I took a friend to a jazz club recently and, despite the powerhouse performance laced with complex improvisations, the experience was a disappointment to my friend. I had built up the event as something special, but he just didn’t “get” jazz. I suspect the root cause was that he was not properly prepared for the encounter, not schooled in the history of the music and thus unable to hear it in a context that made musical sense. He said it was just “interesting” and that he could “appreciate the mastery.”
My own appreciation of contemporary jazz is based in part on listening a lot to the precursors of the hard bop style and extended improvisations of modern jazz. This historical perspective is just as important in jazz as in classical music, where an informed listener can understand more modern classical forms in the context of, say, music from the Baroque Period. It is, for example, easier to hear the magic in Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring if you are familiar with what came before.
I have compiled a list of jazz performances that, in a manageable time frame, could provide a short course in the progression of the music from the original Dixieland originating in the back streets of New Orleans, progressing through ragtime, swing and the other major “movements” to the challenging styles of the present. This is not the “definitive list” or a “complete list” but it’s a pretty good one. More is omitted than is included, but anyone with a minimal ear can listen to the changes through time, without a detailed analysis of what is actually going on, and hopefully learn to dig the sound and the freedom that inheres in jazz music. Jazz deconstructs music to its core elements and reassembles it in new ways. As Cyrus Chestnut says at the end of the first set at each performance: “We’ve enjoyed playing these songs and we promise never to do it again.” He means that the improvisation will be different each time, a spontaneous reimagining of each tune. Like chess games, no two performances of the same tune are the same.
Here is my list:
Louis Armstrong West End Blues
Sidney Bechet Summertime
Jelly Roll Morton Black Bottom Stomp
Pete Fountain Rampart Street Parade
Art Tatum Tiger Rag
Count Basie One O’Clock Jump
Dorsey Brothers St. Louis Blues
Charlie Parker Cherokee
Charlie Parker Scrapple From the Apple
Lester Young Stardust
Ben Webster Stormy Weather
Coleman Hawkins Body & Soul
Bud Powell Bouncing with Bud
Thelonious Monk ‘Round Midnight
Thelonious Monk Straight No Chaser
John Coltrane Giant Steps
John Coltrane One Up, One Down
George Shearing Lullaby of Birdland
Art Blakey Moanin’
Modern Jazz Quartet Softly As In a Morning Sunrise
Erroll Garner Autumn Leaves
Stan Getz Girl From Ipanema
Stan Getz These Foolish Things
Miles Davis So What
Miles Davis Oleo
Dave Brubeck Blue Rondo a la Turk
Dave Brubeck Take Five
Marcus Roberts What Is This Thing Called Love?
McCoy Tyner Passion Dance
Stefon Harris Black Action Figure