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The Top 10 Jazz Tunes For People Who Don't Like Jazz

Wednesday, Dec 7, 2011
While jazz’s complexity cannot be denied, much of the music remains accessible to all. The trick is just finding the right tunes and artists, those who have a universal appeal beyond the scope of the typical, admittedly somewhat limited, jazz audience.

Jazz music began as a popular art form. From its origins in the streets, bars, and brothels of the American South to the speakeasies of Prohibition-era Chicago to the dance floors of Middle America during the big band era, jazz successfully injected the masses with the infectious spirit of swing. After World War II, though, a major shift occurred in America’s beloved music. The innovations of New York musicians like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie would be codified into the style known as bebop, one that emphasized angular melodies, complex rhythms, and virtuoso solos. The music’s primary venue then shifted from the dance floor to the jazz club, and big bands were replaced by small combos. In effect, jazz transformed itself from pop music into art music. Bebop was embraced not by the masses, but rather by a smaller group of devoted followers, including the urbane beatniks (protohipsters, if you will), who found inspiration in the music’s spontaneity and spirit of freedom.


In the post-bop era, the perception of many is that jazz is an elusive music, one that requires lots of “insider” knowledge to appreciate. While jazz’s complexity cannot be denied, much of the music remains accessible to all. The trick is just finding the right tunes and artists, those who have a universal appeal beyond the scope of the typical—admittedly somewhat limited—jazz audience. Below you will find my list of 10 jazz tracks for people who typically don’t like the form. Each of these songs has a strong emotional appeal. While they are all technically brilliant, they never lose the heart and soul amongst the musical intricacy. Many of these tracks are considered foundational to the “jazz canon”, that collection of tunes almost universally agreed upon as among the best work the genre has ever produced. These songs will serve as a “nonthreatening” introduction for those who have been avoiding jazz like the plague or haven’t listened to the music in some time.
  


 
10. Nancy Wilson and Cannonball Adderley - “Save Your Love For Me”
(Nancy Wilson/Cannonball Adderley, 1962)


Nancy Wilson/Cannonball Adderley is appropriate for those normally skeptical of vocal jazz. It’s one of the most beautiful, emotionally resonant vocal jazz records of all time. The arrangements are deceptively simple, but there’s lots going on beneath the surface. Take the opening track “Save Your Love For Me”. Nancy Wilson’s aggressively fragile voice is perfectly suited to front the Cannonball Adderley quintet. There’s an equal amount of pathos and remarkable musical chops to every note she sings. While the musicians on the record are all technically proficient (at the top of their game in fact), they all play sensitively to the musical moment. During the first verse of “Save Your Love For Me”, cornetist Nat Adderley plays understated, quiet background fills behind Wilsonl. On the second verse, Cannonball takes a more aggressive approach, playing more complex, yet insanely melodic, lines to support the vocalist. “Save Your Love For Me” proves that vocal jazz doesn’t have to be a “watered down” version of the music, but can have just as much integrity, passion, and complexity as the best instrumental jazz performances.


 
9. Thelonious Monk - “Everything Happens to Me”
(Solo Monk, 1964)


Virtually every music lover arrives at one point or another at Thelonious Monk. The unconventional pianist is known for being the jazz musician most loved by rock ‘n’ roll fans, perhaps because of his quirky musical personality and the aggressiveness with which he attacks the instrument. While Monk’s catalog is quite large and is all well worth listening to, Solo Monk brings out the pianist’s personality more clearly than any other record. We get to hear him on his own, away from the normal “restrictions” of a band. All of the tracks on Solo Monk are killers, but “Everything Happens to Me” is notable for its contrast in moods and styles. It begins as a quiet, dirge-like ballad, turns into a jaunty Stride-style rag, and later evolves into a piece of virtual abstract expressionism. When I listen to Monk, I hear the whole history of jazz radiating through every passionately played note. There’s the mischievous spirit of ragtime, the angularity of bebop, and the indelible spirit of swing. It’s a lot of jazz for your money. 


 
8. Ornette Coleman - “Lonely Woman”
(The Shape of Jazz to Come, 1959)


Anyone who says free jazz is inaccessible to the “uninitiated” hasn’t listened much to Ornette Coleman. The Shape of Jazz to Come finds the saxophonist at that stage when he was abandoning some of the principles of tonality that had anchored jazz for its first fiftyish years, but hadn’t completely given up the ideals of structure and melody. “Lonely Woman”, above all, has one of the most expansive, expressive melodies in all of jazz. The musicians—including Coleman on alto sax, Don Cherry on cornet, Charlie Haden on bass, and Billy Higgins on drums—react to one another and create a melancholy, almost desperate, mood that reinforces the song’s title. Higgins’ ride cymbal sounds like it belongs in a fast bebop tune, but Coleman and Cherry’s melodic line sounds like a soulful ballad. Haden, a former country bassist on the Grand Ole Opry, plays a bass line striking in its simultaneous melodic simplicity and rhythmic complexity. Somehow it all manages to come together. It truly lives up to the word “free”.


 
7. The Bad Plus - “Velouria”
(Give, 2004)


Ever since Miles Davis’ electric fusion innovations of the 1970s, many jazz musicians have tried to incorporate the pop music of the day into their genre. Some would say this is a noble attempt to reach a larger, more sympathetic audience with the power of jazz, whereas others would say this fusion of styles has the singular effect of making the music more commercially viable. Nevertheless, there is no denying that many fusion musicians have made daring, envelope-pushing, just-plain-fun, music. The Bad Plus, an acoustic piano trio from Minnesota, are among the most popular artists of the last decade to fuse the improvisational spirit and acoustic instrumentation of mainstream jazz with rock music of different sorts. While this trio has recorded creative covers of songs by the likes of Nirvana, Pink Floyd, and Wilco, my favorite is their version of the Pixies song “Velouria”. The trio takes an already strong melody and deconstructs it to the point where it is almost unrecognizable. The thing that really drives the song, though, is the insane rhythmic propulsion. The song builds to the point where you think it’s going to explode and, indeed, it does.


 
6. Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers - “Moanin’”
(Moanin’, (1958)


The fusion of soul, gospel, and jazz music known as hard bop is a great entry point for those who love music for its undefinable spiritual qualities. How can someone listen to a track as downright soulful as “Moanin’” without being at least a little moved? Drummer Art Blakey lays down a perfect shuffle groove. The piano part and horn lines invoke the carnality of a Saturday night and the spiritual devotion of a Sunday morning. Then there’s that breathtaking moment in which trumpeter Lee Morgan ends his solo with a beautifully melodic blues line, only to have tenor saxophonist Benny Golson transpose the line to another key at the start of his own solo. It’s an incredible example of musicians listening to one another and adapting to each other’s playing in the moment, which is one of the most enjoyable, adventurous qualities of jazz music for listeners.


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