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Boston Modern Orchestra Project: Gunther Schuller: Journey Into Jazz

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Boston Modern Orchestra Project: Gunther Schuller: Journey Into Jazz
What might seem the most innocuous music is often the most avant-garde, the most challenging, and the spark that forces the question as to what are the boundaries of jazz. Gunther Schuller's "Journey Into Jazz," composed in 1962, is just that. A children's narrative, it tells the story of one Eddie Jackson, "a boy who learned about jazz," a communal mode of music-making that is free, ostensibly, of all the restraints that come with genre labels. Though the piece is over 40 years old, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project 's new recording of this work captures Schuller's strong aesthetic statement about the third stream of jazz, and its staying power throughout history—Gunther narrating with his two sons, Ed Schuller and George Schuller on bass and drums, respectively.

"Journey Into Jazz" walks a fine line between simplicity and didacticism. Described by Leonard Bernstein (among others) as "a sort of 'Peter and the Wolf' of Jazz," it seems to be a simple narration about the discovery of jazz: a young boy has a hunger for music, picks up the trumpet, and eventually discovers that music need not be notated, that it can be free-flowing, stemming from raw emotion. Yet the music that accompanies the narration, written by Nat Hentoff, seems slightly static. Made legible for even the youngest ears, classical and jazz are rendered into crystallizations of their mass-market definitions. Though the playing and recording quality of this album are undoubtedly high quality, they cannot escape the constraints of the self-ascribed third stream genre, stuck literally between European and African musical traditions. Reduced to its most basic argument, Schuller's children's narrative also brings the music down to its essentials, reducing both other streams to overly simplistic, often bland passages.

The other two pieces on this album, "Variats" and "Concertino," both scored for jazz quartet and orchestra, come closer to Amiri Baraka's (then LeRoi Jones') demand of third stream music, that the "techniques [of jazz and classical music] be used and not canonized." All three are pieces full of contradictions, which make them some of the most interesting compositions of the '50s and late '60s. They struggle to reconcile composition and improvisation—not perfectly, but resoundingly musically.

Track Listing

Variants for Jazz Quartet and Orchestra; Journey into Jazz; Concertino for Jazz Quartet and Orchestra.

Personnel

Boston Modern Orchestra Project
band / ensemble / orchestra

Edwin Schuller: bass; George Schuller: drums; Tom Beckham: vibes; Tim Ray: piano; Gunther Schuller: narrator; David Ballou: trumpet; Jason Hunter: tenor saxophone; Matt Dariau: alto saxophone; Bruce Barth: piano.

Album information

Title: Gunther Schuller: Journey Into Jazz | Year Released: 2009 | Record Label: BMOP/sound

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