Revisiting My Life in Music: The Rise of Writing Influences Pt. 2

Nat Hentoff
Nat Hentoff, a superb jazz writer, in his office.

SKF NOTE: This is my latest post in answer to a new friend asking how I “got the gig” as managing editor for Modern Drummer. Here is my first post. And here is The Rise of Writing Influences Pt. 1.

Listening to other musicians is a must for aspiring musicians. Reading is a must for aspiring writers. Doing both is part of my becoming a music writer. One benefit of growing up when the long-playing (LP) vinyl record was the best way to hear recorded music, the LP back covers – just under 12.5 inches square – have liner notes.

Liner notes are essays, profiles, interviews, written by knowledgeable music journalists, music producers, music deejays – sometimes musicians themselves – about the music on the LPs. Writers like Nat Hentoff, Ralph J. Gleason, George Avakian, Dan Morgenstern, Leonard Feather, Ira Gitler, Orrin Keepnews, Leroi Jones, Barry Ulanov, Norman Granz – liner notes were as interesting as the music they were describing.

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Good liner notes were history lessons by people who lived or were living the history. By writers who were close, trusted friends of the musicians. Many of these writers wrote the “must read” books on jazz, and later on, some of these writers, along with newer writers, gave us great liner notes on rock.

As important as knowning drummers and their history, I studied – and still study – all kinds of musicians and the histories of their instruments: trumpet, saxophones, piano, bass, voice, songwriters, arrangers, trombone, guitar. The history of drumming – the instrument’s pioneers, how the drumset evolves – none of this happens in a vaccuum. Knowing the history of the music – be it jazz, rock, blues, country – made interviewing drummers and writing about drums much more interesting.

Ira Gitler
Ira Gitler

Two examples: When I first interviewed Jim Keltner, he mentioned right at the start, his musician friend, Al Stinson. Jim paused and said, “But you probably don’t know who Al Stinson was, so….” “Yeah, I do,” I said. “He was a jazz bassist. I’ve heard him on a Chico Hamilton record.” To which Jim replied, “Okay, then. This is going to be alright.”

Last week I interviewed drummer Roy McCurdy. I was familiar with all the musicians he spoke about during our 90-minutes on the phone. Roy also told me about someone he met with one time who wanted to help Roy write his memoir. But the writer didn’t know any of the musicians in Roy’s life. Didn’t know their names, their role in music history, or their sound. How do you write about them? Roy asked. The answer is, you can’t.

Liner notes from a Herbie Hancock LP.
Liner notes from a Herbie Hancock LP.

In addition to liner notes and books, certain magazines were a great source for study. Down Beat and Rolling Stone were probably the best. There were a number of jazz and pop magazines that came and went. They often had bits of valuable music writing. I collected LP’s, magazines, books – thousands of music information sources. Interviews, profiles, record reviews, historical essays – I loved reading them, absorbing the information. I underlined key passages, wrote notes in the page margins. And this library was my chief source of musical information.

To be continued….

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Memorial Day: Thank You!

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Derek Trucks: Inspired by Elvin Jones’s Mother

Watkins: Tedeschi Trucks ‘happy and soulful’
Billy Watkins, The Clarion-Ledger 11:16 a.m. CDT May 14, 2015

Derek Trucks

Derek Trucks

Q. I wanted to know about [Derek Trucks‘s] style, about what he tries to say using his guitar.

A. “I try to convey some kind of emotion,” he says. “Like the great jazz drummer Elvin Jones said his mother used to say to him. She was a gospel singer, and whenever Elvin would play she would shout out, ‘Tell your story.’

“I totally get that. There has to be something behind what you’re playing. With all the great musicians, you can feel there is an art to it. It’s not, ‘Hey, check out all the stuff I figured out in my practice room.’ It’s more about improvising and playing what you feel. One of the first things I learned from hanging around blues clubs or during my time with the Allman Brothers was the importance of not playing the same thing the same way two nights in a row. It was all about ‘take it somewhere else tonight.’ ”

Full Story

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Philly Joe Jones on Baby Dodds

Philly Joe Jones

Philly Joe Jones

“When I was working with Joe Morris opposite George Shearing in the Three Deuces on 52nd St., I went across the street one night to the Onyx. Just casually, you know. And I happened to look at the placards outside that said BABY DODDS. Well, I had always been reading books and things and so I knew that Gene Krupa had been influenced by Baby and Baby had been hanging out with Gene.

“So, wanting to play the drums as bad as I wanted to, I said, ‘I’m going’ to listen to this drummer.’ So what I did, I went in the Onyx, and Baby was playing in there with a bass drum, and a snare drum, and ONE cymbal, a ride cymbal. It wasn’t a sock cymbal. He was swinging’

Baby Dodds

Baby Dodds

SO MUCH I was late an entire set! I don’t get back to work. I missed the entire set, and Joe fined me. I think it was a $30 fine. I couldn’t leave, I sat down and just stayed.”

Source: “The Forming of Philly Joe,” by Ralph J. Gleason, Down Beat, March 3, 1960.

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Jaimo’s Drum Room Circa 1980

SKF NOTE: After interviewing Jaimo and Butch Trucks (Modern Drummer May 1981), Jaimo and his wife at the time, Candy, invited me to spend a weekend with them at their Macon, Georgia home. It was both a fun and somber weekend – which I’ll write about sometime.

I took the photo of Jaimo in his home drum room. Attached to the door (rear left in this photo) is a chart of the human muscular system. I’m sorry my inexperience with a 35mm camera overexposed that part of the photo.

The second photo of Jaimo, Butch Trucks and yours truly was taken in the basement of a New York City bar. There was a very small office in that basement. That’s where most of the MD Jaimo/Butch interview was taped. I think this photo was taken by my friend, Bill Grillo.

L-R: Jaimo, Scott K Fish, Butch Trucks

L-R: Jaimo, Scott K Fish, Butch Trucks

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Jaimo

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