By
Valerie Wilmer.
From
Down Beat (June 3, 1965)
Now it's Monk's Time. Times
have been bad for the eccentric genius and the work all but nonexistent. But
he's famous now. He appears in the slicks; he wears $150 suits and stays at the
best hotels. But as his wife, Nellie says, "He's no more impressed with
himself than he was in the dark days."
Music is his life, and he
appears to be concerned with little else outside of it, himself and his family.
If he ever thinks of the way of the world, he rarely shows it. Speaking of Monk
the composer, Quincy Jones summed it up: "Thelonious is one of the main
influences in modern jazz composition, but he is not familiar with many
classical works, or with much life outside himself, and I think because of this
he did not create on a contrived or inhibited basis."
An interview with Monk
takes patience, but while he was on a European tour recently, he had more time
than usual to relax. In London, there was opportunity to find out the way he
feels about his music and other subjects.
"I started to take up
trumpet as a kid, but I didn't play it," he began tentatively. "I
always wanted to play the piano, and jazz appealed to me. I just like every
aspect of it. You can try so many things with jazz. I was about 11 or something
like that when I started, and used to play with all the different side bands
when I was a teenager."
Did he ever think he might
become a world-famous jazz pianist? "Well, that's what I was aiming
at."
Although he received
classical training, Monk plays "incorrectly," with his hands held
parallel to the keyboard. He doesn't stab at the keys the way some imagine.
It's a flowing thing.
Was he ever taught to hold
his hands in the formal manner?
“That's how you're supposed
to?" he asked, wide eyed, "I hold them any way I feel like holding
them. I hit the piano with my elbow sometimes because of a certain sound I want
to hear, certain chords. You can't hit that many notes with your hands.
Sometimes people laugh when I'm doing that. Yeah, let 'em laugh! They need
something to laugh at."
Monk lived with his parents
off and on until his marriage, an unusual pattern for a jazz musician, although
he claims, "I don't know what other people are doing - I just know about
me. I cut out from home when I was a teenager and went on the road for about
two years."
His mother, who was
particularly proud of her well behaved son, sang in the choir at the local
Baptist church in New York City, where the family lived; whenever she had a
leading part, Thelonious would accompany her on piano. And she would visit the
dives where he worked. "My mother never figured I should do anything
else," Monk said. "She was with me. If I wanted to play music, it was
all right with her, and Nellie is the same way.
"Yeah, I played in the Baptist church, and
I'll tell you something else - I worked with the evangelists for some time,
too. The music I played with them seems to be coming out today. They're playing
a lot of it now. I did two years all over the States; playing in the churches
was a lot of fun. When I got through, I'd had enough of church though. I was in
there practically every night. But I always did play jazz. In the churches I
was playing music the same way. I wouldn't say I'm religious, but I haven't
been around the churches in a good while so I don't know what they're putting
down in there now."
Of Minton's, the Harlem
club long held the incubator of bop, Monk, like others of his fellow
iconoclasts of the time who played there, declared that the music "just
happened. I was working there, so the others just used to come down and play with
me. I guess they dug what I was doing. It was always crowded there, people
enjoying themselves all the time. What I was doing was just the way I was
thinking. I wasn't thinking about trying to change the course of jazz. I was
just trying to play something that sounded good. I never used to talk about it
with other people, but I believe the other musicians did. It just happened.
For a long time the pianist
found it difficult to obtain work, but he says with typical Monkish
nonchalence, "I didn't notice it too much. I had certain things to do. I
wasn't starving."
Nellie, whom he married in
1947, was a great help and comfort through the lean years. She worked at a variety
of clerical jobs and when she was pregnant with their first child, Thelonious
Jr., used to take in sewing.
"Music to him is
work," she said, "When he wasn't working regularly, he'd be working
at home, writing and rehearsing bands that didn't have the prospects of a dog.
he just did it to know what it'd sound like. In the 'un' years, as I call them,
as far as he was concerned, he felt just as confident as he does now that what
he was doing musically could appeal to other people if they only took the opportunity
to listen.
We live music every day.
Thelonious has never attempted to do anything else except play music. He's always been optimistic."
Her husband confirmed this: "How can I be
anything other that what I am?"
A couple of years ago
soprano saxophonist Steve Lacy declared his intention to limit his repertoire
to Monk tunes, of which there were almost 60 then.
"Yeah, I heard he was doing that,"
Monk said. "But I haven't heard him yet. I guess if anybody wants to do
that it's okay."
He says he has no
particular favorite among his many compositions and that the unusual names for
many of them "just come to me." He composes at the piano sometimes,
though more often than not he has a melody running around in his head. Although
he said, "You have to stay home and relax to write the music," his
wife commented, "He thinks about music all the time when he's not talking.
He may be able to compose in a room full of people, just standing there. I
don't know anybody else who can just withdraw like that. he has a marvelous
capacity for withdrawal."
This withdrawal includes
not speaking to his wife for days on end, "unless he wants me to fetch
something," and she will only break the silence if she has something
urgent to tell him.
"Even then he might
not reply or show that he's heard," she said, "but in emergencies his
reactions are very fast. He's more contained than most people and, therefore,
more helpful than someone who falls apart and goes to pieces."
When he is writing, Monk
said, he does not think of the actual notes or of the effect his finished work
will have on his audience.
I'm just thinking about the music," he
added, "You think about everything else automatically. I think about what
anyone else does."
And what does he think of
the public? "I think very highly of the public. I think they're capable of
knowing if something sounds all right. I figure that if it sounds all right to
me, it sounds all right to them."
The pianist has lived in
the same place for 30 years. It's a small, undistinguished apartment on New
York's W. 63rd St., and he is very attached to it.
"There's nothing special about it," he
said, "but I guess I'll always keep it."
He once remarked that if he
couldn't live in New York, he'd rather be on the moon, but he denies this
tongue-in-cheek statement.
"Did I say that? Can't
remember it. I don't know what's happening on the moon, but I know what's
happening in New York. I like New York City. I haven't been anywhere that tops
it yet.
"I have to listen to
New York; I live there. I wasn't born there, but I've been living there all my
life. (Monk was born in Rocky Mount, N.C.) You can't shut the sound out too
easily; you always hear some kind of noise going on. I guess all sort of things
have an effect on what you're writing. But I was raised in New York, and it's
home to me. That's what I dig about it. You want to know what sound I put into
my music - well, you have to go to New York and listen for yourself. I can't
describe them. How do you expect me to describe to you right here how New York
sounds? How does London sound? Can you tell me how London sounds - huh?"
Onstage Monk often will
rise from the piano stool and stand listening intently to the other soloists,
swaying slightly in what has been termed Monk's dance. He gets exasperated over
comment on such aspects of his behaviour. "What's that I'm supposed to be
doing?" he demanded. "I get tired sitting down at the piano! That way
I can dig the rhythm better. Somebody's got something to say about everything
you do!
"I miss a lot of
things that're written about me. I don't read papers. I don't read magazines.
Of course, I'm interested in what's going on in music, but I'm not interested
in what somebody else is writing or anything like that. I don't let that bug
me. In fact, I don't see those 'columns' or whatever you call 'em. People write
all kinds of jive.
"I've got a wife and
two kids to take care of, and I have to make some money and see that they eat
and sleep, and me, too - you dig? What happens 'round the corner, what happens
to his family is none of my business. I have to take care of my family. But
I'll help a lot of people, and I have . . . .But I don't go around . .(asking)
what's the matter with you?' No! I'm not interested in what's happening
nowhere. Are you worried about what's happening to everybody? Why do you ask me
that? Why should I be worried? You're not! Why do you ask me a stupid question
like that? Something you don't dig yourself? I don't be around the corner, looking
into everybody's house, looking to see what's happening. I'm not a policeman or
a social worker - that's for your social workers to do. I'm not in power. I'm
not worrying about politics. You worry about the politics. Let the statesmen do
that - that's their job. They get paid for it. If you're worried about it, stop
doing what you're doing!"
And Monk does not concern
himself with the racial scene in any way.
"I hardly know anything about it," he
said. "I never was interested in those Muslims. If you want to know, you
should ask Art Blakey. I didn't have to change my name - it's always been weird
enough! I haven't done one of these 'freedom' suites, and I don't intend to. I
mean, I don't see the point. I'm not thinking that race thing now; it's not on
my mind. Everybody's trying to get me to think it, though, but it doesn't
bother me. It only bugs the people who're trying to get me to think it."
Monk is a self-willed
person. Rarely does he do anything that
does not interest him. He seldom goes to parties, and when he is neither
working nor walking around New York City, he is at home with Nellie and their
two children, Thelonious Jr., who is 15, and 11 year old Barbara. Now, at 45,
he seems hardly aware of the substantial increase in his income in recent years
and says money makes no difference to his way of life.
"If I feel like it,
I'll spend it," he said, "but I spend it on what anybody spends it on
- clothes and food. My wife and kids spend a lot of money, but I really don't
know how much I make. I'd go stupid collecting and counting my money. I worked
at $17 a week when I was a kid - make thousands now. At 14, 15 years old I
could do anything I wanted with that money. It wasn't bad for that age.
"I really don't want
to do anything else other than what I'm doing. I like playing music.
Everything's all right. I don't look like I'm worrying about anything, do I? I
don't talk much because you can't tell everybody what you're thinking.
Sometimes you don't know what you're thinking yourself."
A perceptive wife, Nellie
added, "You wouldn't know whether he was happy or not at any time. He's
always been very agreeable. Even in the direst situations you can't see if he's
worried from looking at his face. Maybe you can tell from a chance remark, but
he isn't a worrier. We have a theory that worry creates a mental block and
prevents you from being creative. So worry is a waste of time."
When he is not working, the
pianist likes to walk. And when he walks, he says, he walks in a daze. And he
and his wife are television addicts.
"I haven't been to the
movies in a long time," he said, "I look at TV, see everything there
just laying in the bed. You have to get up and go to movies, where you fall
asleep in your chair. That way you're in bed already. But I never get enough
sleep. I haven't slept eight hours through in a long time."
Monk is noncommital about
his favorite composers and musicians. "I listen to 'em all," he says.
But it is hard to believe
that he ever goes out of his way to listen to the music of other people. One
evidence of this could be that his own work is so self-contained, so very
personal. Today, however, he finds little time to write. His most recent
composition, Oska T, was written more than a year ago, and he continually
records the same tunes. Why?
"So somebody will hear
'em!" he replied.
For the last 10 years or
so, Monk's music has become easier to listen to, though it is not necessarily
any simpler. What he is doing is as engaging and profound as ever, though
seeming to be less provocative than when he was upsetting rules.
"If you think my
playing is more simple, maybe that's because you can dig it better," Monk
said and laughed. "It takes that long for somebody to hear it, I guess. I
mean for them to understand it or for you to get to them for them to hear it,
because you might be changing and then stop playing, and they'd never get a
chance to hear it.
"But I never be noticing these things. I
just be trying to play."
©1965 - Valerie Wilmer & Down Beat
magazine. A version of this interview
also appeared in Wilmer’s book, Jazz People (Allison & Busby Ltd.,
1970)