“I suppose
any jazz lover has to decide which Louis Armstrong record he is taking, because
there are so many and Louis is such a combined Chaucer and Shakespeare of jazz.
I’ve chosen ‘Dallas Blues’ from 1929 because I’ve been playing it for about
forty years and never got tired of it. It is a blues, and Armstrong plays it in
a beautiful warm and relaxed way that he doesn’t always achieve on his later
more showmanship sides.”
Those who think
a blues must be unhappy music are mistaken. Consider Armstrong’s recording of
W.C. Handy’s “St. Louis Blues,” also from 1929. In a March 1968 review
collected in All What Jazz (1985), Larkin calls it “the hottest record
ever made,” and goes on: “Starting in media res, with eight bars of the
lolloping tangana release, it soon resolves into a genial up-tempo polyphony,
with [J.C.] Higginbotham, [Red] Allen and Charlie Holmes observable behind the
trumpet lead.” Barry Ulanov in A History of Jazz in America (1952) helps us with
tangana: “In 1914 Handy published his ‘St. Louis Blues’ with its
provocative Tangana rhythm, which is a kind of habanera or tango beat
consisting of a dotted quarter, an eighth-note, and two quarter-notes.” In
other words, listen and try to sit still. Larkin adds: “By the third chorus the
whole building seems to be shaking.”
For
supplemental happiness infusions, try "West End Blues" and “Learnin’ the Blues,”
the latter performed with Ella Fitzgerald. The most personal words Larkin ever
wrote about Armstrong, suggesting a deep affinity, were not published during
his lifetime. They were written shortly after Armstrong’s death on July 6,
1971, and collected in Jazz
Writings: Essays and Reviews, 1940-1984 (2001):
“I was born
the day after Louis received that telegram from King Oliver summoning him to
Chicago, and as soon as I was old enough to wind up a gramophone I was sold on
his music. West End Blues, Dallas Blues, St. Louis Blues, all of them took hold
of my mind like poems, or better than poems, for you were taught those in
school, and I had found this wonderful music for myself.”
My reader
also asks for “happy” book suggestions. That’s easy: P.G. Wodehouse. And go
here for more Larkin-related happiness.
3 comments:
Spike Jones!
And for print happiness the English light comic novels always do the trick: Three Men In a Boat, Diary of a Nobody, Augustus Carp, 1066 and All That (not really a novel, but still wonderful, as is the American Richard Armour - does anyone still read him?), and the comic poetry of Hilaire Belloc is in a class by itself, especially the Cautionary Tales for Children ("Henry King, who chewed bits of String, and was early cut off in Dreadful Agonies").
Joseph Epstein's personal essays, written under the pen name Aristides, make me happy.
Gershwin's music makes me happy.
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