"Bunny M." is a seventeen-year-old Dallas resident who plays drums, piano and clarinet.  Her passion for jazz and the challenges she faces as a youthful fan of it is the focus of her Jerry Jazz Musician column, "Accent on Youth."


Listen to Dinah Washington sing Accent On Youth


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Accent on Youth

by

Bunny M.




"Sing Sister Sing," by Aaron Waugh

S'Wonderful...Discovering Gershwin, Mercer and Ellington

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      Words are a favorite plaything of mine. From rhyming to anagrams, pun to metaphor and double-entendre, I have always taken great delight in shuffling words around to create different meanings and patterns. Being something of an aspiring poet, I've always intensely envied those persons so gifted with gab as to have the ability to free verse, being able to pick up words and run with them in a manner that makes sense while also being entertaining. When set to music, however, words become an entirely new experience that sometimes communicates more than either one could say on its own. Throughout all of music great songs have been written which become universally known, some of which even go on to become classics. For me, however, the most meaningful and clever songwriting can be found most widely in jazz.

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     My first introduction to the appreciation of songwriting came through the works of George and Ira Gershwin. Together, George -- the handsome melodic master -- and his older brother Ira -- the genius and witty wordsmith  -- produced a stunning output of music, almost all of which is widely known and considered a classic of popular music (that famous clarinet glissando opening the "Rhapsody in Blue" is almost universally recognized). Their working style was interesting, with George composing at the piano and Ira seated at a fold-up card table immediately next to the piano. Perhaps this closeness is why they were able to think on the same wavelength and their music always seems to have such a cohesive quality. With the kind of wild and complicated rhythms George was sometimes known to create, Ira had to be a master to put together lyrics that were both logical, witty, and oftentimes just as complex in their scheme as George's music. One ancedote relates how George presented Ira with a heavily syncopated rhythm, to which Ira wondered aloud how George could expect him to write lyrics to it!

     I especially enjoy Ira's having no objection to changing words to fit into his rhythmic and rhyme framework. For example, in "It Ain't Necessarily So," Ira questioningly skirts about Biblical history, finding ways to rhyme "Goliath/ who lay down and dieth" and "I take that Gospel/ wherever it's poss'ble."  His playfulness is evident even in more serious songs like the ballad "I Can't Get Started," whose lyrics (however conceitedly) tell of one's accomplishments in all but a relationship: "All the movies want me to star . . . When J.P. Morgan bows, I just nod . . . I've been consulted by Franklin D./ Greta Garbo (or Frank Sinatra) had me to tea/ the Siamese twins I've parted/ but I can't get started with you" (!) It's a song of frustration and even sadness, yet one just can't help but smile and be amused by Ira's humorous words. For all the brilliant and lighthearted wordplay, however, Ira also had a serious side, as in the favorite "Someone to Watch Over Me."  I wish the introduction of this song were more commonly heard, as it's truly lovely in both meaning and construction with its double rhymes and triplets:

George and Ira Gershwin

Rhapsody in Blue, performed by NY Philharmonic

I Can't Get Started, sung by Carmen McRae

Someone to Watch Over Me, sung by Chet Baker

There's a saying old says that love is blind
Still we're often told, seek and ye shall find
So I'm going to seek a certain lad I've had in mind
Looking everywhere, haven't found him yet

He's the big affair I cannot forget
Only man I ever think of with regret
I'd like to add his initial to my monogram
Tell me, where is the shepherd for this lost lamb?

     For me, the Gershwin songbook typifies the freewheeling fun and elegance of the Roaring 20s, and yet they still continue to be widely recorded and referenced in popular culture. I think the music of the Gershwins could be quite appealing to young people today in both its simple, sentimental poetry and its buoyant and carefree fun. During his entire life Ira Gershwin always remained dedicated to preserving the purity of his and his brother's work; he was always quick to setting the record straight, and disdained renditions of their music which deviated in even the slightest way from the original product. Even Frank Sinatra was not immune to Ira's exacting standards; his 1960 version of "A Foggy Day" was frowned upon because Sinatra rendered the phrase "with alarm" as "with much alarm," and any performer who attempted to correct the grammar of "I Got Rhythm" was equally eschewed. I am thankful that Ira Gershwin was as adamant and dedicated to their work as he was -- a golden era of our country's musical history has been beautifully preserved, and the treasury of American standards is greatly enriched for it.

     While listening to the songwriting wonders of the Gershwins gives me great enjoyment, if there is any one songwriter I wish I could be more than anyone else, it's Johnny Mercer. With over 1000 songs to his credit including classics like "Autumn Leaves", "Fools Rush in", and "Days of Wine and Roses" (the theme of the 1962 movie of the same title), Mercer ranks as one of the most prolific songwriters, whose body of work peppers the songbook of American popular standards. His writing abilities were revered enough to often be called upon to provide lyrics for a song after it had already become a hit, and more than once did he write English lyrics to foreign-language songs. The Mercer magic is unmistakable: brilliant lyrics rich with abstract beauty and meaning, and melodies that, be they tender ballads or catchy dance numbers, rise and fall like natural conversation (a hallmark of good songwriting). His ability with words is simply fascinating  -- you have to admire someone who can rhyme things like "chalice/palace/aurora borealis" (as he does in the beautiful "Midnight Sun"), and the lyrics always seem to perfectly complement their accompanying music (which he often wrote himself). Johnny Mercer was one of those overly blessed souls that burst at the seams with talent and genius; in addition to writing and composing, he could sing as well, with a delightful casual voice that is pleasant and fun to hear, and if that isn't enough, he founded Capitol records and helped launch the careers of greats like Nat King Cole and Frank Sinatra (who is known as one of the greatest interpreters of popular music).

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     Growing up in the South, Johnny Mercer was largely inspired by the local bands he heard playing as a child (especially the music of Irving Berlin), the charming colloquialisms of southern speech, and the sounds of nature and the town. Writing seems to have been his forte from the beginning; his first song, written when he was just barely out of his teens, made it to Broadway, and shortly thereafter he joined the Paul Whiteman orchestra as a songwriter. He collaborated with nearly all the other giants of popular music, including Hoagy Carmichael, Henry Mancini, and Harold Arlen.

Johnny Mercer

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I'm Old Fashioned , by Fred Astaire

Fools Rush In, by Frank Sinatra

One For My Baby and One More For the Road, by Lena Horne

     I can almost always tell a Mercer tune just by hearing it (even the first time around); if I find myself falling in love with a song at the first note, I am usually (not) surprised to later find that it was written by Johnny Mercer. Favorites are all but impossible to pick out, but one of my earliest introductions to Mercer was through the great "Charade," the title theme of the outstanding Hitchcock-esque movie from 1963 (co-written with Henry Mancini).  And what an introduction! "Charade" is a song heavy with poetic and lyrical imagery, the kind of song that lingers long after you hear it; the shadowy melody, sad and haunting (that bridge always takes my breath away), and the lyrics seem to dance sinuously in its midst; indeed, the meaning of the song is just as enshrouded at the end of the song as it was before.

     Aside from the aural captivation of a Mercer melody, the quality that I think makes Mercer so popular and enduring is his timelessness. His music is just as fresh and moving as it was back in the day, perhaps because it deals with lovely life themes of love and beauty in such a way as to be able to be applied to almost any situation; a Mercer song about a natural wonder could just as easily be applied to a person. And for being an "old guy," he's pretty cool even today. His words were simple, and even when they dealt with complex images, they still managed to have a sort of youthful speech about them. I like to dream that I could be on my way to one day being like Johnny Mercer: I grew up in the South, listening to old music, and have a special fondness for finding unique ways to use words. Now, if I could just get the composing, singing, and brilliant lyric writing down . . .

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     There are some things, however, that even the best lyric writing cannot communicate. "It is very hard to speak through the limitations of words" I once wrote, and nowhere is this more evident than in the music of Duke Ellington. To be able to convey feelings, thoughts, and epic adventures through the human spirit without ever uttering a single word is the summit of excellence in songwriting, and Duke Ellington does this better than anyone else. The Duke Ellington orchestra has been likened to a painter's palette of musical voices, and Ellington's masterly ability to mix these into infinite combinations of colors, tones, and textures produced nearly 2,000 compositions of heartwrenching beauty. Duke Ellington is one of my favorite musical figures, and classic songs like "Satin Doll", "Night in Tunisia", and "It Don't Mean a Thing" only further cement my admiration of him.

     It's impossible to make it through life without hearing an Ellington tune at some point (whether you know it or not), but my earliest conscious Ellington experience was through a Scott Hamilton rendition of the lovely and relatively little-known "Tonight I Shall Sleep with a Smile on my Face," which left me completely breathless by the staggering, refined beauty of the saxophone and strings interpretation of Ellington's serpentine melody. By far, Duke Ellington's forte was the ballad, and over the years I've fallen ever deeper in love with his signature fluid grace and sophisticated elegance. His hand is that of a master painter -- virtually flawless at painting lush, vivid landscapes that are tangible only to the mind and the soul -- only this artist's medium is music, and his extraordinary creativity his tools.

     The music of Duke Ellington is not for everyone; there is so much, on so many levels, to be uncovered and comprehended that is a daunting task for all but the most seasoned of listeners. It is rather heavy music, and some young people might need to be warmed up to it before coming to fully embrace it. I do think, however, that within Ellington's music lies an undeniable energy and an ineffable mot juste that, to paraphrase a Jobim tune, is able to make us aware of "things our hearts alone are meant to see."

photo by Lee Tanner

Duke Ellington

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Tonight I Shall Sleep with a Smile on my Face, performed by Scott Hamilton

     Great songwriters like Johnny Mercer, the Gershwins, and Duke Ellington have built up a vast depository of classic music whose influence is impossible to escape even today. Their poetry in words and music has given timeless speech to our everyday thoughts and emotions in a way that is both entertaining and profound. How often do we sing along to our favorite songs, without ever stopping to think and understand the words we are singing? Next time you crank up your favorite tune, stop and listen: a picture is worth a thousand words, and in the words (and music) of the great songwriters, you can bet it is a beautiful picture indeed.

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Peace is the word,

Bunny

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"Bunny M." is a seventeen-year-old Dallas resident who plays drums, piano and clarinet.  Her passion for jazz and the challenges she faces as a youthful fan of it is the focus of her Jerry Jazz Musician column, "Accent on Youth."

You can contact Bunny at: lotusflower1922@hotmail.com



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