[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Gould and Bjork



Funny, when I made my little Bjork jorke, I was thinking that Bjork would have been right up GG's alley as a pop star. She has all the elements that seemed to get his attention and praise.
 
It's odd that GG devoted as much attention as he did to the passing Pop Parade, and yet seemed largely chilly and cool to jazz. Jazz has musical elements every bit as deep and profound as classical music; jazz can be and regularly is as great and enduring a musical achievement as Bach or Mozart or Beethoven. During the Soviet days, Russian jazz lovers frequently risked the wrath of the KGB for their beloved smuggled jazz records and forbidden jazz shortwave broadcasts; I don't think nearly as many people would be willing to risk a stint in the gulag for Petula Clark.
 
Pop, on the other hand, seems designed by definition to be transient and momentary, forgettable and soon forgotten. Its elements concentrate far more on expensive dentistry and elaborate costuming and coiffure than on musical content -- music to be looked at, thus the volcanic popularity of MTV.
 
Which isn't to say it isn't wildly entertaining. But I think Pop is meant just to goose the heart and glands for a few weeks, and then move on; great jazz artists are trying to move the heart as deeply as great classical artists, and are striving for the same kind of eternity. Coltrane and Bird deserve a ride on our extra-galactic space probes every bit as much as Mozart, and we Terrans should be equally proud to show off their work.
 
Perhaps GG sensed this, and just didn't want to risk the intellectual and emotional investment that understanding or playing jazz would have entailed -- an investment every bit as demanding as his classical investment. Some in his situation, like Andre Previn, invested enormous amounts of their attention into jazz; Previn's trio  recordings with Shelly Manne are some of the best, most entertaining and most successful achievements in Caucasian jazz -- a rather lonely and largely undistinguished category. Certainly classical artists have been particularly lackluster and unsuccessful with their forays into jazz.
 
But bjetcha Bjork would have got GG's attention bjigtime! No investment necessary in mastering her oeuvre! A real Plug 'n' Play Pop Diva babe! The hottest thing to ever fly out of Reykjavik!
 
Elmer
 
-----Original Message-----
From: John Smith <smitros@YAHOO.COM>
To: F_MINOR@EMAIL.RUTGERS.EDU <F_MINOR@EMAIL.RUTGERS.EDU>
Date: Tuesday, October 01, 2002 6:34 PM
Subject: Gould and Bjork

>This may sound like a college essay question, but I
>think there may be some interesting points of
>comparison between Bjork and Gould (latitude,
>eccentricity, singularity of approach and, I would
>argue, genius).
>
>Any opinions?
>
>J.D. Smith