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#83153 - 07/25/08 08:33 PM RIP - Smooth jazz
Kat Administrator Offline
Musical Technologist
Member

Registered: 12/24/00
Posts: 3765
Loc: Danbury, Connecticut
And.... discuss (as DWbass would say) wink

http://www.popmatters.com/pm/column/56880/rip-smooth-jazz-1985-2008/

I personally think the writer comes across as elitist.... probably watching on the fringes while the rest of us loved this music and felt the rush from it.

Yeah, it may be dead... but that doesn't mean he gets to trash it.
_________________________
I've Got Jazz...Do You?


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#83159 - 07/25/08 11:57 PM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: Kat]
Eric Viccaro Offline
Member

Registered: 01/18/99
Posts: 181
Loc: Liberal, KS
Kat and everyone,

Woody Harrelson played Mark Twain in an episode of "Cheers."

In that show, Harrelson reprises the Twain standard, "Reports of my death are greatly exaggerated."

Smooth jazz isn't dead.

It's just morphing back to a time when fusion and improvisation mattered much, much more than simply putting out a homogenized product.

Wow, I haven't shared an actual OPINION like that in years in here.

Well, that's how I feel.

Signed,



Eric Viccaro
Ready for Wayne Brady to shock you all on Sept. 16!!!


Edited by Eric Viccaro (07/25/08 11:58 PM)

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#83160 - 07/26/08 04:02 AM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: Eric Viccaro]
bwardmusic Offline
Member

Registered: 10/23/07
Posts: 273
Scathing review of Smooth Jazz. Here's a quote from the article, saying the genre:

"ushered in a long era of mushy fusion from bands like the Yellowjackets, Spyro Gyra, and the Rippingtons; melodic guitarists like Earl Klugh, George Benson, and Lee Ritenour; buttery pop saxophonists like Mindi Abair; keyboard noodlers such as David Benoit and Bernard Wright; and schmaltzy trumpeters like Arturo Sandoval and Tom Browne."

Personally, I think a better title for this article would be:

"R.I.P. The Traditional Business Model".

I often wonder if the deletion of the format from radio is more a symptom of the fact that you can listen and get exposure to music in so many different ways now. Rather than listen to the radio, or tolerate your Sony Walkman CD player skipping as you walk around, you can download hundreds of songs onto your skip-free MP3 player and listen to your own, commerical-free, 24-hour "Best-of-Everything I Like" "radio" show. And you can link it into your car stereo, which is a key place people used to listen to the radio. Plus you can use headphones and not have to annoy everyone else in the car by forcing your genre on them by selecting a radio station.

We hardly need the radio anymore, in my view, when we have flexible media like You Tube, Limewire for the unscrupulous, Amazon, the ability to try songs for 99 cents, lots of free samples and of course, the skip-free, portable MP3 player. Then there's CD Baby where you can click up anyone you want to hear that sounds like your favorite artist.

I always react negatively to these people who consider styles of music "evil" or look down on people who like a particular style. As Esperanza Spalding said, musical tastes are similar to tastes in food -- how can anyone be critical of one type of food than another when it's all relative?

And last of all, his reasons for the 'death' of the format -- the economy is weak -- pure speculation.

As a student and player of jazz, I still think the immortal tunes like Curves Ahead, Catching the Sun, Together Again, are far better than the older jazz tunes in terms of engendering loyalty and passion for music for me personally. I'll listen to smooth jazz tunes (many of which never got radio) over and over again where the older tunes like Scrapple from the Apple by Charlie Parker have historical, theoretical and intellectual interest to me, but mean far less to me personally.

And I think the author of this article leaves out the fact that traditional jazz is dying on the vine as well -- I think even fewer people like it than smooth jazz, and I suspect there are even fewer radio stations out there that actually play it all day. If it wasn't for universities teaching it and the commitment of the older musicians who were steeped in it, I think it too would go the way of many genres.....largely forgotten except for the most immortal tunes or among die-hard musicologists and super-fans.


Edited by bwardmusic (07/26/08 04:18 AM)

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#83162 - 07/26/08 04:55 AM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: bwardmusic]
hbh Offline
Member

Registered: 06/02/99
Posts: 727
Loc: Kaarst
There's live in the old dog. I never observed so many new smooth jazz releases than nowadays. R.I.P. The Traditional Business Model that would be ok. The smooth jazz genre is still growing. This writer has no insight view.

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#83163 - 07/26/08 07:18 AM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: hbh]
Mark of Cenla Offline
Member

Registered: 01/12/05
Posts: 421
Loc: central Louisiana
While I agree with some of what was said in the article, I agree with ALL of what was said above in this thread. Hopefully what is dying out is the muzak-like stuff (I won't name any names).

I have not listened to radio as a source of music for about twenty years; maybe I was just ahead of the curve (for the first time ever, LOL).

Long live artists who continue to play jazz with a back beat. Peace.
_________________________
Mark Wellman >

Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.

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#83172 - 07/26/08 03:56 PM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: Mark of Cenla]
Shannon West Moderator Offline
Zumbafied
Member

Registered: 02/23/99
Posts: 4092
Loc: Jacksonville, FL
Quote:
Each step of retreat was a thinning out of what gave the original music its texture and interest.


There is the quote from that article that summed it up. But the fact that the guy is coming from the "it's not straightahead" perspective makes the article irrelevant. What would make it relevant is if he went in deeper about how the radio folk ravaged the music that used to be called "contemporary jazz" and tried, mostly successfully, to eliminate every interesting element it had in it.

The other gaping hole in his logic is that he confused the music with the format. Sadly, so many musicians have become safe and comfy in their role as content providers for a format they they are even afraid of the music they create, preferring to bury it in the live sets and only come out of the studio with covers and songs that sound like reconfigurations of other songs that have "tested well" . Then you look at the fact that live gigs are where people go crazy over this music and as for the toned down recorded stuff..well it sure isn't selling. Fortunately there are artists like Ken Navarro and Steve Oliver who are not coming from fear or playing into corporate radio's fear of music. Hopefully more artists will realize that the audience matters more than 7 spins a week between 10pm and 5am. (which is all an instrumental is going to get on smooth A/C)

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#83232 - 07/30/08 09:17 PM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: Shannon West]
TopCat Offline
Lurker

Registered: 06/15/08
Posts: 8
As far as those who hate smooth jazz I would venture to say its their hatred
of disco music that fuels it even more. All the criticisms of the smooth jazz
genre are the same criticisms of disco by the then disco critics.
The REAL origins of "smooth jazz" WAS/IS the fusion of disco and jazz.
As far back as LOVE UNLIMITED ORCHESTRA,MFSB,etc,. do a disco jazz
search on youtube and you'll find that a lot of late 70's early 80's
"disco" instrumentals,NOT necessarily chart toppers mind you,one good
example THE DUKES-MYSTERY GIRL.Give that a listen,and you'll see its
an early smooth jazz "pioneer" of a song,BUT called "disco" at the time.
Not an instrumental is mystery girl but you'll see what I mean.

Now the sound eventually fused to the point of not hearing disco
overtones or characteristics directly thereof,but the characteristic of
its"soul" being no more deep than disco everwas is certainly where
the critics are coming from. No disco+jazz fusion,no smooth jazz
evolution.

One can also not ignore the fusion of jazz w funk,soul,and r and b
as well as to the origins of what smooth jazz came to be.All those
being blended elements of what made disco,disco too.

As far as it being dead,the ol' plant seeds of thought in the general public's
mind what you want them to think,and then turn around and offer as
evidence of your premise,the "talk" going around about it when you're
the one who STARTED the gossip in the first place,it's the same ol'
same ol' trick used to influence many a pop culture trend away from
this or that.Just get the word started as a rumor,have it repeated enough,
ACT AS IF you were "onto" this before anyone else and VOILA, it ends
up looking like you made a correct prediction.

That's exactly what this author is intending,hiding behind a pseudo
intellectual rationalization,he's just trying to plant seeds of gossip,
"DID YOU HEAR SMOOTH JAZZ IS DEAD" and they tell two friends,
and they tell two friends,and so on and so on and so on.





Edited by TopCat (07/31/08 01:30 AM)

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#83237 - 07/31/08 06:57 AM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: TopCat]
SH Offline
Member

Registered: 09/08/04
Posts: 1280
Loc: Algonquin, IL
I'm not quite sure who the author is talking to? Yes, he sounds somewhat elitist. He lists many good points but as Shannon points out he is also missing other key points. Maybe there is some over-analyzing going on too? Granted I listen to music on commercial radio only about an hour a week (just too turned off by the dial overly dominated by classic rock, lite contemp and rap) so I may be somewhat out of touch but....could the average music listener even identify what a smooth jazz song is these days? Twenty years ago it seemed to be able to be pegged pretty well (Kenny G) but look what it morphed into as far as what the "smooth jazz" stations play? Perhaps this is what the author is getting at?


Edited by SH (07/31/08 06:59 AM)

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#83238 - 07/31/08 07:23 AM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: SH]
bwardmusic Offline
Member

Registered: 10/23/07
Posts: 273
I don't think this author is responding to the morphing of smooth jazz over the years - I think he's part of that group of
"elitist" traditional jazz players who have always beat up smooth jazz.

I see him as an opportunitist -- taking this opportunity to perpetuate this attitude now that there is solid evidence the genre is losing radio popularity.

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#83242 - 07/31/08 08:13 AM Re: RIP - Smooth jazz [Re: bwardmusic]
James Ranka Offline
Newbie

Registered: 07/19/08
Posts: 18
Loc: Houston, Texas
As a Smooth Jazz Recording Artist, I love to tackle idiotic comments like:

"ushered in a long era of mushy fusion from bands like the Yellowjackets, Spyro Gyra, and the Rippingtons; melodic guitarists like Earl Klugh, George Benson, and Lee Ritenour; buttery pop saxophonists like Mindi Abair; keyboard noodlers such as David Benoit and Bernard Wright; and schmaltzy trumpeters like Arturo Sandoval and Tom Browne."

Mushy fusion?
LOL!

These guys are GREAT players!

But more importantly, their music is emotional, every note means something, DYNAMICS ARE THE NORM - NOT THE EXCEPTION and when I listen to this most amazing music I am moved to chill bumps and a smile.

Forgive my lack of "Real Jazz" appreciation, but listening to Chick Corea bang out Hanon exercises at 120 BPM to fill in a 45 minute "song" does NOTHING for me!
Do I respect Chick's technical abilities?
ABSOLUTELY.
Will I, or have I ever bought a Chick Corea CD?
ABSOLUTELY NOT!
_________________________
James Ranka

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