Titis Sapto's posts with tag: history of jazz
 Menyambut JavaJazz Festival, setelah kemarin saya menyajikan
jurnal Indonesia Jazz History, kali ini saya akan menyajikan jurnal history of
jazz, dari awal mula jazz itu terbentuk dan sejarah perjalanan musik jazz.. Diambil dari sebuah milis yg saya ikuti,
moga-moga jurnal ini akan menambah waawasan anda tentang dunia Jazz.
Listening to other jazz musicians is by far the most important single
thing you can do to learn about jazz improvisation. Just as no words can ever
describe what a Monet painting looks like, no primer I can write will describe
what Charlie Parker sounds like. While it is important for a performer to
develop his own style, this should not be done in isolation. You should be
aware of what others have done before you.
Having established the importance of listening, the question remains,
"What should I listen to?" Most likely, you already have some idea of
jazz musicians you like. Often, you can start with one musician and work
outwards. For example, the first jazz musician I listened to extensively was
the pianist Oscar Peterson. After buying half a dozen or so of his albums, I
found I also liked some of the musicians with whom he had performed, such as
trumpet players Freddie Hubbard and Dizzy Gillespie, and started buying their
albums as well. Then, upon hearing pianist Herbie Hancock with Hubbard, I found
a new direction to explore, one which lead me to trumpet player Miles Davis,
and thereby to saxophonist John Coltrane, and the process is still continuing.
Part of the goal of this primer is to help direct you in your listening. What
follows is a brief history of jazz, with mention of many important musicians
and albums. Note that the subject of jazz history has generated entire volumes.
A few of these are listed in the bibliography.
This primer gives a cursory overview of major periods and styles. There is a
lot of overlap in the eras and styles described. The later sections on jazz
theory are based primarily on principles developed from the 1940's through the
1960's. This music is sometimes referred to as mainstream or straightahead
jazz.
Your local library can be an invaluable asset in checking out musicians with
whom you are unfamiliar. Also, you may wish to share albums with friends.
Taping records or CD's for use by others is, of course, in violation of
copyright law, however, and it devalues the
musicians' economic reward. You should use the library, and other people's
collections, to give you an idea of what you like, and then go out and buy it.
Top Ten List
It is certainly not expected that you run out and purchase albums by all of the
artists mentioned above. In general, the artists described first and in the
most detail within a given style are considered the most important. A fairly
non-controversial "Top Ten List", containing representatives of several
styles and instruments, would be Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Billie
Holiday, Charlie Parker, Art Blakey, Charles Mingus, Thelonious Monk, Miles
Davis, John Coltrane, and Ornette Coleman. These are among the true giants of
jazz. After this, personal preferences begin to come more into play.
Early Jazz
The earliest easily available jazz recordings are from the 1920's and early
1930's. Trumpet player and vocalist Louis Armstrong ("Pops",
"Satchmo") was by far the most important figure of this period. He
played with groups called the Hot Five and the Hot Seven; any recordings you
can find of these groups are recommended. The style of these groups, and many
others of the period, is often referred to as New Orleans jazz or Dixieland. It is
characterized by collective improvisation, in which all performers
simultaneously play improvised melodic lines within the harmonic structure of
the tune. Louis, as a singer, is credited with the invention of scat, in which
the vocalist makes up nonsense syllables to sing improvised lines. Other
notable performers of New Orleans
or Dixieland jazz include clarinetist Johnny Dodds, soprano saxophone player
Sidney Bechet, trumpeter King Oliver, and trombonist Kid Ory.
Other styles popular during this period were various forms of piano jazz,
including ragtime, Harlem stride, and
boogie-woogie. These styles are actually quite distinct, but all three are
characterized by rhythmic, percussive left hand lines and fast, full right hand
lines. Scott Joplin and Jelly Roll Morton were early ragtime pioneers. Fats
Waller, Willie "The Lion" Smith and James P. Johnson popularized the
stride left hand pattern (bass note, chord, bass note, chord); Albert Ammons
and Meade Lux Lewis developed this into the faster moving left hand patterns of
boogie-woogie. Earl "Fatha" Hines was a pianist who was especially
known for his right hand, in which he did not often play full chords or arpeggios,
playing instead "horn-like" melodic lines. This has become
commonplace since then. Art Tatum is considered by many to be the greatest jazz
pianist ever; he was certainly one of the most technically gifted, and his
harmonic insights paved the way for many who came after him.He is sometimes
considered a precursor of bebop.
Big Band Jazz and Swing
Although the big bands are normally associated with a
slightly later era, there were several large bands playing during the 1920's
and early 1930's, including that of Fletcher Henderson. Bix Beiderbecke was a
cornet soloist who played with several bands and was considered a legend in his
time.
The mid 1930's brought on the swing era and the emergence of the big bands as
the popular music of the day. Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Artie
Shaw, Duke Ellington, and Count Basie led some of the more popular bands. There
were also some important small group swing recordings during the 1930's and
1940's. These differed from earlier small groups in that these featured very
little collective improvisation. This music emphasized the individual soloist.
Goodman, Ellington, and Basie recorded often in these small group settings.
Major saxophonists of the era include Johnny Hodges, Paul Gonsalves, Lester
Young, Coleman Hawkins, and Ben Webster. Trumpet players include Roy Eldridge,
Harry "Sweets" Edison, Cootie Williams, and Charlie Shavers. Pianists
include Ellington, Basie, Teddy Wilson, Erroll Garner, and Oscar Peterson;
guitarists include Charlie Christian, Herb Ellis, Barney Kessell, and Django
Reinhardt; vibraphonists include Lionel Hampton; bassists include Jimmy Blanton,
Walter Page, and Slam Stewart; drummers include Jo Jones and Sam Woodyard. Billie
Holiday, Dinah Washington, and Ella Fitzgerald were important singers in this
era. Most of these musicians recorded in small groups as well as with big
bands. The styles of these musicians can best be summarized by saying they
concentrated primarily on playing melodically, on the swing feel, and on the
development of an individual sound. The blues was, as in many other styles, an
important element of this music.
Bebop
The birth of bebop in the 1940's is often considered to mark
the beginning of modern jazz. This style grew directly out of the small swing
groups, but placed a much higher emphasis on technique and on more complex
harmonies rather than on singable melodies. Much of the theory to be discussed
later stems directly from innovations in this style. Alto saxophonist Charlie
"Bird" Parker was the father of this movement, and trumpet player
Dizzy Gillespie ("Diz") was his primary accomplice. Dizzy also led a
big band, and helped introduce Afro-Cuban music, including rhythms such as the
mambo, to American audiences, through his work with Cuban percussionists. But
it was the quintet and other small group recordings featuring Diz and Bird that
formed the foundation of bebop and most modern jazz.
While, as with previous styles, much use was made of the blues and popular
songs of the day, including songs by George Gershwin and Cole Porter, the
original compositions of the bebop players began to diverge from popular music
for the first time, and in particular, bebop was not intended to be dance music.
The compositions usually featured fast tempos and difficult eighth note runs.
Many of the bebop standards are based on the chord progressions of other
popular songs, such as "I Got Rhythm", "Cherokee", or
"How High The Moon". The improvisations were based on scales implied
by those chords, and the scales used included alterations such as the flatted
fifth.
The development of bebop led to new approaches to accompanying as well as
soloing. Drummers began to rely less on the bass drum and more on the ride
cymbal and hi-hat. Bass players became responsible for keeping the pulse by
playing almost exclusively a walking bass line consisting mostly of quarter notes
while outlining the chord progression. Pianists were able to use a lighter
touch, and in particular their left hands were no longer forced to define the
beat or to play roots of chords. In addition, the modern jazz standard form
became universal. Performers would play the melody to a piece (the head), often
in unison, then take turns playing solos based on the chord progression of the
piece, and finally play the head again. The technique of trading fours, in which
soloists exchange four bar phrases with each other or with the drummer, also
became commonplace. The standard quartet and quintet formats (piano, bass,
drums; saxophone and/or trumpet) used in bebop have changed very little since
the 1940's.
Many of the players from the previous generation helped pave the way for bebop.
These musicians included Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins, Roy Eldridge, Charlie
Christian, Jimmy Blanton, and Jo Jones. Young and Hawkins in particular are often
considered two of the most important musicians in this effort. Other bebop
notables include saxophonists Sonny Stitt and Lucky Thompson, trumpeters Fats Navarro,
Kenny Dorham, and Miles Davis, pianists Bud Powell, Duke Jordan, Al Haig, and
Thelonious Monk, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, bassists Oscar Pettiford, Tommy
Potter, and Charles Mingus, and drummers Max Roach, Kenny Clarke, and Roy
Haynes. Miles, Monk, and Mingus went on to further advances in the post-bebop
eras, and their music will be discussed later.
Cool Jazz
Although Miles Davis first appeared on bebop recordings of
Charlie Parker, his first important session as a leader was called The Birth of
the Cool. An album containing all the recordings of this group is available.
The cool jazz style has been described as a reaction against the fast tempos
and the complex melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic ideas of bebop. These ideas
were picked up by many west coast musicians, and this style is thus also called
West Coast jazz. This music is generally more relaxed than bebop. Other
musicians in the cool style include saxophonists Stan Getz and Gerry Mulligan,
and trumpet player Chet Baker. Stan Getz is also credited with the popularization
of Brazilian styles such as the bossa nova and samba. These and a few other
Latin American styles are sometimes collectively known as Latin jazz.
Many groups in the cool style do not use a piano, and instead rely on
counterpoint and harmonization among the horns, usually saxophone and trumpet,
to outline chord progressions. Pianist-led groups that developed from this
school include those of Dave Brubeck (with Paul Desmond on saxophone), Lennie
Tristano (with Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh on saxophones), and the Modern Jazz
Quartet or MJQ (featuring John Lewis on piano and Milt Jackson on vibraphone),
which also infuses elements of classical music. The incorporation of classical music
into jazz is often called the third stream.
Hard Bop
In what has been described as either an extension of bebop
or a backlash against cool, a style of music known as hard bop developed in the
1950's. This style also downplayed the technically demanding melodies of bebop,
but did so without compromising intensity. It did this by maintaining the
rhythmic drive of bebop while including a healthier dose of the blues and
gospel music. Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers was, for decades, the most
well-known exponent of this style. Many musicians came up through the so-called
"University Of
Blakey". Blakey's
early groups included pianist Horace Silver, trumpet player Clifford Brown, and
saxophonist Lou Donaldson. Clifford Brown also co-led a group with Max Roach
that is considered one of the great working quintets in history. Several albums
from these groups are available today and all are recommended. Miles Davis also
recorded several albums in this style during the early 1950's. There were also a
number of groups led by or including organists that came from this school, with
even more of a blues and gospel influence. Organist Jimmy Smith and tenor
saxophonist Stanley Turrentine were popular players in this genre.
Post Bop
The period from the mid 1950's until the mid 1960's
represents the heyday of mainstream modern jazz. Many of those now considered
among the greatest of all time achieved their fame in this era. Miles Davis had
four important groups during this time. The first featured John Coltrane
("Trane") on tenor saxophone, Red Garland on piano, Paul Chambers on
bass, and "Philly" Joe Jones on drums. This group is sometimes considered
the single greatest jazz group ever. Most of their albums are available today,
including the series of Workin' ..., Steamin' ..., Relaxin' ..., and Cookin'
with the Miles Davis Quintet. Miles perfected his muted ballad playing with
this group, and the rhythm section was considered by many to be the hardest swinging
in the business. The second important Davis
group came with the addition of alto saxophonist Julian "Cannonball"
Adderly and the replacement of Garland
with Bill Evans or Wynton Kelly and the replacement of Jones with Jimmy Cobb.
The album Kind Of Blue from this group is high on most lists of favorite jazz albums.
The primary style of this group is called modal, as it relies on songs written
around simple scales or modes that often last for many measures each, as opposed
to the quickly changing complex harmonies of bebop derived styles. The third Davis group of the era
was actually the Gil Evans orchestra. Miles recorded several classic albums
with Gil, including Sketches Of Spain. The fourth important Miles group of this
period included Wayne Shorter on saxophone, Herbie Hancock on piano, Ron Carter
on bass, and Tony Williams on drums. The early recordings of this group,
including Live at the Plugged Nickel, as well as the earlier My Funny Valentine,
with George Coleman on saxophone instead of Wayne Shorter, mainly feature innovative
versions of standards. Later recordings such as Miles Smiles and Nefertiti
consist of originals, including many by Wayne Shorter, that largely transcend
traditional harmonies. Herbie Hancock developed a new approach to harmonization
that was based as much on sounds as on any conventional theoretical underpinning.
John Coltrane is another giant of this period. In addition to his playing with
Miles, he recorded the album Giant Steps under his own name, which showed him
to be one of the most technically gifted and harmonically advanced players
around. After leaving Miles, he formed a quartet with pianist McCoy Tyner,
drummer Elvin Jones, and a variety of bass players, finally settling on Jimmy
Garrison. Coltrane's playing with this group showed him to be one of the most intensely
emotional players around. Tyner is also major voice on his instrument,
featuring a very percussive attack. Elvin Jones is a master of rhythmic
intensity. This group evolved constantly, from the relatively traditional post bop
of My Favorite Things to the high energy modal of A Love Supreme to the wailing
avant garde of Meditations and Ascension.
Charles Mingus was another influential leader during this period. His small
groups tended to be less structured than others, giving more freedom to the
individual players, although Mingus also directed larger ensembles in which
most of the parts were written out. Mingus' compositions for smaller groups
were often only rough sketches, and performances were sometimes literally
composed or arranged on the bandstand, with Mingus calling out directions to
the musicians. Alto saxophonist, bass clarinetist, and flautist Eric Dolphy was
a mainstay of Mingus' groups. His playing was often described angular, meaning
that the interval in his lines was often large leaps, as opposed to scalar
lines, consist mostly of steps. The album Charles Mingus Presents Charles
Mingus featuring Dolphy is a classic.
Thelonious Monk is widely regarded as one of the most important composers in
jazz, as well as being a highly original pianist. His playing is more sparse
than most of his contemporaries. Some of his albums include Brilliant Corners
and Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane. Pianist Bill Evans was known as one of
the most sensitive ballad players, and his trio albums, particularly Waltz For
Debby, with Scott LaFaro on bass and Paul Motian on drums, are models of trio
interplay. Wes Montgomery was one of the most influential of jazz guitarists.
He often played in groups with an organist, and had a particularly soulful
sound. He also popularized the technique of playing solos in octaves. His early
albums include Full House. Later albums were more commercial and less well regarded.
Tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins rivaled Coltrane in popularity and recorded many
albums under his own name, including Saxophone Colossus and The Bridge, which also
featured Jim Hall on guitar. Sonny also recorded with Clifford Brown, Miles
Davis, Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk, and other giants.
Other noteworthy musicians of the era include saxophonists Jackie McLean,
Dexter Gordon, Joe Henderson, and Charlie Rouse; trumpet players Freddie
Hubbard, Lee Morgan, Woody Shaw, and Booker Little; trombonists J. J. Johnson
and Curtis Fuller; clarinetist Jimmy Guiffre, pianists Tommy Flanagan, Hank
Jones, Bobby Timmons, Mal Waldron, Andrew Hill, Cedar Walton, Chick Corea, and
Ahmad Jamal; organist Larry Young, guitarists Kenny Burrell and Joe Pass; guitarist
and harmonica player Toots Thielemans; vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson; bassists
Ray Brown, Percy Heath, Sam Jones, Buster Williams, Reggie Workman, Doug Watkins,
and Red Mitchell; drummers Billy Higgins and Ben Riley; and vocalists Jon
Hendricks, Eddie Jefferson, Sarah Vaughan, Betty Carter, Carmen McRae, Abbey
Lincoln, and Shirley Horn. Big bands such as those of Woody Herman and Stan Kenton
also thrived.
Free Jazz and the Avant Garde
During these same decades of the 1950's and 1960's, some musicians took jazz in
more exploratory directions. The terms free jazz and avant garde are often used
to describe these approaches, in which traditional forms, harmony, melody, and
rhythm were extended considerably or even abandoned. Saxophonist Ornette
Coleman and trumpet player Don Cherry were pioneers of this music through
albums such as The Shape Of Jazz To Come and Free Jazz. The former album, as
well as several more recorded with a quartet that also include either Scott
LaFaro or Charlie Haden on bass and either Billy Higgins or Ed Blackwell on
drums, still retains the basic feel of traditional post bop small group jazz,
with alternating soloists over a walking bass line and swinging drum beat. This
style is sometimes known as freebop. The album Free Jazz was a more cacophonous
affair that featured collective improvisation.
Another major figure in the avant garde movement was pianist Cecil Taylor. His
playing is very percussive, and includes dissonant clusters of notes and fast
technical passages that do not appear to be based on any particular harmonies
or rhythmic pulse.
John Coltrane, as already mentioned, delved into the avant garde in the mid 1960's.
Albums such as Ascension and Interstellar Space show Coltrane absorbing both
Free Jazz and the works of Cecil Taylor. Later Coltrane groups featured his
wife Alice on piano and Rashied Ali on drums, as well as Pharoah Sanders on
tenor saxophone. He also recorded an album The Avant Garde with Don Cherry that
is interesting for its parallels with The Shape of Jazz to come and other
Ornette Coleman quartet recordings. Coltrane influenced many other musicians,
including saxophonists Archie Shepp, Sam Rivers, and Albert Ayler.
Sun Ra is a somewhat enigmatic figure in the avant garde, claiming to be from
the planet Saturn. He plays a variety of keyboard instruments with his big
bands that range from 1920's style swing to the wilder free jazz of Coltrane
and others.
Fusion
Miles Davis helped ushers in the fusion of jazz and rock in
the mid to late 1960's through albums such as Bitches Brew and Jack Johnson. His
bands during this period featured Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, and Joe Zawinul
on electric piano, Ron Carter and Dave Holland on bass, John McLaughlin on guitar,
and Tony Williams and Jack DeJohnette on drums. Tony Williams formed a rock
oriented band called Lifetime with John McLaughlin, who also formed his own
high energy group, the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Through the 1970's Miles continued
to explore new directions in the use of electronics and the incorporation of
funk and rock elements into his music, leading to albums such as Pangea and
Agharta.
Other groups combined jazz and rock in a more popularly oriented manner, from
the crossover Top 40 of Spyro Gyra and Chuck Mangione to the somewhat more
esoteric guitarist Pat Metheny. Other popular fusion bands include Weather
Report, featuring Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul, and bass players Jaco Pastorius
and Miroslav Vitous; Return To Forever, featuring Chick Corea and bassist
Stanley Clarke; The Crusaders, featuring saxophonist Wilton Felder and
keyboardist Joe Sample; the Yellowjackets, featuring keyboardist Russell
Ferrante; and the Jeff Lorber Fusion, which originally featured Kenny G on saxophone.
In recent years, several fusion bands have achieved much commercial success,
including those of Pat Metheny and Kenny G.
Post Modern Jazz
While fusion seemed to dominate the jazz market in the
1970's and early 1980's, there were other developments as well. Some performers
started borrowing from 20th century classical music as well as African and
other forms of world music. These musicians include Don Cherry, Charlie Haden,
saxophonists Anthony Braxton, David Murray, and Dewey Redman, clarinetist John Carter,
pianists Carla Bley and Muhal Richard Abrams, the World Saxophone Quartet,
featuring four saxophonists with no rhythm section, and the Art Ensemble Of Chicago,
featuring trumpet player Lester Bowie and woodwind player Roscoe Mitchell.
Their music tended to emphasize compositional elements more sophisticated than
the head-solos-head form.
Some groups, such as Oregon,
rejected the complexity and dissonance of modern jazz and played in a much
simpler style, which has given rise to the current New Age music. On the other
extreme are musicians like saxophonist John Zorn and guitarists Sonny Sharrock and
Fred Frith, who engaged in a frenetic form of free improvisation sometimes called
energy music. Somewhere in between was the long lived group formed by saxophonist
George Adams, who was influenced by Coltrane and Pharoah Sanders, and pianist
Don Pullen, who was influenced by Cecil Taylor. This group drew heavily from
blues musicand well as the avant garde. Other important musicians during the
1970's and 1980's include pianists Abdullah Ibrahim, Paul Bley, Anthony Davis
and Keith Jarrett.
Not all developments in jazz occur in the United States. Many European
musicians extended some of the free jazz ideas of Ornette Coleman and Cecil
Taylor, and further dispensed with traditional forms. Others turned toward a
more introspective music. Some of the more successful of the European improvisers
include saxophonists Evan Parker, John Tchicai, John Surman, and Jan Garbarek,
trumpet players Kenny Wheeler and Ian Carr, pianist John Taylor, guitarists Derek
Bailey and Allan Holdsworth, bassist Eberhard Weber, drummer John Stevens, and
arrangers Mike Westbrook, Franz Koglman, and Willem Breuker.
The Present
One of the big trends of today is a return to the bebop and
post bop roots of modern jazz. This movement is often referred to as neoclassicism.
Trumpeter Wynton Marsalis and his brother, saxophonist Branford Marsalis, have
achieved much popular success playing music that is based on styles of the
1950's and 1960's. The best of this group of young musicians, including the
Marsalises and their rhythm sections of Kenny Kirkland or Marcus Roberts on
piano, Bob Hurst on bass, and Jeff "Tain" Watts on drums, manage to
extend the art through new approaches to melodicism, harmony, rhythm, and form,
rather than just recreate the music of past masters.
An exciting development since the mid 1980's has been a collective of musicians
that refers to its music as M-Base. There seems to be some disagreement, even
among its members, as to what this means exactly, but the music is
characterized by angular melodic lines played over complex funky beats with
unusual rhythmic twists. This movement is led by saxophonists Steve Coleman,
Greg Osby, and Gary Thomas, trumpet player Graham Haynes, trombonist Robin
Eubanks, bass player Anthony Cox, and drummer Marvin "Smitty" Smith.
Many other musicians are making strong music in the modern tradition. Among musicians
already mentioned, there are Ornette Coleman, David Murray, Joe Henderson,
Dewey Redman, Cecil Taylor, Charlie Haden, Dave Holland, Tony Williams, and
Jack DeJohnette. Others include saxophonists Phil Woods, Frank Morgan, Bobby
Watson, Tim Berne, John Zorn, Chico Freeman, Courtney Pine, Michael Brecker,
Joe Lovano, Bob Berg, and Jerry Bergonzi; clarinetists Don Byron and Eddie
Daniels; trumpet players Tom Harrell, Marcus Belgrave, and Arturo Sanduval;
trombonists Steve Turre and Ray Anderson; pianists Geri Allen, Mulgrew Miller,
Kenny Barron, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Eduard Simon, Renee Rosnes, and Marilyn Crispell;
guitarists John Scofield, Bill Frisell, and Kevin Eubanks; vibraphonist Gary
Burton; bassists Niels-Henning Oersted Pedersen and Lonnie Plaxico; and
vocalists Bobby McFerrin and Cassandra Wilson. This is by no means a complete list,
and you are encouraged to listen to as many musicians as possible to increase
your awareness and appreciation for different styles.
Sedikit artikel ttg Sejarah jazz di Indonesia, diambil dari suatu milis. Untuk menambah pengetahuan kita ttg jazz tanah air. Sekaligus menyambut pergelaran ajang Java Jazz Festival yg akan diadakan minggu depan di JCC. Enjoy !
Indonesian Jazz History
Although the musical
style known as jazz was first synthesized in the United States in the
years just before the First World War, it is today a music that knows
no international boundaries. Good jazz is now being played on every
continent. What's more, some its most talented musicians - and the
most fervent fans- are Asian.
Jazz first began to be
heard in Indonesia in the late Thirties when it was played by the
visiting Filipino musicians who had come to Indonesia to earn their
livings as entertainers. Through their playing, many Indonesian
listeners first had the opportunity to hear wind instruments
(trumpets, saxophones and so on) usually then featured only in
so-called "serious" music played in an exciting new way.
That early jazz-influenced music had quite an impact on young people
of the day and represented a real contrast to the staid European
heritage that then represented "high culture."
Among the other musical
elements introduced by these visitors from the Philippines were Latin
rhythms - rumbas, sambas, boleros, and more. Many old-timers still
recall the names of the more prominent of the visiting Filipino
stars: Soleano, Garcia, Pablo, Baial,
Torio, Barnarto, and
Samboyan. Some stayed for long periods in Jakarta and were even
featured as soloists with the Indonesian Radio Orchestra. Others
found opportunities to play in cities in various regions of the
country. Samboyan, for example, became leader of the Bandung Studio
Orchestra. Through the process of observation and osmosis, these new
musical influences began to be reflected in the playing of young
Indonesian musicians.
Where were theses
intriguing new orchestras and smaller groups being heard around
Indonesia in the late Thirties? Filipino musicians were entertaining
and playing for dancers at Hotel Des Indes (on what is now the site
of Duta Merlin Plaza), at Hotel Der Nederlander (there are government
offices in that location today), at the Savoy Homann Hotel in
Bandung, and at the Orange Hotel in Surabaya. At these and other
popular spots, the Dutch mingled on occasion with upper-crust
Indonesians.
It is said that the first
song composed by an Indonesian specifically to entertain (and using a
standard song pattern) was one called "Als de Orchideen Bloeien"
("When The Orchids Bloom") by Ismail Marzuki. The lyrics
were in Dutch and the date of publication was November 1939.
Western-influenced music
was banned by the Japanese during their occupation. However, Asian
music was allowed. And so was keroncong, which was regarded as
traditional music. But with the expulsion of the Japanese and the new
availability of Western recordings, a broad musical revolution began
to occur. Certain individual musicians began to garner local
reputations for the clever ways; they adapted overseas influences as
a part of their own styles. Pianist Marihot Hutabarat, for example,
played with a flair not unlike George Shearing's. He often
accompanied singer Sal Saulius Hutabarat, whose baritone voice was
said to resemble Billy Eckstine's. Bing Slamet's singing, on the
other hand, reflected the influence of Bing Crosby's popular records.
Over sixty Dutch
musicians came to Indonesia in 1948 with the intention of organizing
a symphony orchestra made up primarily of local musicians. Before
they returned to Holland around the time of independence, they had
established the Radio Philharmonic Orchestra. Among the best known of
these Dutch musicians were Baarspoel, Fritz Hintze, Henk te Strake,
and Jose Cleber. Some of them lingered beyond their original period
of commitment and helped to form ensembles of other sorts.
Cleber's Jakarta Studio
Orchestra featured big band arrangements that sounded a lot like what
Stan Kenton's band was doing in California around that time. Other
prominent groups of the time included The Progressive Trio (with Dick
Able as guitarist, Nick Mamahit on piano, and Dick van der Capellen
playing bass); Iskandar's Sextet and Octet, which played modern jazz
arrangements; The Old Timers, led by Eto Latumeten on tenor saxophone
and playing a Dixieland repertoire.
In 1955, Bill Saragih
formed the Jazz Riders with himself on piano, vibes, and flute, Didi
Chia on piano, Paul Hutabarat as vocalist, Herman Tobing on bass, and
Yuse on drums. A later edition featured Hanny Joseph playing drums,
Sutrisno playing tenor saxophone, Thys Lopis on bass and Bob Tutupoly
as featured singer.
As the jazz style became
more popular, other names gained prominence: pianists Taslan Suyatno
and Mus Mualim, trumpeter Ari Tess, drummer Benny van Dietz (Benny
Mustafa), and many others. The leading lights in Surabaya between
1945 and 1950 were Jack Lemmers / Jack Lesmana (bass), Bubi Chen
(piano), Teddy Chen, Jopy Chen (bass), Maryono (saxophone), Berges
(piano), Oei Boen Leng (guitar), Didi Pattirane (guitar), Mario Diaz
(drums), and Benny Heinem (clarinet). During the Fifties and Sixties,
the big names on the Bandung jazz scene were Eddy Karamoy (guitar),
Joop Talahahu (tenor saxophone), Leo Massenggi, Benny Pablo, Dolf
(alto saxophone), John Lepel (bass), Iskandar (guitar and piano), and
Sadikin Zuchra (guitar and piano).
Among the younger
musicians who began to be heard in Jakarta during the Seventies and
Eighties are the late Perry Pattiselano (bass), Embong Raharjo (saxophone),
Luluk Purwanto (violin), Oele Pattiselano (guitar), Jackie
Pattiselano (drums), Benny Likumahuwa (trombone and bass), Bambang
Nugroho (piano), Elfa Secioria (piano). Some of these younger players
leaned toward rock and fusion, but occasionally had opportunities to
play in a jazz context: Yopie Item (guitar), Karim Suweileh (drums),
Wimpy Tanasale (bass), Abadi Soesman (keyboards), Candra Darusman
(keyboards), Christ Kayhatu (piano), Joko WH (guitar), and many
others.
There are doubtless many
other names deserving of mention. The list above represents only a
cross-section of musical talent in past decades. The musical scene in
Indonesia today is a busy one, with many chances for talented players
to earn their livings playing for television, in nightclubs and as
back-up for pop singers. But many of them would like to have the
chance to play real jazz more often because it's music that
stimulates and challenges them. As lovers of this music, we should
support them wherever and whenever we can. Our enthusiasm will allow
them to keep the music as vital and as omnipresent as it should be!
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