ON JAZZ
1. Just as light art succeeds avant-garde
painting in the evolution of art towards absolute holography, so jazz, and in
particular jazz classical, succeeds classical in the evolution of music towards
absolute jazz, a pure pitch climax. This
is especially true of the mainstream bourgeois/proletarian civilization of late
twentieth-century
2. Rock musicians can extend their musical
commitment either down towards the classical or up towards modern jazz. In the one case they are drawing on classical
precedent and transforming a chosen piece of acoustic music into a type of
pseudo-rock, electric and, as a rule, highly rhythmic. They are, in a sense, upgrading the
classical, and such a procedure is by no means untypical of European rock
musicians. Indeed, it is probably the
most representative trend in instrumental rock, since the extension of rock
towards modern jazz, as in the other case, presupposes identification, in one
degree of another, with an alien tradition, namely the American, and requires,
moreover, a degree of improvisational facility which most European and, in
particular, British rock musicians tend to lack. Nevertheless, hybridization of this nature
does in fact occur, and the result, though falling short of modern jazz, is
usually preferable to both rock and pseudo-rock. We can call this hybrid music 'jazz-rock' or,
alternatively, 'progressive music' - the European equivalent of modern jazz.
3. When American jazzmen extend their musical
commitment in any direction, it is usually down towards rock - the converse of
the European extension of rock up towards jazz - and the result, while being
musically inferior to modern jazz, is generally superior to rock, being, in
effect, a kind of vocal jazz. One could
claim that they have relapsed from the spiritualistic to the materialistic or,
rather, pseudo-spiritualistic, that is to say from a free-electron equivalent
to a pseudo-electron equivalent. The
resultant music we can call 'rock-jazz' or, alternatively, 'fusion'. Sometimes the extension of commitment is even
further down than rock, embracing classical music of one kind of another, but
the resultant music is still fusion, if on 'pseudo' terms, like rock-classical
in Britain. However, not all fusion
music is culturally hybrid; for it can just as easily transpire that the
renegade jazzman decides to adapt a piece of American classical music, which,
in any case, is usually jazzy and thus a national step down from modern
jazz. Such an adaptation can make for a
superior type of fusion music to that availing of rock techniques. Yet it is not as culturally national as the
kind of fusion music suggesting a compromise between modern jazz and trad jazz, seemingly alternating between the one and the
other. Likewise, the fusion musician may
decide to go even further down the path of American music, way past the trad to the painful birth of jazz in the blues, and thus
incorporate blues techniques or structures into his music - a procedure
appealing more, on the whole, to black jazzmen than to their white
counterparts, who, at the risk of oversimplification, will incline to the adaptation
or incorporation of classical precedent.
4. Fusion music, like progressive music, is
not, as a rule, a fusion of the serious with the popular, the instrumental with
the vocal, but a fusion of different types of serious music, whether
contemporary or traditional. American
jazzmen do not, as a rule, deign to fuse jazz with soul, that American
equivalent of pop, any more than their European counterparts deign to fuse rock
with pop. Generally, soul and pop are
left to their proletarian practitioners, since the fusion of civilized with
barbarous music is both illogical and incongruous, not
liable to make for an aesthetically satisfying result! Folk music is one thing, fine music quite
another, and rarely do the two fields cross-fertilize, even though attempts
have been made, in recent years, to cross-fertilize them, with, by and large,
unconvincing results. If the chief
criteria of the most civilized late-twentieth-century music are instrumental
sophistication and facility combined with an almost Buddhist religious
commitment which may or may not seek vocal expression, then it follows that
jazzmen will be careful, as a rule, to ensure that their excursions into fusion
music do not resemble excursions into popular music, with particular reference,
in the American context, to soul. They
will ensure that at least one track on their fusion album is instrumental or,
failing which, that certain of the songs will have fairly lengthy instrumental
solos and be of a religious rather than simply romantic significance. An album conceived solely as songs of a
romantic nature would be unlikely to pass muster as fusion music!
5. Hitherto I have not spoken of British and
European jazzmen, nor of American rock musicians, but the reader will have
gleaned that I regard them as exceptions to the rule and, therefore, as
generally unrepresentative of their respective traditions. In my estimation, European jazzmen are
exponents of an American music, even if they play it in a European, i.e.
classical, fashion. Similarly, American
rock musicians I regard as exponents of a European music, though their handling
of it is more likely to veer in the direction of jazz than classical, sounding
somewhat akin to progressive music; just as the European jazzmen tend,
willy-nilly, towards a kind of fusion music, with or without vocals. Probably there are many more American rock
musicians than European jazzmen, but this fact wouldn't render their music any
the less unrepresentative of primary American trends. Even if their music is serious,
it is of an inferior order of seriousness than the mainstream
bourgeois/proletarian achievements of modern jazz, a sort of quasi-European
seriousness co-existing, on a lower plane, with
6. At its best,
improvisation is all on the one level, concerned with pitch and therefore
disposed to fast-note 'runs', each note being of approximately equal duration
and, thus, equal value. Such
improvisation is highly democratic, if by democratic we mean equalitarian. The introduction of varied duration would
entail melody, and melody entails rhythm.
A music that is truly free, functioning as a free-electron equivalent,
cannot invoke melody or rhythm. It needs
to keep the pitch as pure as possible, undiluted by rhythm. Such a procedure is usually upheld with the
best improvisation and, as already noted,
improvisation is the essence of jazz, the 'modern' no less than the 'trad'. However, behind
and beneath this improvisation one finds the rhythmic accompaniment of drums
and/or bass, but this accompaniment is itself often improvisational in nature,
functioning on the level of a pseudo-electron equivalent given to the creation
of intricate patterns of volatile rhythm which assume a quasi-pitch status
deferential to, rather than dominant over, the lead soloist(s). Such is the norm with modern jazz, and it
conforms to the relatively post-atomic integrity of contemporary American
civilization. Since the essence of this
jazz is improvisation, it follows that the music is essentially a free-electron
equivalent. But, of course, it cannot be
absolutely so, since involving the relative use of a quasi-electron equivalent,
namely rhythmic pitch, and this relativity is consonant with the
socio-political integrity of mainstream bourgeois/ proletarian civilization.
7. A music that could be defined as equivalent
to an absolutely free-electron status, involving pure pitch and nothing else -
neither rhythm, melody, nor harmony - could only pertain to an absolutely
post-atomic civilization, a civilization rooted in Social
Transcendentalism. Such music would be conceived/performed on a synthesizer - in other words an
instrument which is both highly artificial and electronic, as well as being a
kind of composite of earlier instruments which yet transcends them all in its
own unique technological integrity. Thus
a kind of omega instrument, akin to the dovetailing of traditional visual
arts/entertainments into a medium, viz. television, which yet transcends them
or, alternatively, to the dovetailing of all so-called world religions into a
True World Religion which is yet distinct from them and uniquely itself. Just so, the synthesizer, although capable of
sounding like a guitar, an organ, a piano, flute, trumpet, sax, or whatever, is
also distinct from these traditional instruments and able, in consequence, to
produce a truly unique sound. Such an
instrument would be suitable for the production of pure jazz, the successor, we
may believe, to modern jazz. Notes would
be played or programmed to play equally, as so many free-electron equivalents
floating on air and floating, needless to say, without any rhythmical
accompaniment.
8. This absolutely free-electron music will be
the only music of the next and ultimate civilization, since both folk music and
traditional civilized music would be irrelevant to an absolutely post-atomic
age dedicated to the social wellbeing and moral progress of a truly civilized
proletariat. There could only be one
type of music in this transcendental civilization, which would be of a
quintessentially religious significance.
Earlier types of music, whether barbarous or civilized, would be
discouraged and thereafter consigned to the rubbish heap of history. The People would soon forget that such music
had ever existed, assuming they were in a position to remember! Their ears would be solely attuned to pure
jazz; though it is questionable whether they would spend as much time listening
to this music as people of earlier times spent listening to their kinds of
music, and for the simple reason that the emphasis in a transcendental
civilization would be on still higher things, including meditation. Pure jazz would serve as an appetizer, so to
speak, for the 'main course' ... of contemplation and meditation, rather than
as an art form to be listened to for its own sake. Once again music, together with each of the
other fine arts, would become inseparable from religion, functioning as an
ingredient in the religio-cultural integrity of the
True World Religion, as practised in meditation centres - those future
successors to churches, mosques, temples, synagogues, etc.
9. In the present century, however, music is as
often as not secular as well as religious, though the development of a
religious dimension to the best modern jazz indicates, plainly enough, that
music is on the way back to a religious allegiance - one neither pagan nor
Christian but transcendentalist. Of
course, modern jazz is not concerned with Transcendentalism in any absolute
sense - since nothing is known of such a True World Religion in contemporary
America - but with its petty-bourgeois precursor in what may be termed Buddhist
Transcendentalism, as taught by Eastern gurus, whose dedication to
transcendental meditation is unconnected with a knowledge of technological
requirements to-come (before the attainment of transcendence becomes possible),
and who, in any case, tend to a rather complacent acquiescence in certain
traditional oriental beliefs and practices more attuned to the occult than to
the supernatural. No, while the best
modern jazz has associations with relative transcendentalism, the pure jazz of
the future will be exclusively associated with an absolute transcendentalism
which, to the extent that it upholds the practice of meditation, will stem from
the former while surpassing it in terms of a freedom from occult theology and
simultaneous awareness of evolutionary transformations to-come. What rhythmic pitch is to modern jazz,
theological occultism was to its religious inspiration in neo-Buddhism. Neither
ingredient could be encouraged in an absolute civilization!
10. Having spoken of American jazzmen on the
foregoing pages, I should add that, after one or two countries have taken the
lead in developing pure jazz, such absolutely free-electron music should become
the prerogative of all peoples. Thus one won't be entitled to define pure
jazz as basically an American music, but will regard it as a universal music,
played and respected the world over, even if, for a time, it has the appearance
of being unique to one country. Such, in
reality, it cannot be; for this music, together with everything else pertaining
to an absolute civilization, is intended for global appreciation, being, in
essence, something that transcends race and nationality - like, to a certain
extent, modern jazz. If it begins in one
country it will end everywhere, the first truly universal music, transcending
all previous cultures and, as already remarked, instruments and instrumental
combinations. Not on an electric piano,
organ, or guitar, those quintessentially higher bourgeois/proletarian
instruments, still less on a sax, flute, or trumpet, the class precursors of
the above, but on a synthesizer or combination of synthesizers ... is the most
likely way in which the ultimate music will be performed or, more probably,
programmed in advance for autonomous performance, since manual manipulation of
the keyboard would doubtless prove incompatible with absolute proletarian
criteria.