John Lewis

John Lewis

born on 3/5/1920 in La Grange, IL, United States

died on 29/3/2001 in New York City, NY, United States

John Lewis (pianist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
John Lewis (pianist)

John Aaron Lewis (May 3, 1920 March 29, 2001) was an American jazz pianist, composer and arranger, best known as the musical director of the Modern Jazz Quartet.

Early life

John Lewis was born in La Grange, Illinois,[1] and raised in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and began learning classical music and piano at the age of seven.[2] His family was musical and had a family band that allowed him to play frequently and he also played in a Boy Scout music group.[3] Even though he learned piano by playing the classics, he was exposed to jazz from an early age because his aunt loved to dance and he would listen to the music she played.[3] He attended the University of New Mexico,[2] where he led a small dance band that he formed[4] and double majored in Anthropology and Music.[3] Eventually, he decided not to pursue Anthropology because he was advised that careers from degrees in Anthropology did not pay well.[3] In 1942, Lewis entered the army and played piano alongside Kenny Clarke, who influenced him to move to New York once their service was over.[5] Lewis moved to New York in 1945[5] to pursue his musical studies at the Manhattan School of Music and eventually graduated with a master's degree in music in 1953.[2] Although his move to New York turned his musical attention more towards jazz, he still frequently played and listened to classical works and composers such as Chopin, Bach and Beethoven.[3]

Jazz career

Once Lewis moved to New York, he and Clarke tried out for Dizzy Gillespie's bop-style big band by playing a song called "Bright Lights" that Lewis had written for the band they played for in the army.[4] They both were asked to join Gillespie's band,[5] and the tune they originally played for Gillespie, renamed "Two Bass Hit", became an instant success.[6] Lewis composed, arranged and played piano for the band from 1945 until 1948 after the band made a concert tour of Europe.[2] When Lewis returned from the tour with Gillespie's band, he left it to work individually. Lewis was an accompanist for Charlie Parker and played on some of Parker's famous recordings, such as "Parker's Mood" (1948) and "Blues for Alice" (1951), but also collaborated with other prominent jazz artists such as Lester Young, Ella Fitzgerald and Illinois Jacquet.[2]

Lewis also was part of Miles Davis's Birth of the Cool sessions. While in Europe, Lewis received letters from Davis urging him to come back to the United States and collaborate with the trumpeter, Gil Evans, Gerry Mulligan and others on the second session of Birth of the Cool.[7] From when he returned to the U.S. in 1948 through 1949, Lewis joined Davis's nonet[7] and is considered "one of the more prolific arrangers with the 1949 Miles Davis Nonet".[8] For the Birth of the Cool sessions, Lewis arranged "S'il Vous Plait", "Rouge", "Move" and "Budo".[9]

Lewis, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, drummer Clarke and bassist Ray Brown had been the small group within the Gillespie big band,[10] and they frequently played their own short sets when the brass and reeds needed a break or even when Gillespie's band was not playing.[11] The small band received a lot of positive recognition and it led to the foursome forming a full-time working group, which they initially called the Milt Jackson Quartet in 1951 but in 1952 renamed the Modern Jazz Quartet.[2]

The Modern Jazz Quartet

The Modern Jazz Quartet was formed out of the foursome's need for more freedom and complexity than Gillespie's big band, dance-intended sound allowed.[12] While Lewis wanted the MJQ to have more improvisational freedom, he also wanted to incorporate some classical elements and arrangements to his compositions.[8] Lewis noticed that the style of bebop had turned all focus towards the soloist, and Lewis, in his compositions for the MJQ, attempted to even out the periods of improvisation with periods that were distinctly arranged.[13] Lewis assumed the role of musical director from the start,[2] even though the group claimed not to have a leader.[14] It is commonly thought that "John Lewis, for reasons of his contributions to the band, was apparently the first among the equals".[1] Davis even once said that "John taught all of them, Milt couldn't read at all, and bassist Percy Heath hardly".[1] It was Lewis who elevated the group's collective talent because of his individual musical abilities.[1]

Lewis gradually transformed the group away from strictly 1940's bebop style, which served as a vehicle for an individual artist's improvisations, and instead oriented it toward a more refined, polished, chamber style of music.[15] Lewis's compositions for The Modern Jazz Quartet developed a "neoclassical style"[16] of jazz that combined the bebop style with "dynamic shading and dramatic pause more characteristic of jazz of the '20s and '30s".[8] Francis Davis, in his book In the Moment: Jazz in the 1980s, wrote that by "fashioning a group music in which the improvised chorus and all that surrounded it were of equal importance, Lewis performed a feat of magic only a handful of jazz writers, including Duke Ellington and Jelly Roll Morton, had ever pulled offhe reconciled the composer's belief in predetermination with the improviser's yen for free will".[13]

Lewis also made sure that the band was always dressed impeccably.[17] Lewis believed that it was important to dress the way that they came across in their music: polished, elegant and unique.[17] Lewis once said in an interview with Down Beat magazine: "My model for that was Duke Ellington. [His band] was the most elegant band I ever saw".[18]

From 1952 through 1974, he wrote and performed with and for the quartet.[2] Lewis's compositions were paramount in earning the MJQ a worldwide reputation for managing to make jazz mannered without cutting the swing out of the music.[19] Gunther Schuller for High Fidelity Magazine wrote:
It will not come as a surprise that the Quartet's growth has followed a line parallel to Lewis' own development as a composer. A study of his compositions from the early "Afternoon in Paris" to such recent pieces as "La Cantatrice" and "Piazza Navona" shows an increasing technical mastery and stylistic broadening. The wonder of his music is that the various influences upon his workwhether they be the fugal masterpieces of Bach, the folk-tinged music of Bartók, the clearly defined textures of Stravinsky's "Agon", or the deeply felt blues atmosphere that permeates all his musicthese have all become synthesized into a thoroughly homogeneous personal idiom. That is why Lewis' music, though not radical in any sense, always sounds fresh and individual.[20]

During the same time period, Lewis held various other positions as well, including head of faculty for the summer sessions held at the Lenox School of Jazz in Lenox, Massachusetts from 1957 to 1960,[2] director of the annual Monterey Jazz Festival in California from 1958 to 1983,[5] and its musical consultant,[21] and "he formed the cooperative big band Orchestra U.S.A., which performed and recorded Third Stream compositions (196265)".[2] Orchestra U.S.A., along with all of Lewis's compositions in general, were very influential in developing "Third Stream" music, which was largely defined by the interweave between classical and jazz traditions.[5] He also formed the Jazz and Classical Music Society in 1955, which hosted concerts in Town Hall in New York City that assisted in this new genre of classically influenced jazz to increase in popularity.[22] Furthermore, Lewis was also commissioned to compose the score to the film Sait-On Jamais.[23]

The MJQ disbanded in 1974 because Jackson felt that the band was not getting enough money for the level of prestige the quartet had in the music scene.[24] During this break, Lewis taught at the City College of New York and at Harvard University.[2] Lewis was also able to travel to Japan, where CBS commissioned his first solo piano album.[25] While in Japan, Lewis also collaborated with Hank Jones and Marian McPartland,[26] with whom he performed piano recitals on various occasions.[25]

In 1981, the Modern Jazz Quartet re-formed for a tour of Japan and the United States, although the group did not plan on performing regularly together again.[24] Since the MJQ was no longer his primary career, Lewis had time to form and play in a sextet called the John Lewis Group.[2] A few years later, in 1985, Lewis collaborated with Gary Giddins and Roberta Swann to form the American Jazz Orchestra.[2] Additionally, he continued to teach jazz piano to aspiring jazz students, which he had done throughout his career.[25] His teaching style involved making sure the student was fluent in "three basic forms: the blues, a ballad, and a piece that moves".[25] He continued teaching late into his life.

In the 1990s, Lewis partook of various musical ventures, including participating in the Re-birth of the Cool sessions with Gerry Mulligan in 1992,[27] and "The Birth of the Third Stream" with Gunther Schuller, Charles Mingus and George Russell,[28] and recorded his final albums with Atlantic Records, Evolution and Evolution II, in 1999 and 2000 respectively.[29] He also continued playing sporadically with the MJQ until 1999, when Jackson died.[30]

Lewis performed a final concert at Lincoln Center in New York and played a repertoire that represented his full musical abilityfrom solo piano to big-band and everything in between.[29] John Lewis died in New York City on March 31, 2001, at the age of 80, after a long battle with prostate cancer.[30]

Music

Style and influence

Leonard Feather's opinion of Lewis's work is representative of many other knowledgeable jazz listeners and critics:[31] "Completely self-sufficient and self-confident, he knows exactly what he wants from his musicians, his writing and his career and he achieves it with an unusual quiet firmness of manner, coupled with modesty and a complete indifference to critical reaction."[32] Lewis was not only this way with his music, but his personality exemplified these same qualities.[3]

Lewis, who was significantly influenced by the arranging style and carriage of Count Basie,[33] played with a tone quality that made listeners and critics feel as though every note was deliberate. Schuller remembered of Lewis at his memorial service that "he had a deep concern for every detail, every nuance in the essentials of music".[34] Lewis became associated with representing a modernized Basie style, exceptionally skilled at creating music that was spacious, powerful and yet, refined.[29] In an interview with Metronome magazine, Lewis himself said:

My ideals stem from what led to and became Count Basie's band of the '30s and '40s. This group produced an integration of ensemble playing which projectedand sounded likethe spontaneous playing of ideas which were the personal expression of each member of the band rather than the arrangers or composers. This band had some of the greatest jazz soloists exchanging and improvising ideas with and counter to the ensemble and the rhythm section, the whole permeated with the fold-blues element developed to a most exciting degree. I don't think it is possible to plan or make that kind of thing happen. It is a natural product and all we can do is reach and strive for it.[35]

It is considered, however, that Lewis was successful in exemplifying, in his arrangements and compositions, this skill that he admired.[36] Because of his classical training, in addition to his exposure to bebop, Lewis was able to combine the two disparate musical styles and refine jazz so that there was a "sheathing of bop's pointed anger in exchange for concert hall respectability".[37]

Lewis was also influenced by the improvisations of Lester Young on the saxophone.[38] Lewis had not been the first to be influenced by a horn player. Earl Hines in his early years looked to Louis Armstrong's improvisations for inspiration and Bud Powell looked to Charlie Parker.[38] Lewis also claims to have been influenced by Hines himself.[3]

Lewis was also heavily influenced by European classical music. Many of his compositions for the MJQ and his own personal compositions incorporated various classically European techniques such as fugue and counterpoint,[29] and the instrumentation he chose for his pieces, sometimes including a string orchestra.[39]

In the early 1980s, Lewis's influence came from the pianists he enjoyed listening to: Art Tatum, Hank Jones and Oscar Peterson.[25]

Piano style

Len Lyons depicts Lewis's piano, composition and personal style when he introduces Lewis in Lyons' book The Great Jazz Pianists: "Sitting straight-backed, jaw rigid, presiding over the glistening white keyboard of the grand piano, John Lewis clearly brooks no nonsense in his playing, indulges in no improvisational frvolity, and exhibits no breach of discipline nor any phrase that could be construed as formally incorrect. Lewis, of course, can swing, play soulful blues and emote through his instrument, but it is the swing and sweat of the concert hall, not of smoke-filled, noisy nightclubs." Although Lewis is considered to be a bebop pianist,[29][40] he is also considered to be one of the more conservative players.[2] Instead of emphasizing the intense, fast tempoed bebop style, his piano style was geared towards emphasizing jazz as an "expression of quiet conflict".[1] His piano style, bridging the gap between classical, bop, stride and blues, made him so "it was not unusual to hear him mentioned in the same breath with Morton, Ellington, and Monk".[41] On the piano, his improvisational style was primarily quiet and gentle and understated.[2] Lewis once advised three saxophonists who were improvising on one of his original compositions: "You have to put yourself at the service of the melody.... Your solos should expand the melody or contract it".[42] This was how he approached his solos as well. He proved in his solos that taking a "simple and straightforward... approach to a melody could... put [musicians] in touch with such complexities of feeling",[42] which the audience appreciated just as much as the musicians themselves.[42]

His accompaniment for other musicians' solos was just as delicate.[2] Thomas Owens describes his accompaniment style by noting that "rather than compingpunctuating the melody with irregularly placed chordshe often played simple counter-melodies in octaves which combined with the solo and bass parts to form a polyphonic texture".[2]

Compositions and arrangements

Similarly to his personal piano playing style, Lewis was drawn in his compositions to minimalism and simplicity.[33] Many of his compositions were based on motifs and relied on few chord progressions.[43] Francis Davis comments: "I think too, that the same conservative lust for simplicity of forms that draws Lewis to the Renaissance and the Baroque draws him inevitably to the blues, another form of music permitting endless variation only within the logic of rigid boundaries".[44]

His compositions were influenced by 18th-century melodies and harmonies,[2] but also showed an advanced understanding of the "secrets of tension and release, the tenets of dynamic shading and dramatic pause"[42] that was reminiscent of classic arrangements by Basie and Ellington in the early swing era. This combining of techniques led to Lewis becoming a pioneer in Third Stream Jazz, which was combined classical, European practices with jazz's improvisational and big-band characteristics.[2]

Lewis, in his compositions, experimented with writing fugues[45] and incorporating classical instrumentation.[12] An article in The New York Times wrote that "His new pieces and reworkings of older pieces are designed to interweave string orchestra and jazz quartet as equals".[46] High Fidelity magazine wrote that his "works not only show a firm control of the compositional medium, but tackle in a fresh way the complex problem of inprovisation with composed frameworks".[20]

Thomas Owen believes that "[Lewis'] best pieces for the MJQ are Django, the ballet suite The Comedy (1962, Atl.), and especially the four pieces Versailles, Three Windows, Vendome and Concorde... combine fugal imitation and non-imitative polyphonic jazz in highly effective ways."[2]

Discography

As leader
  • Grand Encounter (1956)
  • Afternoon in Paris (1957, Atlantic) - with Sacha Distel
  • The John Lewis Piano (1957, Atlantic)
  • European Windows (1958)
  • Improvised Meditations and Excursions (1959, Atlantic 1313)
  • Odds Against Tomorrow (1959, UA 5061)
  • Jazz Abstractions (1960, Atlantic)
  • The Golden Striker (1960, Atlantic 1334)
  • The Wonderful World of Jazz (1961, Atlantic)
  • Original Sin (Atlantic, 1961)
  • Essence (1962, Atlantic)
  • European Encounter (1962, Atlantic) - with Svend Asmussen
  • Animal Dance (1964, Atlantic) - with Albert Mangelsdorff
  • P.O.V. (1975, Columbia PC33534), including "Mirjana of my Heart and Soul"
  • Sensitive Scenery (1977, Columbia)
  • Kansas City Breaks (1982, Finesse)
  • Preludes and Fugues from the Well-tempered Clavier Book 1 (1984, Philips)
  • The Bridge Game (1984, Philips)
  • The Chess Game Volume 1 (1990, Polygram Records)
  • The Chess Game Volume 2 (1990, Polygram Records)
  • Private Concert (1991, Emaecy)
  • Evolution (Atlantic, 1999)
  • Evolution II (Atlantic, 2000)
As sideman with Charlie Parker
  • The Genius of Charlie Parker (19458, Savoy 12009)
  • "Parker's Mood" (1948)
  • Charlie Parker (19513, Clef 287)
  • "Blues for Alice" (1951)
As member of the Miles Davis Nonet
  • The Complete Birth of the Cool (194850, Capitol Jazz)
As leader of Orchestra U.S.A. (with Gunther Schuller and Harold Farberman)
  • Orchestra U.S.A. (1963, Colpix 448), including "Three Little Feelings"
Recordings with the Modern Jazz Quartet
  • Vendome (1952, Prestige 851)
  • Modern Jazz Quartet, ii (19545, Prestige 170) incl. "Django" (1954)
  • Concorde (1955, Prestige 7005)
  • Fontessa (1956, Atlantic 1231) included "Versailles"
  • The Modern Jazz Quartet Plays No Sun in Venice (Atlantic, 1957)
  • The Modern Jazz Quartet (Atlantic, 1957)
  • Third Stream Music (1957, 195960, Atlantic. 1345) including "Sketch for Double String Quartet" (1959)
  • The Modern Jazz Quartet and the Oscar Peterson Trio at the Opera House (Verve, 1957)
  • The Modern Jazz Quartet at Music Inn Volume 2 (Atlantic, 1958)
  • Music from Odds Against Tomorrow (United Artists, 1959)
  • Pyramid (Atlantic, 1960)
  • European Concert (Atlantic, 1960 [1962])
  • Dedicated to Connie (Atlantic, 1960 [1995])
  • The Modern Jazz Quartet & Orchestra (Atlantic, 1960)
  • The Comedy (1962, Atlantic 1390)
  • Lonely Woman (Atlantic, 1962)
  • A Quartet is a Quartet is a Quartet (1963, Atlantic 1420)
  • Collaboration (Atlantic, 1964) with Laurindo Almeida
  • The Modern Jazz Quartet Plays George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess (Atlantic, 196465)
  • Jazz Dialogue (Atlantic, 1965) with the All-Star Jazz Band
  • Concert in Japan '66 (Atlantic [Japan], 1966)
  • Blues at Carnegie Hall (Atlantic, 1966)
  • Place Vendôme (Philips, 1966) with The Swingle Singers
  • Under the Jasmin Tree (Apple, 1968)
  • Space (Apple, 1969)
  • Plastic Dreams (Atlantic, 1971)
  • The Legendary Profile (Atlantic, 1974)
  • In Memoriam (Little David, 1973)
  • Blues on Bach (Atlantic, 1973)
  • The Last Concert (Atlantic, 1974)
  • Reunion at Budokan 1981 (Pablo, 1981)
  • Together Again: Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival '82 (Pablo, 1982)
  • Echoes (Pablo, 1984)
  • Topsy: This One's for Basie (Pablo, 1985)
  • Three Windows (Atlantic, 1987)
  • For Ellington (East West, 1988)
  • MJQ & Friends: A 40th Anniversary Celebration (Atlantic, 199293)

With Clifford Brown

  • Memorial Album (Blue Note, 1953)

With Dizzy Gillespie

With Milt Jackson

  • Ballads & Blues (Atlantic, 1956)

With Sonny Stitt

  • Sonny Stitt/Bud Powell/J. J. Johnson (Prestige, 1949 [1956]) with J. J. Johnson
Contributions
  • Bill Evans: A Tribute (Palo Alto, 1982) performs "I'll Remember April"
  • The Jazztet and John Lewis (Argo, 1961) as composer and arranger

Notes

  1. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named guardian
  2. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named online9
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Lyons, p. 77.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Giddins, p. 378.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Lyons, p. 76.
  6. Giddins, p. 379.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Lyons, p. 78.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Davis, p. 228.
  9. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Sultanof
  10. This practice of having small groups within the big band began in 1935 when Benny Goodman had a trio in his band that would play when the arrangers and other musicians in his band needed a break. Since that time, it became common for big bands to have smaller groups within (Giddins, p. 378).
  11. Lyons, p. 79.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Giddins, p. 380.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Davis, p. 229.
  14. Giddins, p. 383.
  15. Giddins, pp. 379381.
  16. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Williams
  17. 17.0 17.1 Giddins, p. 382.
  18. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Bourne
  19. Giddins, p. 387.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Schuller, p. 56.
  21. Schuller, p. 135.
  22. Schuller, p. 134.
  23. Schuller, p. 195.
  24. 24.0 24.1 Lyons, pp. 8182.
  25. 25.0 25.1 25.2 25.3 25.4 Lyons, p. 80.
  26. He met Marian McPartland while teaching at Harvard (Lyons, p. 80).
  27. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Stewart
  28. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Ramsey
  29. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named allaboutjazz
  30. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named andrews
  31. Originally from Encyclopedia of Jazz 1960 edition (Lyons, p. 76).
  32. Lyons, pp. 7677.
  33. 33.0 33.1 Giddins, p. 377.
  34. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Ratliff
  35. Giddins, p. 388.
  36. Davis, p. 230.
  37. Davis, p. 227.
  38. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named pastras
  39. Davis, p. 231.
  40. He played with many of the great bebop players such as Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and Sonny Rollins.
  41. Davis, p. 233.
  42. 42.0 42.1 42.2 42.3 Davis, p. 234.
  43. Giddins, p. 391.
  44. Davis, p. 232.
  45. He appreciated fugues for their use of counterpoint in jazz (Giddins, p. 380).
  46. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Pareles

References

  • Davis, Francis (1986). In The Moment: Jazz in the 1980s, Oxford University Press.
  • Giddins, Gary (1998). Visions of Jazz: The First Century, Oxford University Press.
  • Lyons, Len (1983). The Great Jazz Pianists, Da Capo Press.

External links

This page was last modified 13.04.2014 16:30:57

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