[Dixielandjazz] Latin influences on early jazz

Joe Carbery joe.carbery at gmail.com
Wed Oct 28 18:49:55 PDT 2015


Hi Keith et al,

Re Scottish drumming: I've always been incredibly impressed by the drumming
in pipe bands. When they really get warmed up the cross-rhythms are
amazing. It's a tradition which has been kept alive here in New Zealand. If
my memory serves me correctly, Max Harrison maintained that the rhythmic
approach in jazz has been more European than anything else.

Joe Carbery.

On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 2:16 PM, Ken Mathieson <
ken at kenmath.free-online.co.uk> wrote:

> Hi Charlie et al,
>
> I've been enjoying this thread and would like to add my tuppenceworth as
> we say in Scotland (that's two cents' worth for transatlantic listmates).
> I'll start off by challenging Charlie's assertion that "the tango is a very
> limited rhythmic background rhythm, lacking the energy and thrust of
> syncopated jazz that's often superimposed in solos over it." If Charlie
> means the simplified, repetitive pattern of the Tango as played by Gringo
> musicians for Gringo dancers he's got a point. But hear a good Argentinian
> rhythm section playing tango for skilled Argentinian dancers and it has a
> subtle, pulsating and fluid feel, with passages drifting in and out of
> double time and with dramatic rubatos and pauses which the dancers respond
> to, all the while building to a driving climax. As someone once observed of
> porteno tango "it's the vertical expression of horizontal desire!" The same
> thing can be said of gringo attempts to standardise and simplify samba,
> beguine, son, rumba etc. Indeed the rhythm called rumba in the Anglo-Saxon
> world is closer to a simplified bolero and a million miles away from
> authentic Cuban rumba in which percussion patterns become radically
> dislodged from the downbeat. Likewise in the Anglo-Saxon world the beguine
> rhythm is a misnomer and is in fact truly a simplified bolero (as in When
> They Begin the Beguine), whereas the Antillean beguine of Martinique and
> Guadelupe is usually a lively mid- to up-tempo rhythm with percussion
> patterns similar to bossa nova over a habanera bass pattern.
>
> Given the non-existence of gramophone records in jazz's formative phase,
> it's likely that incoming stylistic influences were delivered by musicians
> for whom these styles were second nature. And just because these styles
> became watered down to make them more suited to Anglo-Saxon dance
> conventions, we shouldn't discount the impact of the real thing on early
> jazz players. A case in point is the music of the Caribbean: New Orleans
> was the most important port on the Gulf of Mexico and trade with the
> Caribbean islands was colossally important, so the music of the whole
> Caribbean must have have been familiar to the early jazz players. If you're
> in doubt, check out the similarities between the music of the New Orleans
> Creoles and the authentic beguines of Martinique (Stellio and Ernest
> Leardee). The Cuban/Puerto Rican influence was felt very early in NYC:
> Benny Waters told a musician friend of mine that when he first went to New
> York in the mid 1920s, many of the young black musicians went to regularly
> to hear the Puerto Rican bands in East Harlem, whose trumpeters, in Benny's
> words, "played just like Dizzy Gillespie; where do you think he got it
> from?" Als worth checking out is Brasilian choro music, which roughly
> parallels the development of jazz from ragtime through informal small group
> playing and a big band phase and eventually spun off into Bossa Nova with
> parallels in the Californian Cool School.
>
> Re the influence of Scots-Irish music, much of this came through bluegrass
> fiddle playing and had some influence on ragtime. However another
> overlooked influence came from the drumming in Scottish traditional dance
> music. I was a friend of the late great Jake Hanna, who was very interested
> in the highly technical Scottish pipe band drumming tradition. One night
> after hours at the Sacramento Jubilee, Jake and I were in the company of
> Scots-born saxophonist, Jim Galloway. Jake had asked me about the drumming
> in Scottish Country Dance bands and when I was struggling to describe it,
> Jim suggested that he and I and the bassist and pianist from Fat Sam's Band
> who were also present, should play Jake a few selections. We did this and
> Jake listened carefully. When we'd finished, Jake said that, as a
> youngster, he had heard Zutty Singleton and other early New Orleans
> drummers (I'm nearly sure he also heard Baby Dodds, but wouldn't swear to
> it) and that the New Orleans style of jazz drumming had more to do with
> Scottish Country Dance drumming than it had to do with Africa. I thought he
> was kidding, but he was insistent that the drum patterns essentially
> contributed great horizontal drive while the bass and piano were stressing
> the vertical strong beats. In effect the drummer's role was essentially the
> same and the techniques employed were very similar.
>
> Interesting thread - thanks Charlie!
>
> Ken Mathieson
>
>
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