Choose language

Forgot your password?

Need a Spoofbox account? Create one for FREE!

No subscription or hidden extras

Login

#jazz

Read through the most famous quotes by topic #jazz




Well, being a jazz musician is not a rose garden!


Toots Thielemans


#garden #jazz #jazz musician #musician #rose

Jazz came to America three hundred years ago in chains.


Paul Whiteman


#america #came #chains #hundred #jazz

Jazz is the folk music of the machine age.


Paul Whiteman


#folk #folk music #jazz #machine #machine age

Jazz tickles your muscles, symphonies stretch your soul.


Paul Whiteman


#muscles #soul #stretch #symphonies #your

Miles Davis was doing something inherently African, something that has to do with all forms of American music, not just jazz.


Cassandra Wilson


#american #american music #davis #doing #forms

Jazz is the last refuge of the untalented. Jazz musicians enjoy themselves more than anyone listening to them does.


Tony Wilson


#does #enjoy #jazz #jazz musicians #last

I'm not a big jazz fan.


Warren Zevon


#fan #i #jazz

I've often cringed when I heard myself described as a jazz singer. I've always thought of myself as a jazz vocalist.


Cassandra Wilson


#described #heard #i #jazz #jazz singer

I would say that jazz is my own language.


Amy Winehouse


#jazz #language #my own #own #say

Jazz presumes that it would be nice if the four of us--simpatico dudes that we are--while playing this complicated song together, might somehow be free and autonomous as well. Tragically, this never quite works out. At best, we can only be free one or two at a time--while the other dudes hold onto the wire. Which is not to say that no one has tried to dispense with wires. Many have, and sometimes it works--but it doesn't feel like jazz when it does. The music simply drifts away into the stratosphere of formal dialectic, beyond our social concerns. Rock-and-roll, on the other hand, presumes that the four of us--as damaged and anti-social as we are--might possibly get it to-fucking-gether, man, and play this simple song. And play it right, okay? Just this once, in tune and on the beat. But we can't. The song's too simple, and we're too complicated and too excited. We try like hell, but the guitars distort, the intonation bends, and the beat just moves, imperceptibly, against our formal expectations, whetehr we want it to or not. Just because we're breathing, man. Thus, in the process of trying to play this very simple song together, we create this hurricane of noise, this infinitely complicated, fractal filigree of delicate distinctions. And you can thank the wanking eighties, if you wish, and digital sequencers, too, for proving to everyone that technologically "perfect" rock--like "free" jazz--sucks rockets. Because order sucks. I mean, look at the Stones. Keith Richards is always on top of the beat, and Bill Wyman, until he quit, was always behind it, because Richards is leading the band and Charlie Watts is listening to him and Wyman is listening to Watts. So the beat is sliding on those tiny neural lapses, not so you can tell, of course, but so you can feel it in your stomach. And the intonation is wavering, too, with the pulse in the finger on the amplified string. This is the delicacy of rock-and-roll, the bodily rhetoric of tiny increments, necessary imperfections, and contingent community. And it has its virtues, because jazz only works if we're trying to be free and are, in fact, together. Rock-and-roll works because we're all a bunch of flakes. That's something you can depend on, and a good thing too, because in the twentieth century, that's all there is: jazz and rock-and-roll. The rest is term papers and advertising.


Dave Hickey


#music #rock-and-roll #society #art






back to top