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white englishman explains Coltrane '66


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so now ya'll know

http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/gallery/2014/oct/04/catastrophic-coltrane/

i just noticed from the comments i'm late but since i imagine i'm not alone in usually ignoring this idiocy...

i do "love" that this turd throws "Adorno" into the mix; like that "helped" Schoenberg any either!

Edited by MomsMobley
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Dyer's piece is stupid and rather thuggish, but what does his being a white Englishman have to do it? Max Harrison is a white Englishman and, at his best, as brilliant a jazz critic as we have. Jack Cooke likewise. And two of the best jazz critics I know personally are Terry Martin, a white Australian, and our own John Litweiler, a white American.

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LK, esteemed commenter, in theory, it shouldn't have anything to do with; in this instance, his thuggish drivel exacerbated by cultural ignorance/arrogance-- take your pick or choose both. didn't mean to imply there weren't excellent white critics & historians of myriad nationalities! (i'll leave NYRB's less-than-spectacular roster of black writers-- on any subjects-- for another discussion tho' that too is suggestive of how an editor would assign &/or accept this drivel.)

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Mods Squad, I'm OK with changing subject line to more clearly place blame where its deserved:

* insipid NYRB critic Geoff Dyer

* idiotic and/or wholly-- but 'innocently'-- clueless New York Review Book editor(s)

Q: I wonder how many times, if any, Geoff has been to Philadelphia & what he did if was there.

One can, if they wish, make a musicological argument without knowing the Schuykill from the Delaware but that's not what this fucking simp is playing at here-- at all.

also, for Sunday morning--

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Are you guys serious??... I read that piece and it makes some interesting points, even though I may not agree with it, but someone somewhere took the time to listen to, think, and write something about what he heard. I'd hate to see a Twitter or Facebook type mob mentality take over here when somebody expresses in civilised terms their view of music.

And btw, I loved the photo at the top of that page!

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I respectfully disagree. It's legitimizing junk writing and criticism like this that keeps the ignorance flowing right into the minds of people who don't know any better and take essays like this at their word. It's damaging. Mainstream culture may never really get jazz right, but it never had to get is this wrong.

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Are you guys serious??... I read that piece and it makes some interesting points, even though I may not agree with it, but someone somewhere took the time to listen to, think, and write something about what he heard. I'd hate to see a Twitter or Facebook type mob mentality take over here when somebody expresses in civilised terms their view of music.

And btw, I loved the photo at the top of that page!

Bogdan, let's take it from top then. Music maestro, please!

Offering: Live at Temple University offers further evidence of the catastrophe of the last phase of John Coltrane’s work.

no comment.

“Last” rather than “late” because he became ill and died too suddenly (on July 17, 1967), too early, to have properly entered a late period. He was forty. In any other field of activity that would be a desperately short life. Only in jazz could it be considered broadly in line with actuarial norms.

Henry Purcell (1659-1695)-- age 36

Giovanni Pergolesi (1710-1736)-- age 26

Wolfgang Mozart (1756-1791)-- age 35

Franz Schubert (1797-1828)-- age 31

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)-- age 38

Chopin (1810-1849)-- age 39

George Gershwin (1898-1937)-- age 38

etc etc i'll stop before World War II but hello, compare like to like, or would bringing musicians of similar historical stature into the conversation further reveal the author's idiocy rather than faux 'authority'?

"Actuarial" is bullshit diversion, like he's about to offer a deeply researched socio-aesthetic discourse... right. I'm not suggesting there isn't AMPLE room for aesthetic criticism of Coltrane-- if someone wants to go that route, hey, the narrow road is open-- but Dyer is an arrogant simp.

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Are you guys serious??... I read that piece and it makes some interesting points, even though I may not agree with it, but someone somewhere took the time to listen to, think, and write something about what he heard. I'd hate to see a Twitter or Facebook type mob mentality take over here when somebody expresses in civilised terms their view of music.

And btw, I loved the photo at the top of that page!

Bogdan, let's take it from top then. Music maestro, please!

Offering: Live at Temple University offers further evidence of the catastrophe of the last phase of John Coltrane’s work.

no comment.

“Last” rather than “late” because he became ill and died too suddenly (on July 17, 1967), too early, to have properly entered a late period. He was forty. In any other field of activity that would be a desperately short life. Only in jazz could it be considered broadly in line with actuarial norms.

Henry Purcell (1659-1695)-- age 36

Giovanni Pergolesi (1710-1736)-- age 26

Wolfgang Mozart (1756-1791)-- age 35

Franz Schubert (1797-1828)-- age 31

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)-- age 38

Chopin (1810-1849)-- age 39

George Gershwin (1898-1937)-- age 38

etc etc i'll stop before World War II but hello, compare like to like, or would bringing musicians of similar historical stature into the conversation further reveal the author's idiocy rather than faux 'authority'?

"Actuarial" is bullshit diversion, like he's about to offer a deeply researched socio-aesthetic discourse... right. I'm not suggesting there isn't AMPLE room for aesthetic criticism of Coltrane-- if someone wants to go that route, hey, the narrow road is open-- but Dyer is an arrogant simp.

I think you misunderstand the use of "catastrophe" here. It is in the sense from the Adorno quote down the page (“In the history of art late works are the catastrophe”), and it's not to be taken in it's simplistic pejorative sense meaning something "awfully bad".

I agree with you about the age analysis, he's wrong about that.

Oh, and I like this post much better than the first one in the thread :)

Edited by bogdan101
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I've never had any use for Dyer's writing. Reading this hasn't changed my views.

+1 in spades. As often happens, I agree with Moms's general drift, with some reservations about her (?) particular wording ( :tup on "turd", though :smirk: ).

Years ago, I bought Dyer's But Beautiful on the basis of some enthusiastic Internet reviews. I couldn't stand it (a "catastrophic" purchase subsequently donated to the local library), which may go to say that Dyer is capable of offending when writing about straight-ahead as well as avant-garde jazz!

Edited by T.D.
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I've never had any use for Dyer's writing. Reading this hasn't changed my views.

+1 in spades. As often happens, I agree with Moms's general drift, with some reservations about her (?) particular wording ( :tup on "turd", though :smirk: ).

Years ago, I bought Dyer's But Beautiful on the basis of some enthusiastic Internet reviews. I coudn't stand it (a "catastrophic" purchase subsequently donated to the local library), which may go to say that Dyer is capable of offending when writing about straight-ahead as well as avant-garde jazz!

My copy of But Beautiful ended up at the local library too. That was probably too kind a choice. It should have ended up in the recycle container.

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I'm tired of reading that blah-blah about the "late" period in musicians' lives, classical or jazz. It only makes sense when someone lived a long life and was not torn out of it by an accident or disease or whatever. There was a development in Coltrane's music, it's evident, and he was headed somewhere, and you can sense it, but we will never know what it would have sounded like, we have only hints in his last recordings.

Joachim Berendt once wrote a whole book (in German) about the "mystery of the late works" - it was rather mislead due to his superficial knowledge of the life and works of classical composers, and sank without a trace.

I'm also tiredof reading judgements about Trane's last rcordings in comparison to his earlier work - some are content to elaborate on what they started out with, some others move on, like Trane.


I read But beautiful and thought it was a nice book to give someone outside of the jazz fan scene an impression of the jazz life. Take it as fiction closely based on biographical facts.

Dyer was boosted by Keith Jarrett's raving comments about the book - maybe that's his mistified view of the jazz scene, now that he is more or less removed from it at the top of the game.


The German translation of But Beautiful was a catastrophe, btw.

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"Late life" is a very relative concept anyway. Some reach a phase of maturity (or of an urge to "move on") earlier, some later. And evolution in one's overall works therefore differs.

However, the above rattling off of names of clasical composers from the 18th/19th century misses the point considerably IMO when they are supposed to be compared to the relatively early death of John Coltrane. Please have a look at the average life expectancy of the overall population in the respective countries/regions first before comparing the "early" deaths of those composers to the early death of someone living in the midst of the 20th century. Not sure if all this was always seen as that "desperately short" by all of the contemporaries of those composers to the same degree that later generations of lovers of the music mourn the short lives these celebrities led. Times WERE different ...

Edited by Big Beat Steve
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