Thelonious Monk – “Art Blakey's Jazz
Messengers with Thelonious Monk”
Notes by Martin Williams
Atlantic LP1278 / Atlantic CD-781332 / London SAH-K 6017 /
London LTZ-K15157
Evidence; In Walked Bud; Blue Monk; I Mean You; Rhythm-a-ning;
Purple Shades;
CD Re-Issue
WEA/Atlantic/Rhino 75598
Evidence (6'46); In Walked Bud (6'39); Blue Monk (7'56); I Mean
You (7'58); Rhythm-a-ning (7'21); Purple Shades (7'48); Evidence (5'26 - alt
take); Blue Monk (6'55 - alt take); I Mean You (7'34 - alt take); (May 14/15,
1957 - N.Y.)
Johnny Griffin - tenor. Bill Hardman - trumpet. Thelonious Monk
- piano. Spanky DeBrest - bass. Art Blakey - drums.
I think that this collaboration of Art Blakey's group and
Thelonious Monk dramatizes important events in jazz in the late 1950's for,
although each man has been heard from for years, each has recently been
listened to probably more attentively than ever before, and each is a man in
whose work we see jazz doing what it must do as a music with an identity of its
own -- finding, not borrowing, its way by developing the implicit possibilities
in the materials which are its substance.
Now that the "cool" conception of the early fifties
has ceased to be a fad, it should be clear which of its arrangers, its
instrumentalists, and its groups have been and are capable of genuine
creativity within that idiom, and of exploring it further, and which are
capable only of a kind of derivative hack-work. The fashion as such has passed
and the real artists and craftsmen can be counted.
When the pendulum swung, it swung almost violently, and the
style it swung to soon acquired a name or two: "funky" and "hard
Bop". Art Blakey has led groups of messengers for years, but the group he
introduced in 1954 proclaimed the "funky" style. These men wanted to
incorporate as much of the quality, as well as the devices, of blues and church
music in their playing as they could. Inevitably, they were called regressive
and even crude, but their conception was actually neither naif nor reactionary.
It implied that if jazz got too far from the kinds of music in its background,
it might not only be in danger of a contrivance and preciosity, but of losing
something essential -- indeed, even of losing its identity. Such an attitude is
not merely conservative, and the style not for another reason: as I have
indicated above, I think it is bringing about some stylistic changes in jazz.
(For a precedent, we can remember how the dominance of the almost classic
ragtime conception at the turn of the century was supplanted by what has been
called a "blues craze", and how a combination of elements of these
two was worked out in New Orleans.)
Some of Blakey's earliest records were made with Thelonious
Monk and the two collaborate excellently. It has been said of Blakey that he
took the bop style and reduced it to its elements. When such a thing happens,
one had better be watching for changes.
The bop drummer both simplified his basic accompaniment and
expanded it by adding to it a spontaneous series of accents and replies to the
soloist's improvisations, with bass "explosions", snare and cymbal
strokes, etc.
Listen to Blakey behind Bill Hardman's trumpet solo on I Mean
You. Clearly he not only accompanies but directly leads the trumpet into ideas
and motifs. It is a dangerous role for a drummer, demanding constant discretion
and sympathy with the soloist. The second change is illustrated in some of
Blakey's solos: probably more directly than any other drummer, Blakey saw the
possibility of sustaining polyrhythmic lines and he can keep several rhythms
going with an unusual kind of continuity. But the most important point for me
is the one we can hear illustrated by what he does on the opening chorus of I
Mean You. He carries the accompanying 4/4 pulse, but, at the same time, he
improvises a parallel percussive line which interplays with both the melody and
the fundamental time: the jazz drummer becomes an improvising percussionist on
a plane almost equal to that of the
Rhythm is fundamental to jazz and if one develops its role
soundly, one develops jazz along the way that its own nature implies that it
should go. Such an obvious thing, and yet how brilliant. In the forties, Paul
Bacon, probably the only American critic who understood Thelonious Monk, said
of him in The Record Changer that he had looked at jazz, seen the gaps and,
sacrificing the obvious things that everyone could do, proceeded to fill in
those gaps. The same kind of thing might be said of Art Blakey.
Almost anyone knows that Monk is supposed to have been one of
the founders of bop. Undoubtedly he made important contributions to the style,
but it should be clear by now that what this strikingly original musician has
been working on all along is something different.
Monk is a virtuoso of time, rhythm, metre, accent. He has
played versions of "standards" which are little more than sets of
unique rhythmic variations directly on a melodic line, with an evolving pattern
of displaced accents and shifting metres -- a conception at once more basic
than the groups of melodic variations Jelly Roll Morton, James P. Johnson, and
Fats Waller produced, and more "experimental" than the harmonic
variations, which improvise new melodic lines, of the late swing and bop
instrumentalists. At the same time, he may play melodic variations, and his
solo here on In Walked Bud interplays the melodic line of that piece with
contrasting motifs. And notice his rhythmic and harmonic experiments with the
sparsely suggestive and obviously difficult tissue of notes that is Evidence,
both in his own solo and behind John Griffin's.
Monk's harmonics, always a part of the picture, are not
innovations in themselves -- it is the sequence and pattern of alteration in
which he plays them that is unique. In this and in simultaneous accentual
shiftings, there is an almost constant element of humour (even sarcasm) that
his wonderful, deliberate dissonances often point up.
Monk also plays harmonic variations, and these may seem quite
simple, even casual, on the surface. His two choruses here on I Mean You show
the kind of inner logic they can have. The first chorus is based on a
descending motif variously altered. The second on a brief and contrasting riff
figure which is turned several ways, subjected to a counter-riff or two and, in
the end, complemented by a descent which alludes to the first chorus and ties
the two together. And, lest anyone doubt that Monk can improvise a lyric
melody, let him hear the solo on Blue Monk.
Monk's style, like Lester Young's in the late thirties, depends
on surprise. It does not, like the work of earlier "stride" pianists
(yes, Monk, like Count Basie, is really a member of that school) depend on the
expected. He can also be one of the most exciting and original accompanists in
jazz, as his work behind Bill Hardman on I Mean You, both horns on
Rhythm-a-ning, and behind Griffin on Purple Shades illustrates. The latter
example seems to me one of the best things I have ever heard him do on records
and, notice also that both his solo and his accompaniment on that piece are
based on similar ideas and patterns, giving that performance a fine continuity.
I think that on the whole, Monk's compositions place him with
the great jazz composers, but I will confine myself to a few points which the
selections here illustrate. Whereas Ellington often leans heavily on the
"show tune" tradition, Monk is more directly instrumental in his
conception, even when he uses the 32-bar, A A B A popular tune form. Monk,
himself, has made the point about the integration of the B, bridge, melody;
notice that the bridges of I Mean You and of In Walked Bud are both
developments of bits of the final phrase in the A melody. It is not Monk's
habit to base his compositions on "standard" chord sequences, but he
may, and three of the tunes here do use slight alterations of base lines we all
know. That is almost bound to be true of any 12-bar blues, of course, but
notice the structure of Blue Monk's melody. Most blues have an open space of
about three beats at the end of each four-bar unit. There are
"modern" blues which deliberately fill this hole, of course, but the
deceptive simplicity with which this melody unfolds makes for neither a trick
nor a contrivance, but an inevitability that flows like life.
Monk does indeed "fill in the gaps"
MARTIN WILLIAMS.