lundi 10 décembre 2012

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What is Jazz?

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Jazz Music Is Ecstatic Language

By  Published: December 7, 2012
Leonardo DaVinci once said, "Do you know that our souls are composed of music?" Music and religion are intimately linked, and music is one of the most powerful tools to convey religious meaning. As human beings, we have been given the gift of musical language which can help transform us from our humdrum, everyday existence, into something out of the ordinary. Whether music excites or soothes us, it transports us to another place. When we play and listen to music it can lift us out of ourselves to enjoy the very language of the heavens. To quote Albert Einstein, "Human beings, vegetables, or cosmic dust—we all dance to a mysterious tune, intoned in the distance by an invisible piper." Music is not just sound vibrations or notes on paper—it is ecstatic language. In this article I want to explore jazz music and the ecstatic experience.
The word "ecstatic" comes from the Greek language and means "to step outside oneself." The word "ecstatic" is derived from the word "ecstasy" and can be defined as something outside the realm of normal experience—something incomprehensible or foreign to our ordinary understanding and experiences. An ecstatic experience is one of forgetting ourselves for the moment, of getting outside oneself in that moment. The ecstatic nature of music and the effect it has on the performers and listeners cannot be denied. It is universal, and something that all humans experience—not only in music but in many other arenas of life.There are those moments when performers and listeners are so into the music that time itself seems to be suspended, so totally absorbed are they by the musical experience that it can be emotionally overwhelming. Playing and/or listening to music can be totally energizing; it can be a spiritual experience. It appears that our brains and our very souls are hardwired to respond.
There are many musicians who, while playing jazz, have experienced what's been called,"breakthroughs" or "ecstatic" experiences. A careful study of the history of jazz reveals many moments where the music has become a very expressive and powerful vehicle which points to a spiritual dimension in life. Whether at funerals in New Orleans or in New York jazz clubs, music like pianist Duke Ellington's beautiful sacred jazz compositions and saxophonist John Coltrane's A Love Supreme (Impulse!, 1965) have been created and played for spiritual purposes. In fact, many jazz musicians and fans understand that both the music and improvisation are of a deeply spiritual nature. Trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie once shared that, ..."the church had a deep significance for me musically. I first learned there how music could transport people spiritually." Many musicians who are considered founding fathers of jazz music from New Orleans—cornetist King Oliver, pianist Jelly Roll Morton and trumpeter Louis Armstrong—were all brought up in church, and church music played a very important role in their musical development. The African/Negro spirituals also played a most important role in the birth of the music today called jazz.
The Reverend Alan Kershaw poignantly states, ..."jazz played with a feeling and inspiration seems to me more truly an act of worship than singing some of the religious songs I learned back in Sunday School. Life is so big and wide and deep that you just have to go beyond what's superficial, and banal, and what's phony. Faith rises above the streets, above the slime and the suffering men, to the source of goodness Himself. In this sense, jazz becomes a glorious anthem of praise." As jazz music is played and improvisation takes place, both the audience and the performers can become transported to a higher place. Entering another world of euphoric awareness and deep sensitivity, they can experience a profound sense of reverence for life and all living things; they become jazzed! In fact, it could be effectively argued that the word "jazz" and the word "ecstasy" mean virtually the very same thing.
Whatever you choose to call these experiences, they can be so energizing and joyful that you will never forget them. These ecstatic experiences are not, however, to be confused with the normal emotional responses that you have when playing or listening to music. During these special experiences time can seem to be temporarily suspended and the intensity is overwhelming. Trumpeter Wynton Marsalis has shared that in playing jazz music, "sustained intensity equals ecstasy."

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