Be-Bop, Be-Bop Daddy-In
Honor Of The Centennial Of The Birth Of The Mad Monk- Thelonious Monk
By Zack James
No question I was (and
still am on nostalgia late nights) a child of rock and roll and while I was
just a shade too young to appreciate what was driving my older brothers and
sisters to blow their socks off screaming about the new dispensation brought
forth by Carl, Elvis, Jerry Lee, Buddy and a fistful of other (and earlier influences
like Big Joe Turner, Warren Smith, Smiley Jackson) I was washed clean in the
afterglow of that time. Then the music died, got stale for a time and I, along
with a billion other lost tween and teen souls, was looking for something to
take the pain away from having to listen to Conway Twitty, Fabian, and Bobby Dee
and Sandra Dee(I won’t even get into the beef I have with those guys who “stole”
the hearts of the very girls I was interested in who would not give me a tumble
since I was not their kind of “cute”). Later before the rock revival of the
1960s-the British Invasion for one thing I feasted on the folk minute.
But that was later. In between
those times during the drought I got “hip” to jazz, to the cool ass max daddy of
cooled-off jazz not the stuff that my parents were crazy for-you know Harry James,
Jimmy Dorsey, the Duke, the Count, the Big Earl beautiful Fatah Hines (I would appreciate
those pioneers a little late-about fifty years late). What caught my ear one
night when I was flipping the dial on my transistor radio (look it up on
Wikipedia if you don’t know what that life-saver was) and I caught a few strands
of a piece on Bill Marlowe’s Be-Bop Jazz Hour (it was really two hours but hour
probably sounded better in the show’s title). After that piece was over, really
after several pieces were completed since the show unlike rock and roll shows
was not inundated with commercials after every song Bill mentioned that those
pieces had been performed by a guy he called the Mad Monk. Mentioned Thelonious
Monk in a loving awestruck way as a max daddy of cool, very cool, maybe ice cold
jazz. This I could listen to. Moreover the whole show was filled with cool jazz
including guys like Charley Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Charley Christian, the
Prez, sweet Billy Holiday when she blasted outside the big band sound.
Get this though the
real hook was that some guys like Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, William Burrows
and a bunch of sidekicks were setting the cool ass jazz to poetry, to “beat” poetry
that I was beginning to hear about. Started talking in clipped voices about there
being new sheriffs in town-about the time of the hipsters come down to earth- that
the thaw was on and that you had better get on board and some of us did-did
catch the tail end of beat fever. But you cannot understand “beat” without paying dues to guys like the Monk who
was born a hundred years ago this year. Could not understand “beat” if you didn’t
“dig” the Monk on the piano searching for that high white note to blow the
world out into the China seas. Thanks-brother.
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