I cannot read “Seeking Air” as a novel.  I can only see it as a supplement to Guest’s poetic work.  A scene in which 19th century hoof prints are found in a front yard in Long Island:  I think of a poem built around this same image in “Fair Realism.”  
***  
Miles was part of at least five movements in jazz.  Bebop (marginally).  Cool jazz (centrally).  Hard bop (masterfully).  That whole pre-fusion, early sixties thing:  the quintets with Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, Tony Williams, Herbie Hancock.  Fusion itself!  The Gil Evans collaborations form a separate category.  He stood apart from “free jazz,” for the most part, and of course hated the neo-conservative revival of the 1980s.  
Yet the early 60s work was avant-garde in its own way.  Tony Williams had listened to Billy Higgins and developed an avant style as compelling as that of Elvin, if such a thing is possible.    
That Philly Joe rim-click on beat four, creating a sense of space.  Miles told Jimmy Cobb to play that too.  An interview with Tony Williams in which he says that, once as a kid, he heard someone play the drums so stiffly, with so little feeling, that he started to cry.   I always use that story to explain to people why I feel upset about someone writing ineptly about poetry.  You can’t disrespect the Bing.
Every significant piano player and jazz guitarist of a certain period passed through Miles’ groups.  Almost every white jazz player of significance also.  Jarrett, Holland, Scofield...  
To think about music is a way of not thinking about poetry 24 hours a day.  Yet it is really another way of thinking about poetry.      
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario