His writing
on jazz is as pithy and memorable as his poetry. His standards are just as
high. When Ben Webster accompanies Art Tatum on Rodger and Hart’s “Have You Met
Miss Jones?” Larkin, sounding like Whitney Balliett (a critic he admired), says the tenor player is “breathing out melodies with
accomplished negligence.” Jimmy Rushing's "invigorating" voice is like "pouring sunshine." Armstrong was “the Shakespeare of jazz.” Here Larkin
distills what jazz means to him:
“Men whose
first coronary is coming like Christmas; who drift, loaded helplessly with
commitments and obligations and necessary observances, into the darkening avenues
of age and incapacity, deserted by everything that once made life sweet. These
I have tried to remind of the excitement of jazz and tell where it may still be
found.”
Larkin’s
jazz writing for the Telegraph is collected
in All What Jazz: A Record Diary,
1961-1971 (1971), of which Clive James rightly claimed “no wittier book of
criticism has ever been written.” Note that James does not say “jazz criticism.” In his combative
introduction to the book, Larkin mourns the impact Modernism had on all the
arts (Pound, Picasso, Parker), “not because they are new, but because they are
irresponsible exploitations of technique in contradiction of human life as we
know it.” I read Larkin’s jazz writing not as inerrant gospel. A good critic,
even when he’s wrong, is interestingly wrong. His misjudgments, as much as his righteous
hosannas, can teach us something. I like my critics ardent and knowledgeable. And
a critic should always write well. Who would trust the judgment of a critic who
can’t write? More of Larkin’s music writing is collected in Jazz Writings: Essays and Reviews 1940-1984
(2004). Looking back on his decade of music reviews for the Telegraph, Larkin writes:
“I tried in
writing them to be fair and conscientious, and there were many times when I
substituted ‘challenging’ for ‘insolent,’ ‘adventurous’ for ‘excruciating,’ and
‘colourful’ for ‘viciously absurd’ in a thoroughly professional manner.
Although my critical principle has been Eddie Condon’s ‘As it enters the ear,
does it come in like broken glass or does it come in like honey?’ I've
generally remembered that mine was not the only ear in the world. Above all, I
hope they suggest I love jazz.”
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