"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.




"Kind of Blue," by Aaron Waugh



Icons of Jazz

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  With every great change or movement comes its leaders, its pioneers, its icons -- those great, enigmatic figures whose names are forever linked in history with their respective achievement, and who are often the most interesting and dynamic figures in their field. Painting has Monet and Picasso; film has Hitchcock, Garbo, and James Dean; and literature has Shakespeare, Dickens, and F. Scott Fitzgerald. For the most part, the artists are so well known that the mere mention of their first -- or last -- name is sufficient to identify them. Music, on a broad spectrum, has its own set of luminaries, among them Mozart, Sinatra, and Elvis, and nowhere is this system any less present than in jazz. A musical tradition going back over one hundred years spawns a long and formidable list of greats -- names which are still well known today for their musical milestones and devastating cool. From this rich musical history, I would like to single out a select few of these "Icons of Jazz," personal favorites, and figures whose influence, personality, and all-around style would, in my opinion, especially appeal to today's youth: Ellington, Miles, and Sinatra.

 Miles Davis once proposed, "At least one day out of the year all musicans should just put their instruments down, and give thanks to Duke Ellington," and I most ardently agree. His effortless magnetism was legendary, and combined with his debonair, luxurious style of living, it earned him the nickname "Duke." Having a musical career going strong for over fifty years is a difficult trick to pull, yet Ellington made it look easy, creating beautiful, inspirational, and thought-provoking masterpieces. Ellington's life and work spun one of the most intriguing jazz stories -- that of a suave, elegantly dressed, dashing young (and young at heart) man amid romanticized images of life on the road, penning musical ideas on napkins during a free moment on the train (he once wrote out a melody on the sleeve of his shirt, not having any composition paper on hand); or holed up in a hotel room during a late night writing session, wooing girls and breaking hearts, and translating it all into a body of work earning him the distinction as the most prolific composer of the twentieth century. Listening to his music and reading his words, I always got the feeling that Duke Ellington was one of the few people to have walked the earth who truly knew what life and living was about.

     And yet for all his depth of character and personality, Ellington also had a beautiful, somewhat idealistic perspective and a personal flair and flamboyance that young people today might find appealing. Even in his later years, Ellington astounded his peers with his relentless energy and stamina. He was said to have a monstrous appetite, and was fond of drinking Coca-Cola by the case, with additional packets of sugar added to it. His fondness for the opposite sex played a part in his musical interest .  He once said, "I never had much interest in the piano until I realized that every time I played, a girl would appear on the piano bench to my left and another to my right," but he also had a genuine fondness for women as a whole. When introducing "Satin Doll, "for example, according to Memories of Duke author Ken Weingartner, "He would say that they were dedicating the song to the most beautiful woman in the audience . . . 'We know who she is. And we know that she knows that we know who she is, so we're not going to embarrass her by pointing her out.' Every woman in the audience thought it was her." One thing that surprised me, which many teens, especially girls, might identify with, is that Duke apparently loved talking on the phone: "I'm a telephone freak, the greatest invention since peanut brittle."

Portrait by Cliff Warner

Duke Ellington

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It Don't Mean a Thing, sung by Mel Torme

      

Portrait by Cliff Warner

Miles Davis

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So What

Move

   Ellington's wisdom on life would be especially beneficial for young people today.  Want a few examples of his philosophy?  "There are two kinds of worries -- those you can do something about and those you can't. Don't spend any time on the latter;" "Grey skies are just clouds passing over;"  and "A problem is a chance for you to do your best"

     Duke once said, "A man is a god in ruins." Towering above his peers in talent and sophistication, Duke Ellington is certainly a god, but he's hardly in ruins.

     If Duke is a "Voice of Wisdom and Knowledge" for today's youth, Miles would be the "Voice of Youthful Apathy and Rebellion." It was Miles who often pioneered such musical rebellions as cool jazz, modal jazz, and jazz-rock fusion. Recordings like Birth of the Cool, Kind of Blue, Milestones, and Bitches Brew are still wildly popular today, and continue to be cited as musical influences by even the most non-jazz oriented musicians. Not bad for a young lad who started playing professionally within two years of first playing the trumpet. A disciple of Charlie Parker, Miles abandoned his Julliard studies to follow Bird, and blew with the best of them -- Billy Eckstine, Gerry Mulligan, and Art Blakey, to name a few -- emerging with more than just a little of the surrounding coolness rubbing off on him. Let's face it, from his natty fashion sense and penchant for fast cars to his devil-may-care attitude (it was he who introduced the phrase "So what?" into casual English), Miles was cool, so cool it hurts even to this day.

     And his sound! Whether shredding through bop like a Concorde jet or setting a ballad smoldering, the Davis trumpet has an incredible clarity and lightness to it. From the time he first picked up his trumpet, it was clear he had a special musical gift and a keen ability for improvisation, as witnessed on his greatest recorded performance, Kind of Blue, a summit achievement in group cohesiveness and improvisational prowess recorded virtually entirely in one take.

     Like every pioneer, Miles Davis possessed the infrared vision to see outside conventional thinking, believing that "Even the sky ain't the limit." "I'll play it first and tell you what it is later," he once said, but perhaps his musical genius can best be summed up in his words, "Don't play what's there, play what's not there."

     The only person I can immediately think of who could possibly tie with Miles Davis in a cool contest is Frank Sinatra.  The Chairman, the Rat Pack, his fedora, his self-appreciative ego -- what isn't cool about Sinatra? From the New Jersey streets to big band crooner to singer-swinger supreme, Frank Sinatra has all but conquered the entire compendium of music and popular culture in general. I have a friend who, for some reason only completely understood by them, addresses me as "Frankie," the underground clone of Frank Sinatra. Aside from a Chinese astrological kinship (we are both Rabbits) and the ego ("I am a thing of beauty"), I can't say I fully understand the parallel. "I wish that one of these days somebody would learn to do [my art] so it doesn't die where it is," Frankie once said, and I'd step right up - if I only had that kind of cool.

     
 "The Voice" -- a moniker which at first listen seems incongruent for a pop singer, instead conjuring images of a pompous operatic powerhouse -- may actually be the closest approximation to verbal appreciation of Frank Sinatra's vocal abilities. His voice is a seemingly simple one, with no frills and no gymnastics, but it is exactly that pared down quality that makes Sinatra so cool. (Check out a Brazilian Sinatra excursion courtesy of the Jobim classic "Agua de Beber" for a lesson in laidback coolness). Not that he couldn't belt out a tune -- just listen to "I've Got You Under My Skin," perhaps the Sinatra tune -- but when Sinatra sings, it's almost like being privy to an intimate conversation, both in timbre and lyrical meaning. And man, does he ever swing! On tracks like "Tangerine," "Mack the Knife," and "Almost Like Being in Love," the groove can only be measured in Richter magnitudes.

     All musical abilities aside, the feature that strikes me as the coolest about Sinatra is his effortless style and swagger. Sure, we can slap on a tux and measure the angle of the tip of our fedoras with a protractor, but somehow it's just not the same as when Ol' Blue Eyes did it. Sinatra was known for his fine-toothed-comb attention to the minutest details of dress and presentation, from the patent leather pumps he loved to the impeccably folded silk handkerchief with just the right amount peeking from the top of a breast pocket -- a craft he took much time to master. And who can forget the fedora tipped rakishly atop his head? "Cock your hat -- angles are attitudes," the Chairman said, regarded even today as a leading authority on "Attitude."  Sinatra was also a stickler for good old-fashioned manners and respect for women -- "Never yawn in front of a lady, treat a lady like a dame" -- a trait which is always cool in Bunny's book.

     I think young people, in their intensity of emotion, can relate to Sinatra's words: "I don't know what other singers feel when they articulate lyrics, but being an 18-karat manic-depressive and having lived a life of violent emotional contradictions, I have an over acute capacity for sadness as well as elation." The greatest Sinatra advice I know? "Dare to wear the foolish clown face." With such fresh, timeless music and words of wisdom, is it any wonder they called him "The Voice"?

Frank Sinatra

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Almost Like Being in Love

   

     While I've never been known to be "with it," I can say with certainty that cats like Duke, Miles, and Sinatra redefined "cool" then and now, and only those seriously out of the loop would disagree. Ellington, Miles, and Sinatra are not mere names or even personas -- they are formidable forces to be reckoned with, whose independent thinking, awesome talent, and timelessness make them figures more than "bad" enough for today's young and hip scene. The question therefore is not "Are they cool enough for you?" but rather, "Are you cool enough for them?"

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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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