Harald Kisiedu: European Echoes: Jazz Experimentalism in Germany 1950 – 1975.
(Wolke Verlag, 256 pp., paperback, € 29. Book review by Tony Dudley-Evans)
olution. The bop
revolution is seen as a rejection of the values and methods of the swing
era and the big bands of that era; the modal and free jazz movements of
the 1960s onwards are also seen as throwing off and abandoning the
constraints of a harmonic approach to jazz. More nuanced accounts of
those key movements would, however, favour a discourse of evolution
rather than revolution, in which musicians develop their own voice
through engaging with and developing the music of a former generation.
Thus the music of the swing era can be seen as leading naturally into
the bop movement, and modal jazz and free jazz as natural developments
of bop of the 1940s and the 1950s, and the hard bop movement of the
1960s.
Author Harald Kisiedu is a music historian and lecturer at the
Institute of Music in Osnabrück, part of the University of Applied
Sciences. He is also a saxophonist, improviser and recording artist. In
this excellent survey of the German free jazz scene from 1950 to 1975, https://music.columbia.edu/bios/harald-kisiedu" rel="nofollow - based on his doctoral thesis at New York’s Columbia University ,
he discusses a similar theme in the discourse of jazz, the reference to
the growth of the German free jazz scene as ‘emancipation’, by which is
meant the breaking away from and rejection of American jazz traditions
by players in Germany. Kisiedu argues very effectively that the
discussion of the German free scene should be much more nuanced and that
the pioneers of the scene engaged very strongly with the American
scene, initially with earlier forms of jazz, and certainly with the hard
bop movement before becoming influenced by the ‘new thing’ of the late
1960s and the 1970s. So the development of the German scene should be
regarded as a process in which free players developed their own
identity, initially through listening to the key Americans and later by
playing with them. They certainly did not reject American jazz and it
can even be argued that the influence also went the other way and that
German players also had an influence on the Americans.
Kisiedu quotes George Lewis as believing that the European free scene
is part of a second generation with a globalised notion of jazz.
Kisiedu then develops this hypothesis by the detailed examination of the
careers of four key players on the German free scene: Peter Brötzmann has the first chapter to himself, then Manfred Schoof and Alexander von Schlippenbach share a chapter, followed by a chapter devoted to Ernst-Ludwig Petrowsky.
Petrowsky remained rooted in East Germany throughout the communist
period and there is thus an interesting contrast between the two German
scenes across the three chapters. There are also shorter descriptions of
the careers of Peter Kowald, Gunter Hampel, Gerd Dudek, Kurt Edelhagen, Irene Schweizer and the Kühn Brothers, Rolf and Joachim.
The detailed descriptions of the four main musicians discussed,
Brötzmann, Schoof, Schlippenbach and Petrowsky, have fascinating
similarities and differences. All four discovered American jazz partly
through the broadcasts of Willis Conover on The Voice of America, and
all four were initially attracted by the jazz of the 1950s, the hard bop
of Horace Silver and Art Blakey in the case of Schlippenbach and
Schoof, Lee Konitz and Paul Desmond in the case of Petrowsky, and,
interestingly, Humphrey Lyttelton and Chris Barber in the case of
Brötzmann. Apparently Brötzmann came with a friend to Birmingham in 1955
at the age of 14 and heard the bands of both Lyttelton and Barber and
then heard Joe Harriott in London on the way back.
All four then discovered the music of the ‘new thing’ in USA,
especially that of Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, Albert Ayler and late
Coltrane and this became the major focus of their own music. They
established strong links with the American scene and in time with other
European scenes and played a key role in making free jazz and improvised
music a vital part of worldwide contemporary music.
One major difference between the four is their route into full time
careers in music; Brötzmann received no formal musical education. His
first goal was to become a visual artist and he attended a School of
Applied Arts in Wuppertal. His musical emergence came about as result of
his involvement with Fluxus, a loose group in USA and Europe of artists
and musicians who were anti-elitism in art. He was also heavily
involved in these early days with squats and far left groups. Working
with Peter Kowald and with leaders of the American avant-garde, such as
Don Cherry, Steve Lacy and Albert Ayler cemented his commitment to free
jazz. By contrast, Schoof and Schlippenbach followed the jazz programme
at the Cologne Music School (Cologne Musikhochschule) directed by Kurt
Edelhagen, who also led a big band. Here they were strongly influenced
by their association with the Bernd Alois Zimmermann, a composer with a
strong interest in jazz and who incorporated certain features of jazz
into his compositions. Petrowsky was initially self-taught on the
saxophone, but took clarinet lessons. He attended the Weimar Music
School (Hochschule für Musik Franz Liszt Weimar), but only received
instruction in violin and piano.
All four musicians received a lot of initial opposition to their
forays into free jazz and improvised music. Brötzmann was mocked by
fellow musicians and was regarded by critics as ‘dangerous and
transgressive’. Schoof and Schlippenbach along with their mentor
Zimmermann received quite hostile opposition in the Cologne School of
Music and Petrowsky had to face the opposition of the authorities in
East Germany who associated jazz with Western decadence. It is
interesting, however, to note that jazz became respectable there as a
result of the appointment of Karl-Heinz Deim , a big jazz fan, to the
deputy directorship of East German radio station Rundfunk der DDR. He
set up Petrowky’s Ensemble Studio IV group. In this regard the increased
interest in West Germany in collaborating with players from East
Germany and the prestige that this brought also added to the willingness
of the East German authorities to tolerate jazz.
Throughout the book the role of the highly influential journalist,
author and producer Joachim-Ernst Berendt is palpable. The publicly
owned radio stations in the different states (Länder) in West Germany
and that in East Germany are shown to have been vital in their support
of jazz. It is interesting to reflect whether similar support from the
BBC would have provided a firmer base for similar experiments in UK.
The book is very successful in bringing together its hypothesis with
descriptions of the careers of the key musicians. There are many details
never before published, certainly not in English. The book is written
in very clear and easy-to-read English without losing its academic
rigour. Further details and references are provided in extensive
footnotes, but these are mostly in German. The conclusion is also clear
and apposite. The book makes an important contribution to studies of
European jazz.
LINKS: https://www.wolke-verlag.de/musikbuecher/harald-kisiedu-european-echoes/" rel="nofollow - European Echoes at Wolke Verlag