To compensate for the
charm deficit, Epstein suggests we look to the past – to Fred Astaire, for
instance; to Harold Arlen, Philip Larkin, Duke Ellington, Max Beerbohm, Evelyn Waugh and
Blossom Dearie. All reliable carriers of what Epstein calls, in a timely
fashion, “the lovely charm virus.” Another name on his list is an inspired
choice, though it may be unfamiliar to younger readers – the tenor saxophonist
and occasional clarinetist Lester Young, known with fond respect by fellow
musicians as Prez.
Watch “Jammin’ the Blues”(1944), a short film that opens with the camera focused on Young’s trademark porkpie hat. Young is
joined by, among others, Harry “Sweets” Edison and “Big” Sid Catlett. If more charm
is called for, move on to the Aladdin Sessions on Blue Note, recorded by Young between
1945 and 1947. Don’t worry about the finer points of musicology, especially if
the music is new to you. Just get comfortable and listen. Whitney Balliett in Collected
Works: A Journal of Jazz 1954-2000 (2000) writes of the Aladdin Sessions:
“Young doesn’t bother with
stating the melody. He launches immediately into his improvisations, and they
are such complete reworkings that sometimes it is impossible to tell what he is
playing. He literally creates new and fascinating compositions out of the
composer’s chords.”
Elsewhere, Balliett writes
that Young “plays so softly he seems to be merely thinking his notes.” That’s
charm.
Lester Young was
born on this date, August 27, in 1909 in Woodville, Miss., and died in 1959 in
New York City at age forty-nine.
Charm requires a sense of balance, doesn't it? No surprise that it would disappear in such an unbalanced time.
ReplyDeleteI read Charm:The Elusive Enchantment just after it was published. I've met many charming ordinary people from all walks of life. This is no less true today than it was 50 years ago.
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