This is
from Lost Chords: White Musicians and
Their Contributions to Jazz, 1915-1945 (Oxford University Press, 1999) by
the late Richard M. Sudhalter, from his chapter devoted to Pee Wee Russell and
Jack Teagarden. It comes more than seven-hundred pages into his scholarly
revision of jazz history aimed at setting straight a record much deformed by
politics and race. The chapter begins with an account of Russell and
Teagarden’s first meeting, in Houston in 1924. He describes their introduction
in a music store as “just a footnote, even a romantic conceit—but symbolically
it’s a richly fateful event, bringing together two of [the] most resolute
individualists to emerge from the early jazz years. Both soon became stylists
as easy to recognize as they were difficult to imitate, and their very
inimitability presents students of jazz history with an intriguing conundrum.”
I intend
to apply Sudhalter’s musical thesis to literary history, but first listen to
his elaboration. Russell and Teagarden were two of the most brilliant,
idiosyncratic and immediately recognizable of all jazz musicians, and for that
reason, Sudhalter says, neither left a “major stylistic progeny.” Neither had
the sort of “direct and diversified” influence on subsequent musicians as, to cite
some of Sudhalter’s examples, Louis Armstrong, Lester Young, Benny Goodman and
Charlie Parker. Jazz history has favored such stellar and widely emulated
figures, he writes, “as if to suggest that the degree to which an individual
style affects those of others is a measure of its importance and, by
implication, its stature.”
The
obvious analogies in literature from the same period are Joyce and Eliot,
inarguably the most influential writers of the twentieth century, and I have no
intention of disputing the achievement of either. What I find troublesome is
the neo-Darwinian assumption that the overwhelming influence of such writers,
their dominance of critical, academic and (to a lesser degree) readerly attention,
supplants the worth of other, “lesser” writers. To acknowledge Joyce’s
accomplishment in fiction is not to declare, for instance, the novels of Janet
Lewis or Christina Stead irrelevant or unworthy of a reader’s attention. One
species doesn’t render another a biological (or literary) cul-de-sac. Nor is
the “major/minor” distinction of much use. Kipling and Waugh are indisputably
“major” and a hell of a lot of fun to read, but neither receives Kafka’s
reverent reception. What I’m proposing is an easing of critical strictures and
an acceptance of readerly reality: No one, I hope, wants to snub James Gould
Cozzens or Anthony Powell in order to pretend he’s yet again enjoying Finnegans Wake. Back to Sudhalter:
1 comment:
Virtuosity - how you say something - is not the same as brilliance of content - what you say. I will happily accept Joyce's or Nabokov's unrivalled virtuosity with no desire to quibble. It's like admiring Paganini. What Rossini, Mozart, Bellini etc provide is different from mere virtuosity, however. They provide something, in terms of what they say to me with which I want to engage and have a large appetite for. Paganini needs them. I read Ulysses recently and was duly impressed, especially by the huge technical possibilities he opens up for novelists. I don't think I'll re-read it because what it told me did not satisfy the appetites I referred to (Conrad does), and time is too short to waste. What you say matters because, after all, words are there to convey meaning, experience and that which affects us. Technique is not the aim.
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