My experience with Jazz has given me the impression that what Pat is referring to has to a large part been assimilated.
I came to the party late: I was raised on Rock and Roll, then got heavily into Prog Rock and Jazz Fusion.
I started listening to the 'Jazz Giants' only within the past ten years.
One thing that immediately struck me was a perception that they had greatly influenced my musical heroes.
The things that were going on in the '60's really seemed to have a big impact.
That is the best way I can explain how when I first heard Tony play with the second Miles Davis quintet, it sounded eerily familiar, like exactly what I was trying to do the first time I ever played a drum.
Jazz is the opposite of nostalgia
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Re: Jazz is the opposite of nostalgia
The word "jazz" is the biggest obstacle standing in the way of the concept of "jazz".
There is too much connotation and preconception contained in that term; from the moment someone starts out playing that style of music, one is pointed in the wrong (retrospective/backward-looking) direction (not to mention all the pretentious silliness that "jazzers" subscribe to--it's worse than classical musicians, if you ask me).
That word needs to be put to rest and buried so that the music world can get on with it.
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There is too much connotation and preconception contained in that term; from the moment someone starts out playing that style of music, one is pointed in the wrong (retrospective/backward-looking) direction (not to mention all the pretentious silliness that "jazzers" subscribe to--it's worse than classical musicians, if you ask me).
That word needs to be put to rest and buried so that the music world can get on with it.
.gif)
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