[JPL] Free jazz pioneer's awards honour

Jazz Promo Services jazzpromo at earthlink.net
Fri Aug 3 10:25:22 EDT 2007


http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/entertainment/6927534.stm

Free jazz pioneer's awards honour
One of jazz's great innovators, Ornette Coleman, has spoken of his feelings
after receiving two major music awards at the age of 77.

Coleman has won both a lifetime achievement Grammy and the Pulitzer Prize
for music in recent months, the latter awarded for his latest album Sound
Grammar.

The saxophonist told BBC World Service's The Beat programme that although he
has often had a prickly relationship with critics, "I can't say it doesn't
mean anything."

"It makes me aware of the growth that I have achieved," he said.

"I do honour people that know more than I do, and tell me if it's good, if
it has meaning.

"If I have found a way to share what I do, to inspire people to go even
further than what I don't know yet - that idea is the most supreme form of
expression in culture."

Ideas

Coleman is known as one of the great jazz innovators, pioneering improvised
"free jazz."

In 1960, his album Free Jazz split the jazz world. By discarding jazz
elements such as fixed chord changes, Coleman was hailed as groundbreaking
by some.

And he remains unapologetic about how he has pushed at boundaries through
his career.

"I've had people say, 'you can't play like that' - and I say, 'what do you
mean - I've already played it.'

"I'm not trying - I'm playing."

However, early 1960s acclaimed jazz musicians such as Miles Davis regarded
Coleman's music as a direct affront to their years of training - something
Coleman rejects.


I have taught myself everything I know
Ornette Coleman
"I wasn't thinking of insults, I was thinking of ideas," Coleman said.

"Imagine - if you don't have ideas, what are you going to do?

"They weren't playing movements, they were playing changes. I was playing
ideas, changes and non-transposed notes."

He recalled in particular the day his mother bought him a horn when he was a
young boy.

"I thought it was a toy and I played it the way I am playing today," he
said.

"I didn't know that you had to learn to play, I thought you had to play to
play. And I still think that.

"I didn't know that music was a style and that it had rules and stuff. I
thought it was just sound. I still believe that.

"I am not that sensitive or that weak to believe that because someone says I
can't do something, I haven't done it.

"I have taught myself everything I know. I have written symphonies, and
no-one has taught me. Because I realised that the human being is all there
is."

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/entertainment/6927534.stm

Published: 2007/08/02 15:33:55 GMT

© BBC MMVII


More information about the jazzproglist mailing list