Wynton Marsellis, le jazz et le moment

“The one thing you always have to have in your playing is hope. When you lose hope and you think to yourself, ‘ugh, what am I going to do with this?’ you’re not going to do anything …because you’ve already projected yourself, and I [the listener] have heard it and can tell you’re not committed…”

[Talking to a keyboard player about his lead into a break:] “You thought to yourself ‘I should have left a space.’ I could feel you thinking that. But it’s too late; now you’re in that space. The beauty of jazz is that we’re in that moment. What happens in that moment is it’s a moment of absolute clarity because you’re there now. When we jump off a building we can’t jump back up. We’re either gonna fly or grab something. Okay, grab something or fly.

[On silence:] “The one thing I want you to notice is after an event, wait. Why do you wait? Because the emotion is in the silence. I come over to you and I talk to you; I want to tell you something. I put my hand on you, I say, ‘Man, that was a beautiful phrase you played.’ When I stop talking to you then you feel the emotion of it and that’s when you assess how you gonna accept what I tell you. In that moment you feel something, but if I [talk] past that moment, if I say ‘I love the way you play [and] you know, you ought to think about that reed you’re using,’ I’ve lost something.”

Wynton Marsellis

Via Joe Bill, Michael Robinson, Dan O’Connor.

Response

  1. Ouardane Avatar

    ” J’ai horreur des comparaisons Jazz / Improvisation théâtrale. Elles n’ont aucun sens, en tout cas dans le cas de l’improvisation pratiquée sur scène. ” – Ian Parizot, le 5 janvier 2012, à 16h49

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