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April is Jazz Appreciation Month (JAM)!!  To honor the occasion, let’s welcome Payal Kumar to share her thoughts on jazz.  Payal spent a decade working in jazz radio, including at Los Angeles station KLON/KKJZ, where she served in several capacities including DJ, Operations Director, and Broadcast/Program Director from 1999 through 2007.  She is now the Director of Communications for The Wooden Floor, a 28-year-old children’s charity based in Orange County, which uses dance to impart generational change and break the cycle of poverty in 400 under served youth annually. 

(This editorial is content posted from www.EbellBlog.com with permission from The Ebell of Los Angeles)

In a Sentimental Mood: 5 Things I learned from Jazz (in Hindsight)
By Payal Kumar

  • Feelin’ Good.

    If there is one major lesson from jazz, it is that one can persevere.  From civil rights, to individuals shaking personal demons, this lesson is deeply steeped within the jazz tradition.  Miles Davis famously overcame a heroin addiction through sheer might by locking himself in his parents’ home until he successfully detoxed. This lesson in determination was applied to our nation as a whole, with jazz acting as the soundtrack to the civil rights movement.  Joe Zawinul, famous for, among other things, his work with Cannonball Adderley, once causally told me during an interview about how he had to lay down on the floor of the car when traveling with the Adderley band.  He said the vehicle would have been shot at if they saw a Caucasian guy in a car with African Americans.  As a naive twenty-something, I was at a loss for words that someone living and breathing before me had witnessed such social atrocities.  That kind of racism seemed so far away, something I read in history class, not something someone I knew lived though.  It’s easy to bury a painful past.  Jazz as a cultural institution bears witness to the significant progress within a movement once thought radical and impossible.  It also lays before us the challenge to believe in and fight for movements for equality that still persist in our world today. (Audio clip of Nina Simone)
  • 2. Straight, No Chaser.

    Jazz requires its creators and appreciators to think outside the box.  Let’s face it: there are some elements of jazz that just plain bewilder most folks.  The hallmark of the genre is its willingness and ability to evolve.  Being bold, and perhaps at times, frightening, without flinching, is an amazingly admirable quality, and something jazz is notable for embracing. (Audio clip of Thelonious Monk)
  • 3. My Favorite Things.

    There is something to be said for holding on to your standards.  The standards within the jazz repertoire are iconic for a reason.  They are no mere flash in the pan pop song, but rather songs which identify with something common within all of us.  Standards also allow for interesting reinvention, decidedly turning convention on its ear, stretching it and twisting it, so the past can be seen in a new light. (Audio clip of John Coltrane)
  • 4. My Funny Valentine.

    After having worked in subsequent art forms following my work within jazz, I really missed the acceptance that jazz embodied. People who have the capacity to make, and likewise, the patience to appreciate the intricacies of jazz are special.  Sometimes “shining star” kind of special, sometime “eating the paste” kind of special, but all were welcomed within the fabric of the music. Jazz folks, at least from my experience, lack the snobbery and arrogance you can sometimes find in the purveyors of other forms of art.  Perhaps this comes from the decidedly gritty, non-affluent roots of the music.  Whatever the origin, it is an attitude the taste makers of other art forms could stand to embrace. (Audio clip of Chet Baker)
  • 5. It Don’t Mean a Thing.

    For as much seriousness as jazz can sometimes put forth, it is also fun. Just go to a jazz concert.  There is a jovial spirit pervasive at most times.  A trait present in the great jazz masters I had the unbelievably good luck of encountering is that they don’t take themselves too seriously.  The music, they were serious about, but they could laugh at and make fun of themselves, which was refreshing. (Audio clip of Louis Armstrong)

So what can you do to celebrate jazz?  Here are a few ideas!:

“See you on the dance floor…!”