Baton Rouge. Some guys beat me up and threw my horn away. 'Cause I had a beard, then, and long hair like the Beatles." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"If you decide you want to be treated good, and you treat someone else good, or you want to learn something, it's information. It's getting the right, good information." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I don't really live like a musician myself. I think music is just something that I do, but I'd like to be doing lots of other things. I like to cure all kinds of illness." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I don't know what they're thinking about. Just because someone says, 'I like what you do' or something: They might like it today and tomorrow they might not. I've had that experience with record companies." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I decided, if I'm going to be poor and black and all, the least thing I'm going to do is to try and find out who I am. I created everything about me." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"I asked my mother could I have an instrument. She said, 'Well if you go out and save your money.' So I went and got - I made me a shine box. I went out and started shining shoes, and I'd bring whatever I made." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"Even when you write it, someone's got to play it. So if you can play it and bypass all the rest of the things, you're still doing as great as someone that has spent forty years trying to find out how to do that. I'm really pro-human beings, pro-expression of everything." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"All the things that human beings suffer from are how their environment treats them, and how the elements of their planet affects their mind and body - like radiation, cancer, and all." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"After I left Texas and went to California, I had a hard time getting anyone to play anything that I was writing, so I had to end up playing them myself. And that's how I ended up just being a saxophone player." - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"Actually, when I was in elementary school, I saw a saxophone. A band came to my school, and I saw this guy get up and play this solo. And I said, 'Oh man, what is that! That must be fantastic!'" - Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman Quotes

"Actually, I have another record I made with them in 1976, but I've had such a bad experience with record companies, because I keep my head so much in music and not in business." - Ornette Coleman

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"You not only have to know your own instrument, you must know the others and how to back them up at all times. That's jazz." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"We're not like pop musicians who have to perform the same top ten tunes every night of a tour." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"Too many jazz pianists limit themselves to a personal style, a trademark, so to speak. They confine themselves to one type of playing." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"The music field was the first to break down racial barriers, because in order to play together, you have to love the people you are playing with, and if you have any racial inhibitions, you wouldn't be able to do that." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"Some people try to get very philosophical and cerebral about what they're trying to say with jazz. You don't need any prologues, you just play." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"It's the group sound that's important, even when you're playing a solo." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"I play as I feel." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"I have no one style." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"If you have something to say of any worth then people will listen to you." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"I don't do something because I think it will sell 30 million albums. I couldn't care less. If it sells one, it sells one." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"I don't believe that a lot of the things I hear on the air today are going to be played for as long a time as Coleman Hawkins records or Brahms concertos." - Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"I believe in using the entire piano as a single instrument capable of expressing every possible musical idea." -Oscar Peterson

Oscar Peterson Quotes

"I am the worlds laziest writer." - Oscar Peterson

Pat Metheny Quotes

"Whatever my recorded output is, it's a reflection of a general love of music." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"The first thing I learned was the theme from Peter Gunn." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"The beauty of jazz is that it's malleable. People are addressing it to suit their own personalities." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"People sometimes say it takes a long time to become a jazz fan, but for me it took about five seconds." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"My older brother Mike is an excellent trumpet player. By the time he was 12, he was playing around Kansas City in classical situations. He was already an amazing talent." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"Listening is the key to everything good in music." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"Jazz is not something that can be defined through blunt instruments. It is much more poetic than that." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I was deep in the zone of practicing almost constantly." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I was able to work with the best musicians in Kansas City starting when I was really young." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"It's more about conception and touch and spirit and soul than whether my hardware was in place." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I think I represent a more left-wing view of what jazz is." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I think I have a basic sound aesthetic that is in most of what I do." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I saw A Hard Day's Night 12 or 13 times." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I realized that equipment really had little to do with why I sound like the way I sound." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I hate the way chorus boxes sound." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I don't worry too much about the fundamentalist principles that are in almost any discussion about jazz." - Pat Metheny

Pat Metheny Quotes

"I don't know if I would qualify as mainstream. I think I have managed to function pretty successfully on the fringes of the music world and have been able to play exactly what I have wanted the way I have wanted." - Pat Metheny

Paul Desmond Quotes

"Writing is like jazz. It can be learned, but it can't be taught." - Paul Desmond

Paul Desmond Quotes

"We used to get on planes, and they'd ask who we were, and we'd say, 'The Dave Brubeck Quartet', and they'd say, 'Who?' In later years they'd say, 'Oh', which amounts to the same thing." - Paul Desmond

Paul Desmond Quotes

"I would also like to thank my father who discouraged me from playing the violin at an early age." - Paul Desmond

Paul Desmond Quotes

"I was unfashionable before anyone knew who I was." - Paul Desmond

Paul Whiteman Quotes

"Jazz tickles your muscles, symphonies stretch your soul." - Paul Whiteman

Paul Whiteman Quotes

"Jazz is the folk music of the machine age." - Paul Whiteman

Paul Whiteman Quotes

"Jazz came to America three hundred years ago in chains." - Paul Whiteman

Pete Fountain Quotes

"You know, it's funny... when you're making money, people don't think you're playing jazz. Now when you're not making money, people think that you're a good jazz musician." - Pete Fountain

Pete Fountain Quotes

"What we used to say was whoever had the bow tie got to lead the band. There was never any jealousy." - Pete Fountain

Pete Fountain Quotes

"I was improvising before I was reading music. I was just trying to play things on the clarinet by ear. I think my ear is one of my greatest assets." - Pete Fountain

Pete Fountain Quotes

"If I had grown up in any place but New Orleans, I don't think my career would have taken off. I wouldn't have heard the music that was around this town. There was so much going on when I was a kid." - Pete Fountain

Ray Brown Quotes

"Well, jazz is to me, a complete lifestyle. It's bigger than a word. It's a much bigger force than just something that you can say. It's something that you have to feel. It's something that you have to live." - Ray Brown

Ray Brown Quotes

"We had to do a lot of rehearsals to get it so that it was playable. What it did was make you practice. That's good for any musician to have that kind of pressure. It brings things out of you that might not come out if you don't have to reach for something all the time." - Ray Brown

Ray Brown Quotes

"They played so good it was frightening. And I, of course, being young, was in awe of everything that was going on and rightly so. I mean, it was too good to believe." - Ray Brown

Ray Brown Quotes

People are trading distance for dollars." - Ray Brown

Ray Brown Quotes

"I will have a song that I'm in love with for a couple of months and then I'll go to something else. That's just constantly changing. And sometimes I will go back to old one that I haven't heard for a long time." - Ray Brown

Ray Brown Quotes

"Coming down off crack is like the worst depression. The worst." - Ray Brown

Ray Brown Quotes

"A 'For Sale' sign in your yard during the holidays is like a 'kick me' sign. You are telling buyers you are a distressed seller." - Ray Brown

Ron Carter Quotes

"I felt a responsibility to present a viable alternative to the popular electric sound." - Ron Carter

Ron Carter Quotes

"I am from the planet of elegance." - Ron Carter

Ron Carter Quotes

"A good bassist determines the direction of any band." - Ron Carter

Roy Ayers Quotes

"You grow and learn a lot about the industry and what happens behind closed doors over the years." - Roy Ayers

Roy Ayers Quotes

"When I was recording from '70 to '82, I always played piano and laid the tracks down. But I used to talk to the other musicians while the track was playing." - Roy Ayers

Roy Ayers Quotes

"What we call soul has been around a long time. It comes out of a particular culture that is African in origin, but influenced by 250 years of slavery, as well as other forms of racial oppression." - Roy Ayers

Roy Ayers Quotes

"The true beauty of music is that it connects people. It carries a message, and we, the musicians, are the messengers." - Roy Ayers

Roy Ayers Quotes

"The majors, they have to control the distribution, the record outlets, the radio and, in some cases, even the venues. And downloading and pirating have also put pressure on the majors." - Roy Ayers

Roy Ayers Quotes

"Soul has no musical geographical or racial boundaries." - Roy Ayers

Roy Ayers Quotes

"Some people really trip on success or popularity. My friends would talk to me about that, about tripping on all this stuff, but you know what I tripped on? I started buying property." - Roy Ayers

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