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Get Involved!
Vinson Valega - Published: October 18, 2006
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'Tis the season...the election season, of course. That's right...it's almost that time again where we enter the polling booth to either affirm what a swell job our elected officials have been doing, or we pull the lever to "kick-the-bums-out!" In either case, our choice employs our representatives for the next term, where they get to decide how to divvy up the money and figure out how best to use the people's tool, also known as our government. This is the one time where it's easiest for us citizens to get involved with designing and organizing our communitiesto exert our freedom to influence things. Unfortunately, far too few of us (less than 50%) actually go out and vote, let alone commit time and energy to a cause. Subsequently, our representative democracy, which demands participation in order to work properly, suffers from this lack of involvement. What does participatory democracy have to do with jazz music you ask? Well, I comment on this very topic in the liner notes to my new CD, Awake: When We Fall Asleep, Democracy Suffers Participation...choice...action...different voices coming together for the greater good. That sounds like jazz music to me! It also sounds like a prescription for changing society. Although voting is an essential form of citizen expression, in fact, there are many things we can do throughout the year to help shape the direction of our communities. From calling and writing our representatives urging them to vote a certain way on a particular issue, to volunteering for a cause in which we believe, to even running for office, there are many ways to get involved with the dialogue of our time. Remember, our society is organized this way only because previous generations made certain choices. Humans made it as it is today and humans can make changes nowbut only if we enter the mix and exert some influence. In fact, this music and the musicians who have devoted their lives to it have created the perfect template for how our society could operate. Each musician expresses his or her view within the group setting and is aware of the role it plays within the shared framework. Constant improvising seeks to propel the music into something that grows and improves, becoming better and better with time. Jazz is participatory music that only works when each musician is intensely involved (and includes the listener's participation, too!). Just as clearly, American society can only function when its citizens are involvedintensely involved. I devote another section of my liner notes to our most "American" of poets, Walt Whitman: Participation Lastly, and most importantly, to me, is that participation in any endeavor leads to the essential essence of jazz musicfreedom. As Thelonious Monk once remarked, "Jazz is freedomyou think about that." I believe that we jazz musicians are deeply devoted to that concept, striving to incorporate freedom into every aspect of this music...and of our lives. We love to make it up as we go; cringe at being told what to do; hate being boxed in; always strive to express ourselves; savor the lifestyle. Freedom is what we live for, as I remark in the last section of my liner notes: Freedom
Vinson Valega at All About Jazz.
Genesis: The Movie Box 1981-2007 Gov't Mule Marches On: Live in Hampton Beach, NH Singing Jazz: Judy Niemack Master Class The Flying Luttenbachers, Seabrook Power Plant, Zevious, Many Arms: We're No Punks Ari Hoenig Quartet: Niu's Jazz & Blues Bar, Bangkok |
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