Album Review: David Amram | Live in Germany 1954-2013
(After the Fall Records)
By Peter Aaron
Still very much with us and creating at the beautiful age of 92 is Beacon-based musician and composer David Amram. The genius multi-instrumentalist has a staggering resume of collaborators that no one else in American music can touch: Jack Kerouac, Charlie Parker, Jackson Pollock, Aaron Copland, Thelonious Monk, and Dizzy Gillespie, are just a few of the giants he's worked with during his incredible career. Live in Germany 1954-2013 pairs music from two great concerts co-led by Amram that were taped 60 years apart.
The 1954 set was recorded for the Armed Forces Radio Network and stars Armam alongside trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff, a pioneer of European free jazz, and the Jazzkellar Band, a quintet that also includes the great pianist Jutta Hipp. Rescued from a rare transcription disc, the historic performance bounces with the bop of the era and has Amram and Mangelsdorff blowing joyously on standards ("Blue Skies") and the original "Dave's Blues." The 2013 concert finds him trading in his earlier French horn for piano, pennywhistles, Middle Eastern shepherd's flute, and vocals. With alto saxophonist Emil Mangelsdorff deputizing for his departed brother, it's a classy program that features the composer's tender score for the 1961 film Splendor in the Grass and yet more rapturous romps through standards, this time "Take the A Train" and Monk's "Straight No Chaser." As the maestro so sagely scats on the latter, "Be creative each and every day / because that is the jazz way."
Making A New Kind Of Scene: New York City's Five Spot
By David Johnson
`
David
Amram performing at New York City's Five Spot in 1957. (Photo by
Burt Glenn courtesy of the David Amram Archive NYC
Public Library Lincoln Center Branch)
We're
going to spend the next hour at a hip little jazz bar in late
1950s New York City called the Five Spot, listening to music
from Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane,
Eric Dolphy and Booker Little, Ornette Coleman and the
Jazztet--and sitting at our table, musician David
Amram and author Dan Wakefield, who
frequented this bar in its heyday, offering their commentary on
one of those places that caught cultural lightning in a bottle
for awhile.
New
York City, 1957: Jack Kerouac's On
The Road is the
literary sensation of the season. West
Side Story is making
its Broadway debut. The abstract expressionist painters are still
at the zenith of their popularity and influence. Frank
O'Hara, John Ashberry and
others from what would come to be called the"New York School
of Poets" are beginning to shake up the poetry world.
Novelist Norman
Mailer publishes the
controversial essay "The White Negro." And
pianist Thelonious Monk and
saxophonist John
Coltrane are performing
nightly at a little storefront Bowery bar called the Five Spot.
It
is easy to make the case that New York City at this moment is the
cultural capital of America, and perhaps the world. And jazz is
the music of this moment—jazz still absorbing all of the
innovative thrusts of the past several decades, with more on the
way. One of the best places to hear jazz in New York City in 1957
was the Five Spot. It was a small space with an official capacity
of 75, run by brothers Frank and Joe Termini, that had only
recently begun to feature jazz, after years of catering to a
down-and-out Bowery customer base. Of it Greenwich Village
historian Terry Miller would later proclaim, " A new
underground formed here, and painters, writers, and jazz
musicians joined forces to stage an assault on the very
definitions of art, music, literature, and theater."
Musician
and composer David Amram was a young Renaissance
man of jazz in the mid-1950s, playing and recording with Charles
Mingus, leading his own group that performed at the Five Spot in
1957, and often hanging out with all of the artists and area
residents who began to frequent the Five Spot in the mid-1950s:
It
was just like a neighborhood bar… only it wasn't Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood! It was more like Mr. and Ms. Wino's Pre-Memorial
Service. So they gradually mopped the floor once or twice, and
got some chairs with holes in them… but it was still a downhome
neighborhood bar, in I wouldn't say a rough area, but a tough
area. And somehow, when you walk into places like that, just as
Mingus told me that first night at the Café Bohemia, he said,
‘Man, no matter how ratty the joint, every night with me is
Carnegie Hall.' I mean, when Monk played there with Coltrane and
I went there opening night with him and the Baroness drove us
down in her great beautiful car—we were there sitting at the
table with Monk and his family. And other people are just sitting
around there, and everybody was hanging out with everybody! It
was very neighborly, and unlike the rest of New York, no one said
‘WHAT DO YOU DO?' You didn't have to prove your credentials to
be acknowledged as a member of the human race. Everybody was
there to hear music and to escape that kind of penitentiary of
snobbism. It just was a place where somehow you could sense there
was something terrific happening.
Dan
Wakefield, a young writer from
Indiana living in New York in the 1950s, who would go on to write
the best-selling novel Going
All The Way, was another
frequent habitue of the Five Spot:
Everybody
went to the Five Spot. Writers, artists, musicians… I never had
the sense that any Wall Street guys were at the Five Spot. They
might have been, in disguise! But it was very informal; it wasn't
like a nightclub. It was just a place you would go to hang out,
and you could sit for a long time nursing a beer, and everything
was very cheap. There was no cover, no minimum. And I later
learned that it was really started by the fact that in the
Bowery, a lot of painters had lofts there where they worked.
And (the Five Spot) was
just a regular bar, and some piano player was there, and they
encouraged the owner to have him back, and then they encouraged
the owner to have other musicians, and it sort of grew out of
that.
David
Amram was part of that cross-group of painters and musicians who
helped establish the Five Spot as a jazz venue—and who brought
in its first boundary-pushing performer:
The
painters went over there and suddenly this was a big boon for the
Termini brothers. They had people who could get one of those
gigantic pitchers of beer for 75 cents and have five people drink
all night… but at least that would be a dollar or two they'd be
sure they would make. Since I was friends with a lot of the
painters, some of them would come over to hear me play. So I
brought down this wonderful young piano player that I had met
when I was playing with Mingus,
named Cecil
Taylor. Who was
very original—REALLY original—and really unusual, had his own
thing. I mean, REALLY different than anybody I'd ever heard or
anybody had ever heard. And he was also very strong and
percussive, and he played a LOT, with a lot of different
shadings… but this crummy old piano that they had at the Five
Spot, he was wailing away and he broke about three (laughs) of
the little hammers that are connected to the keys—they were
probably ready to croak anyway—and Joe (Termini) came and said
"You broke my piano! You can never come back here!..."
He was shouting at us, even though he was a nice guy. And Joan
Mitchell, who's a great painter, who's now revered, but back then
was appreciated by her peers, and a lot of the other painters
said, ‘Hey! Cecil Taylor, we think he's a GENIUS! And we love
Amram, and if you don't have those guys come back whenever they
want to, WE'RE not gonna come back!' So that was kind of
unusual (laughs), and
since they were the only customers—they also were pretty heavy
drinkers, but they could also pay their minimal bar fees—(Joe)
said ‘Gee, I don't wanna lose my only cash customers,' so
begrudgingly he said ‘OK, we'll let those guys play.'"
Here's
pianist Cecil Taylor performing "Rick Kick Shaw" from
his album Jazz Advance,
recorded in September of 1956 with Buell Neidlinger on bass and
Dennis Charles on drums--the same group that would perform at the
Five Spot from late November of 1956 to early January of 1957.
Then
there was Thelonious Monk. The iconoclastic pianist
called "the high priest of bebop" had made his first
impact in the jazz world in the 1940s, but the loss of his
cabaret card in 1951 after he took the fall for a fellow musician
on a drug charge had kept him from being able to legally perform
in New York City. In the summer of 1957, with his cabaret card
restored, Monk began a run at the Five Spot that has entered the
annals of jazz history—not just because it helped reintroduce
him to a new generation of listeners, but also because his band
included saxophonist John Coltrane, who had just
kicked his heroin addiction and was finding the artistic way that
would propel him over the next 10 years to becoming one of jazz's
most revered and influential figures. Jazz critic Nat Hentoff
compared the significance of Coltrane's stint with Monk at the
Five Spot to the young Louis Armstrong playing with older
trumpeter King Oliver in Chicago in the 1920s.
David
Amram: When
Monk was there and John Coltrane was playing a solo, that was the
first time any of us had ever seen Monk get up, and Monk starts
yelling "Coltrane, Coltrane!" and starts dancing around
the room. People were saying, ‘What is this?!' And then they
realized that John Coltrane was doing what they called ‘sheets
of sound', but he didn't dare do that as I understand
with MilesDavis,
who had just fired Coltrane because of Coltrane's drug addiction,
which Coltrane kicked before beginning to play with Monk). And
when he did it with Monk, instead of Monk getting angry and
saying ‘Don't mess up my set,' Monk encouraged that, because he
could hear and feel that Coltrane was doing something that he
wanted to do right from the heart, and it touched Monk. So
instead of giving him a bad ray, he got up from the piano and
started yelling ‘Coltrane! Coltrane!' and dancing. And when he
was dancing it wasn't because he was needy for attention. He was
painting a picture for everybody that part of this music, what
Coltrane was doing, was actually a celebration of an earlier form
of where jazz came from, from the church and the sanctified
church with people dancing for the Lord and all that, and that
this was a throwback in a different way from how it had been
done. But in a new way was celebrating the spirit through music
and dance. But it didn't have all that academic explanation, it
was just happening. And the first time I was saying, ‘Wow, what
is this?' And then everybody could feel that, and then Monk
started doing that when he was doing stuff with Coltrane… it
was pretty, pretty amazing.
Dan
Wakefield recalls the feeling of watching Monk at the
Five Spot:
It
was sort of like watching a magic act, and you didn't know what
was gonna happen next, and yet you'd be really spellbound by the
playing. What you were hearing was pretty amazing—just ordinary
songs that he would play, and you'd just hear it in a different
way.
Even
before Monk's booking, the Five Spot had begun to garner
attention as a cultural hotspot; in July of 1957 Esquire Magazine
highlighted the bar in an article about New York's bohemian
culture that included a photo of David Amram performing before a
full Five Spot house, notable for its mix of black and white
faces. Less groundbreaking, more hardbop oriented groups also
played and recorded at the Five Spot in the late 1950s, such as
baritone saxophonist Pepper Adams and
trumpeter Donald Byrd, pianist Randy
Weston, and guitarist Kenny Burrell. Bassist
Charles Mingus performed there as well and helped establish the
club's reputation as a place where listening to the music was a
priority.
Dan
Wakefield: I
remember particularly Charles Mingus playing there and being—he
was famous for not allowing any talk or any other stuff to go on
while his group was playing. He would stop the music and say,
‘OK, are you gonna pay attention, or you wanna leave, or what
do you wanna do?' And people would shut up or get out or he'd
just walk off the stage.
One
of the most polished state-of-the-art groups that played at the
Five Spot was the Jazztet. Band member Benny Golson even
named a tune in honor of the club, called "Five Spot After
Dark," that the Jazztet recorded in 1960:
The
Jazztet had been booked at the Five Spot in late 1959, playing
opposite another group that would catapult the Five Spot into the
middle of one of the biggest critical controversies in jazz
history. That's coming up in just a few moments on Night
Lights.
I'm
featuring music recorded at New York City's Five Spot nightclub
on this edition of Night Lights, and commentary from two cultural
figures who spent some time there in the late 1950s and early
60s—musician David Amram and author Dan Wakefield. The Five
Spot was a hive of jazz music frequented by painters, writers,
music fans, and neighborhood residents, located at 5 Cooper
Square (hence its name) in the Bowery. It was a small bar,
officially seating no more than 75, though its growing popularity
in the late 1950s resulted in that limit often being exceeded,
and crowds waiting on the sidewalk outside to get in. The walls
inside the bar were festooned with flyers for art openings and
other cultural events, but otherwise there wasn't anything
visually striking about the space, according to Wakefield, who
would later write about going to the Five Spot in his memoir New
York In The Fifties:
It
was, you know, fairly dark… it was very PLAIN. There were just
tables and chairs and that little stage area… and that was part
of the attraction in a funny way. There wasn't anything fancy. It
was just where you'd go to listen and hear music and drink beer.
At
the same time, Wakefield recalls the Five Spot having a special
aura:
It
seemed romantic. Not just romantic like love songs, but romantic
in aspiration. And it seemed NEW. And of course any young people
were always wanting what was new. And that (the
music at the Five Spot) was
a new sound.
There
were new sounds being heard at the Five Spot in November of 1959
that went round the world, in the form of the Ornette Coleman
Quartet. Texas-born alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman had
recorded just two albums when he began his gig at the Five Spot,
but his revolutionary freeing of jazz from its traditional
chordal structures, rhythmic contexts, and harmonic concepts had
already begun to heat up conversations in the jazz world that
turned into a firestorm when his group debuted at the Five Spot.
Pianist Paul Bley said that the Coleman Quartet
made the Jazztet "sound like Guy Lombardo." A DownBeat
writer roamed the Five Spot gathering quotes from the many
musicians who came to hear Coleman, some of them denouncing him
as a sham, others admitting that he was up to something they
couldn't quite grasp yet. Composer and conductor Leonard
Bernstein came down to the Five Spot to hear what all
the fuss was about and proclaimed Coleman the most important
development in jazz since Charlie Parker. Coleman's initial
two-week booking turned into a nearly six-month-long run. David
Amram on the uproar over the Coleman Quartet's Five Spot stay:
They
were fantastic! People were saying ‘What the hell is THAT?' But
it was like when I heard Cecil Taylor… I said ‘Wait a minute,
that guy's GOT something!' And somehow with everything that he
did, there was always a soulfulness and an honesty that was part
of it… and Miles Davis came down and he was
enraged! (laughs) By
the way Ornette was playing! And told him so, and was really
angry. But a lot of the people then began to study what he was
doing and realized he was doing something else. And he knew how
to play Charlie Parker's stuff, he could do all that, and a lot
of other things, but he had something HE wanted to do.
Though
no known recordings of the Coleman Quartet at the Five Spot have
surfaced, we can hear the same group in the studio just a few
weeks before their Five Spot debut, doing "Una Muy Bonita":
Coleman
wasn't the only innovator with his own story to tell who passed
through the Five Spot. Jack
Kerouac, whose novel On
The Road exploded onto the
literary landscape in the autumn of 1957, and who undertook some
of the first jazz-and-spoken-word performances with David Amram,
was a Five Spot denizen even before the supernova of fame that On
The Roadproduced, both as a
jazz fan and performing poet.
David
Amram: In
that (July 1957
Esquire) article, when they
mentioned about how poets would come and read their stuff, he was
one of the people that would come in after midnight and do that.
But that's before we did the first ever jazz-poetry readings and
before ON THE ROAD came out… then that suddenly made him an
international star without wanting to be. And he loved jazz, and
he loved the people that created jazz, and he liked the world and
the ethos that jazz came out of. And the Five Spot kind of
personified that, because you'd walk in there—it wasn't like
any place else, and it wasn't the ‘Who's
Who-and-Who-AIN'T-Who'—but he was just the kind of person you
could feel when he was there that he was always somebody who was
sitting there listening. He was one of those people who was a
great listener, and made you feel good just by his presence. He
was very shy and kind of modest and quiet,and
he'd drink a lot so he could feel relaxed enough to be around
people. I always said he was the person who would find the most
insecure person in the room and purposefully hang out with them.
The
poet and art museum curator Frank O'Hara,was another
literary Five Spot regular, and in perhaps his most famous poem
helped immortalize the venue. Here he is reading his tribute
to Billie Holiday, "The Day Lady Died,"
which concludes with his remembrance of listening to the singer
at the Five Spot near the end of her life:
O'Hara
was just one of numerous writers and artists who frequented the
Five Spot—painters Larry Rivers and Willem
de Koonig could often be found there, as well as
author James Baldwin and poets Allen
Ginsberg and Gregory Corso, as the Five Spot
continued to be a vital cultural hotspot. And though nothing
could quite match the musical significance of the Monk-Coltrane
gigs of 1957 and Ornette Coleman's 1959 and 1960 quartet
performances, in the summer of 1961 the Five Spot again served as
the venue for a jazz group that proved to be historically
important. Trumpeter Booker Little and
multi-instrumentalist Eric Dolphy co-led a
quintet for two weeks that simmered, bristled and brooded with
modernistic force. Both artists would die young, Little at the
age of 23 just a few months after the Five Spot recordings, and
Dolphy in 1964 at the age of 36. Here they are at the Five Spot
performing "Bee Vamp\
In
1962 the construction of a new senior housing project forced the
Five Spot to move from 5 Cooper Square to 2 St. Marks Place a few
blocks away. The new location continued to enjoy success for
awhile as a jazz venue, but it had a different vibe. Jazz critic
Martin Williams wrote in a 1964 issue of DownBeat that "It
isn't very much like the old Five Spot. It is cleaner, neater,
bigger, yet younger, more prosperous, and business-like but still
very comfortable and easy as clubs go." Here's
saxophonist Charles McPherson performing at the
second Five Spot in 1966:
The
Five Spot ceased hosting live music the following year; like
other New York clubs featuring jazz, it was suffering a downturn
from the cultural changes and stylistic upheavals of the times.
In January 1976 it closed its doors for good. But the Five Spot
had already made its mark in jazz history, a kinetic self-made
scene that grew out of a neighborhood bar catering to its artist
customers who wanted to hear some live jazz… and in so doing
showed that cultural shrines can emerge from the most humble
origins.
Dan
Wakefield: It
was a great feeling. I mean, other jazz places were more—I
don't know, I mean like Birdland, they had great people and it
was great to hear Miles Davis there, but it was like going to a
theater. And Jimmy Ryan's was like going to a nightclub. And the
Five Spot was just like going home. (Laughs) Or
going to a friend's place, a bar, a place where you could be
comfortable and enjoy yourself and yet everybody there was also
there to hear the music, and love the music. I think (Norman)
Mailer said something like—and he was a big Five Spot
regular—that jazz was the theme music of the era, and I think
that's true.
David
Amram: It
was just some place you could go to feel good anend see something
new and not know what was gonna possibly happen, and realize that
whatever happened that night would never happen again. It was a
celebration of the sanctity of the NOW.