Saturday Morning with Wynton Marsalis live at Lincoln Center
I came home after that concert and couldn't get to sleep for several hours because I felt so stimulated by the experience....
January 29, 2014
Brussels Bozar Ahmad Jamal in concert
As I write these words, my mind and body absorb the sound,
texture and rhythm of Ahmad Jamal’s 2011 recording “Blue Moon,” hailed then as
his “latest masterpiece.” Indeed, he is
a master, and he has been called “a man touched by grace”…..
I first heard of Ahmad Jamal as a child. My father, Edward Duane George, loved music,
especially the music of his generation – the 1940s , 50s and 60s. He was blessed with a natural ear for music
and was a gifted singer with scarcely any musical training. He admired the crooners of his era – Frank
Sinatra, Mel Tormé, Tony Bennett, Peggy Lee, Lena Horne, Ella Fitzgerald…..I
grew up with their voices and style always playing in the background…on my
father’s electric organ/stereo hifi, or on the big electric radio ensconced on
the righthand side of the old milksafe in the kitchen….the radio which was my
father’s constant companion. Amongst the 33 rpm albums in my
father’s collection, right alongside Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass, Nancy
Sinatra’s “These Boots Were Made for Walkin” and Barbra Streisand’s early “My
Name is Barbra,” was a small 45 rpm in a chic little black cardboard box with a
handsome young man seated at a piano on the cover. The disc contained the recording of Ahmad
Jamal’s “Poinciana” which I could listen
to over and over and never tire of hearing. He was one cool dude in my childish opinion,
even before I knew those words or understood what they meant.
Two years ago, on a road trip from Brussels
to the Dordogne in southwestern France
for an Easter holiday, I was delighted to find a two-cd set of old Ahmad Jamal
recordings in a convenience store reststop.
I shouldn’t have been too surprised, as the French have always loved and
admired American jazz musicians. Of
course, among the many pieces included in these recordings was Jamal’s famous
“Poinciana.” I once again began playing
it over and over again….its magic had not lost its power over me despite the
intervening years.
On January 29, in Brussels’
Bozar theater, I had the unique and supreme pleasure and delight of finally
experiencing Mr. Ahmad Jamal and his trio in concert. It was a thrill I will never forget…yes, even
a magical evening. The theater was completely packed! Brussels
jazz enthusiasts had come out of the woodwork on a cold Wednesday night to heat
up to the sounds of one of jazz piano’s greatest living legends. Here was Ahmad Jamal, now 83 years old, and a
greater musician than the handsome youth from that long ago 45 recording that
entranced me as a child. I was completely
enthralled!
Jamal’s mature playing has rich layers and textures that
have evolved over a lifetime of living, learning, performing, and simply loving
music and life. He has always been an excellent jazz pianist...but now he is a
consummate master....the music flowed from his soul through his fingers....it
was sheer delight to listen to and watch. The trio was also
amazing. The drummer, Herlin Riley, and bassist, Reginald Veal, in particular, were so alive and in synch, and each performed
inspired solos. Percussionist Manolo Badrena injected humor along with
his boundless energy and skill on congo drums and a variety of
playful accompaniments including an ocarina birdlike whistle.
I felt a bit "at home" when I saw them flash huge
American smiles at each other while playing, and heard Mr. Jamal's richtoned voice.
I was a bit nostalgic I must admit. At
one point, I found myself shining, a huge smile on my face while simultaneously tears flowed
unbidden down my cheeks. I was transported
back to my childhood so far off in time and physical space, with my dad’s
spirit looming large in my memory. I
could feel him enjoying the music right along with me. Thanks, Dad, for introducing me to Mr. Ahmad
Jamal…..because of you, I am sitting here at this concert 40-odd years later in
Brussels, Belgium....
What never ceases to amaze me with extraordinarily talented musicians like these, is how they manage to play with such joy, such passion and spontaneity, giving such seamless performances, yet the entire time, you have the feeling that the music is simply flowing effortlessly from some inner unseen but magical source. They hardly seem to be playing at all, and yet every fiber of their being at that moment is in the music. It is supreme virtuosity!
What never ceases to amaze me with extraordinarily talented musicians like these, is how they manage to play with such joy, such passion and spontaneity, giving such seamless performances, yet the entire time, you have the feeling that the music is simply flowing effortlessly from some inner unseen but magical source. They hardly seem to be playing at all, and yet every fiber of their being at that moment is in the music. It is supreme virtuosity!
Mr. Ahmad Jamal has told interviewers that he began to play
the piano at the age of three in his native Pittsburgh, when his uncle challenged him to
try to duplicate his keyboard performance.
Little Fritz Russell Jones promptly did so, and the rest, as they say, is history. He converted to Islam and
changed his name in 1950.
At the end of their set, the audience gave Jamal and his
trio three standing ovations! After each, they returned to their
instruments and offered an encore no less worthy than their earlier performance.
After the second encore, Jamal of course played “Poinciana”which remains his
best known recording and a classic piece from the 1960's. Nevertheless, I really adore his new compositions...he
played "Saturday Morning" from his latest cd of the same name from
2013, and "Autumn Rain" from “Blue Moon” both of which I keep wanting to listen to over and over with
the same fascination that “Poinciana’ held for me so many years ago.
I came home after that concert and couldn't get to sleep for several hours because I felt so stimulated by the experience....
Long live the musical genius and spirit of Ahmad Jamal!
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