Via Steve Smith and David Ryshpan.
What I was listening to when I found out.
More later.
UPDATE 1:
NYT — Peter Keepnews.
TONY blog — Hank Shteamer.
Foucault's Lunchbox — Crawjo.
Who Walk In Brooklyn. (Max was a Brooklyn kid -- he grew up in Bed-Stuy.)
3 Quarks Daily — Robin Varghese.
There was a semester in the late 1980s at UMass, where both Roach and
Shepp taught, during which they would have weekly afternoon sessions in
the Hatch, one the university bars. There was never really more than 8
of us in the audience. The happy hour beers were $1.50 or so. A half a
dozen private concerts by Roach and Shepp--my introduction to jazz.
Enviable, no?
Vast Wasteland — Chris.
Bryan Vargas.
UPDATE 2:
SpiderMonkey Stories — Taylor Ho Bynum.
But as amazing as he was as a drummer, we must be sure to celebrate him
as far more than simply a master instrumentalist. (Though for that
alone, he earned immortality.) As I got to learn more about his career,
and heard more from other musicians who were friends and collaborators
of his, like Braxton or Cecil Bridgewater or Warren Smith, I saw what a
profoundly innovative and truly revolutionary artist he was. He refused
to accept the boundaries imposed upon him by others, be it race or
genre or discipline; he exploded definitions while creating art that
was relevant, vibrant, and always searching.
Soho the Dog — Matthew Guerrieri.
It's probably not an exaggeration to say that Roach changed drumming the way Liszt changed piano playing.
Via Phil Freeman (Running The Voodoo Down), this classic clip:
Lerterland — David Adler.
Howard Mandel (Jazz Beyond Jazz) has an interview with Max (drawn from his upcoming book), and some thoughts of his own.
Chicago Tribune — Larry McShane.
His place in the pantheon of jazz greats long since secured, Roach
collaborated with drummers from around the world, with a string quartet
that featured daughter Maxine, and with rapper Fab Five Freddy.
"I
try to show my students the correlation between hip-hop and Louis
Armstrong," he once said. "That's how well-rooted hip-hop is, coming
out of an environment where people were denied any kind of cultural
enrichment."
Gary Susman — Popwatch.
But maybe that appellation "old guard" didn't really suit Roach, a
rebel who never stopped challenging the formal boundaries of jazz.
Forget what I wrote a couple paragraphs ago; Max Roach never grew old.
Matt Schudel — WaPo.
This only scratches the surface — for more, try this Google Blog Search and Google News Search. There are many more great clips on YouTube.
I'll have my own remembrance up once I get the chance to collect my thoughts.
UPDATE 3:
Doug Ramsey — Rifftides.
The winner, Carl Payne, a gripman who over the years won the contest
ten times, showed up one afternoon at Keystone Korner with a cable car
bell mounted on a frame. Roach was waiting at his drum set. Mr. Payne
could meter on that cumbersome brass bell. He invented patterns that
stimulated Max and the two spent a half hour or so playing for, to and
with one another. I have never heard anything quite like it -- Max
Roach trading fours with a cable car gripman. It made a good story on
that evening's six o'clock newscast, and a memory that has stayed with
me for a quarter of a century.
Destination Out.
Many obits will stick to those historic moments and
they are indeed impressive. But Max Roach never rested on his laurels.
Like few others, he spanned jazz history from bebop to the furthest
reaches of the avant garde. And unlike many of his peers, Roach
restlessly sought to play in different contexts and embrace new musical
modes. He embodied the idea that music was one great continuum and
shredded the received notion the avant and the tradition were somehow
at odds.
UPDATE FOUR:
Ethan Iverson — Do The Math. (Be sure to check out the audio clips.)
The 1953 records of "Confirmation" and "Chi-Chi" with Al Haig and Percy
Heath feature the highest-level ensemble playing recorded in a studio
with Parker. If Percy and Max showed up anywhere in the world right
now playing just how they played for Bird in 1953 they could take
anybody's gig. (This is not true of the performances of the bass and
drums on most classic bebop.)
Pat Donaher — Visionsong.
UPDATE FIVE:
Me.
UPDATE SIX:
The tributes keep pouring in:
NPR's Morning Edition. (With links to his appearances on Jazz Profiles and Piano Jazz.)
Ben Ratliff (NYT) has a selected discography, with commentary. Unfortunately, he lists nothing from between 1962 and 1989. Many of these recordings are unfortunately out of print (including the double quartet dates), but you can get the first (self-titled) M'Boom record, Birth and Rebirth (duets with Braxton), and In The Light (with his 80's quartet) from iTunes.
Kris Tiner — Stop the Play and Watch the Audience.
If only so many of those who will be lauding Roach from the lofty
edifice of jazz education would recognize that he didn't just help to
create a style, but that he continued to push the music, and continued
to recognize and support others who were pushing the music, far past
the crystallization point of bebop in the 1950s.
Andrew Durkin — Jazz: The Music of Unemployment.
We all mourn in our own way, of course; what's "appropriate" is what
feels right. As for me, I choose the celebratory mode, both in
pondering Max's life and the "state of jazz." For one thing, Max's
contribution to music (indeed, to art) was not limited to something
finite, like the elements of a style (he swung in such and such a way,
he pioneered the use of this piece of the kit, etc.). Those things are
of course important, but like Ellington, Zappa, Mingus, Monk, and
umpteen other heroes of mine, Max left behind what Joseph Conrad called
a "how to be": in this case, a philosophy of artistic survival,
vitality, and growth (one of the elements of which was a sense that art
is socially important -- imagine that!).
Dave Rawkblog — The Rawking Refuses To Stop! gives it up for Money Jungle.
[T]his is not an Ellington album any more than it is a Roach album or a
Mingus album. Everyone deserves top billing here, and they certainly
earn it: take the title track, where Mingus goes nuts with desperate
high-fret machine-gunning before slipping back to the lower register
and letting Roach take center stage.
Nolan Strong — allhiphop.com.
"Hip-Hop is complete theater," Roach told the Los Angeles Times in
1991. "These kids don't have rhetoric courses, so they've created their
own script in rhyme--it's verbal improvisation. They don't have formal
musical training, so they make music from the tones and rhythms of
human speech--they'll sample Malcolm X saying, 'Too black, too strong.'
They've even created their own instrument--the turntable. They have
nothing but the inclination to be involved. And like Louis Armstrong,
out of nothing they create something."
Jason Chervokas — newcritics.
The jazz world today–like the world of constitutional interpretation–is
lousy with neocons seeking to etch the old verities in stone,
protecting them from heretical impurity. But for Roach jazz was a
living art form and the spirit of jazz WAS the spirit of innovation,
that’s why, in his teens he could play with Duke Ellington
and in his 60s he could play with Fab Five Freddy. There’s no doubt
that Roach’s legacy as a drummer is secure. But I suspect that for
Roach, a man who was both musician and educator, his lessons of
innovation and imagination would be just as important.
Kenneth Woods — A View From The Podium.
He was a virtuoso in
the best sense of the word, but also a poet- no drummer ever had a
sweeter touch or a more effortless sense of swing. Jazz fans like to
talk about how hard a drummer swings, but with Max Roach it never
sounded hard, but cool and electric.
Mark — The Oak Room.
On a personal level, he was a key figure in opening my eyes and ears to jazz in particular and a wider range of musical possibility in general.
In high school, when I was still at the stage where Neal Peart seemed
like the pinnacle of percussion prowess, Roach gave a clinic that I
attended. I was completely awed by what he could accomplish with
nothing more than a high-hat.
E. "Doc" Smith — BeyondChron
Max Roach was born in New Land, N.C., on Jan. 10, 1924. His family
moved four years later to a Brooklyn apartment, where a player piano
left by the previous tenants gave Roach his musical introduction. Using player piano rolls of Jelly Roll Morton and Albert Ammons, Roach played along by putting his fingers on the keys and pedals as they rose and fell.
UPDATE 7:
There are far too many wonderful tributes coming in from all corners of blogdonia for me to keep up with -- remember, Google Blog Search is your friend. (And if you have authored something good that I missed, don't be shy about letting people know about it in the comments.)
Here are just a few more:
Helmut — Phronesisaical.
I
listened to Steve Lacy, Peter Brötzmann, and a couple others, but
generally thought jazz was dead. Then there was a piece on the radio in
that winter landscape that truly stunned me. It turned out to be a
recent piece by Max Roach from 1991. Just a few years ago I came across
a journal entry I had made later that day. It was one sentence written
to myself in bold letters, as if an epiphanic answer to some torturous
metaphysical conundrum, that read: "More Max Roach!"
Howie Klein — Crooks and Liars.
Doug Shulkind's Give the Drummer Some broadcast on WFMU.
And here is information about the memorial at Riverside Church:
A public viewing will be held at Riverside
Church for jazz great Max Roach, who died of complications of
dementia/Alzheimer's Disease at 12:45 a.m. Thursday in New York at the
age of 83. His daughters Maxine and Dara were at his bedside, according
to family spokesperson, Terrie M. Williams.
Roach's public viewing will be held on Friday, August 24 at
Riverside Church, 490 Riverside Drive in Manhattan from 9:00 A.M. to
10:30 A.M. with a funeral service from 11:00 A.M. to 1 P.M. The
legendary drummer will be buried in a private ceremony at Woodlawn
Cemetery in the Bronx.
Born on January 10, 1924 in Newland, North Carolina -- which he
always referred to as "the Great Dismal Swamp of North Carolina" --
Roach is survived by his five children Daryl Roach, Maxine Roach, Raoul
Roach, Ayo Roach and Dara Roach.
The family issued a statement: "We are deeply saddened by his
passing, yet heartened and thankful for the many blessings and
condolences we have received during as we grieve. As a musician,
educator and social activist, are fortunate to share his life and his
legacy with the world."
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be sent to
Alzheimer's Association, 225 N. Michigan Ave., Fl. 17, Chicago, Ill.
60601- 7633, http://www.alz.org/.
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