Jazz From Detroit by Mark Stryker
(Michigan University Press Hardback, 342 pp. Book Review by Andy Hamilton) Jazz from Detroit explores the city’s role in shaping modern
and contemporary jazz. The book consists of a series of critical
biographies on the city’s most notable musicians, broken up by astute
historical scene-setting and contextual chapters. It features over two
dozen profiles of Detroit musicians, featuring material from interviews
that Mark Stryker conducted, and many excellent
photographs. Stryker has been an arts reporter and critic at the Detroit
Free Press for two decades, and his book is thoroughly researched and
stylishly written, offering important insights into the geographical
basis of American jazz.
Stryker begins by citing Detroit jazz pianist Kenn Cox‘s
complaint, that listeners know about Motown and the city’s pop legacy,
but don’t recognise its importance in jazz. General Motors began in
Detroit in 1908; Chevrolet began in 1918, followed by Dodge and
Chrysler. As a result of the manufacturing boom across two World Wars, a
substantial African-American population migrated from the South. In the
1940s and ’50s, the car industry created a prosperous African-American
working and middle class in Detroit, with a vibrant nightlife. Detroit
was unusual in having an integrated school system, and musicians’ union,
and most significant was the exceptional public school music programmes
– notably at Cass Technical High School – enhanced by mentors in the
community such as pianist Barry Harris. Their pupils filled symphony orchestras across the US, as well as jazz and pop bands.
This golden age produced some remarkable musicians: Hank, Thad, and Elvin Jones, Gerald
Wilson, Milt Jackson, Yusef Lateef, Donald Byrd, Paul Chambers, Charles
McPherson, Pepper Adams, Tommy Flanagan, Sheila Jordan, Yusef Lateef,
Kenny Burrell, Ron Carter, Joe Henderson, Kenny Garrett, Geri Allen. (Bebop graduates of Cass, as well as Chambers and Carter, included Wardell Gray, Lucky Thompson, Howard McGhee, Al McKibbon, Roland Hanna and Kirk Lightsey
– an astonishing roll-call from one regional institution.) As George
Grella puts it in a review, the golden age occurred “at the delicate
balance point when jazz was a commercially viable and popular art
music”.
The city’s economic fortunes declined, and there were terrible riots
in 1967; growing mismanagement led to the 2013 bankruptcy. But
musician-run cooperatives of the 1960s and ’70s, including the Strata
Corporation and Tribe, sustained the city’s musical development. Mentors
such as trumpeter Marcus Belgrave have ensured that Detroit continues to develop great jazz players, including Belgrave protégés Kenny Garrett, Robert Hurst, Regina Carter, Gerald Cleaver, and Karriem Riggins. Stryker quotes from a 1996 interview with Joe Henderson:
“Detroit had the best listening audience…No way to come up on the
bandstand jiving”. Stryker sees a slow revival of neighbourhoods in the
city as cautious grounds for optimism.
The first musician profile is Gerald Wilson, who got his break with
Jimmie Lunceford, and was still composing into the 21st century – he
died at age 96 in 2014. Yes, he went to Cass Tech, where his fascination
with harmony began. Stryker comments that he was underrated for most of
his career, partly because he chose to live on the West Coast. But the
author doesn’t go in for undiscriminating eulogies, and offers a
critical evaluation of Wilson’s later recordings.
The chapter on Yusef Lateef perceptively links the saxophonist’s
multi-ethnic idiom with the later vogue for World music; Stryker argues
that his finest working band was with Kenny Barron and Albert Heath,
from 1971-75. Another Detroit elder is Hank Jones, whose touch Stryker
rightly describes as aristocratic. His brother Elvin had a more radical
influence on the music – Stryker comments interestingly that “the
variety of articulation of his cymbal strokes made downbeats less
discernible…for musicians whose internal time wasn’t secure”. A
particularly evocative chapter is the one on Marcus Belgrave, less known
as a player, but a key influence on Detroit musicians across 40 years;
the trumpeter reminisces about his time with Ray Charles. It’s followed
by a moving chapter on Belgrave’s greatest pupil, Geri Allen, who died
at aged 60 in 2017.
As the author comments, “Geography has always mattered in jazz”. He
makes a strong case that as well as New Orleans, Chicago, New York, Los
Angeles and Kansas City, Detroit should be known as one of the great
jazz cities. Finally, a declaration of interest – I am also a published
author of Michigan University Press, who did an excellent job with my
book of conversations with Lee Konitz in 2007. The present volume
suggests that the Press’s production standards have been maintained.
from https://londonjazznews.com