Saying Something Jazz Improvisation and Interaction

Saying Something Jazz Improvisation and Interaction by Ingrid Monson, published by University of Chicago Press on March 15, 1997, offers a detailed examination of the often-overlooked rhythm section in jazz ensembles. This illustrated edition, spanning 265 pages, presents a fresh perspective on the improvisational interplay among drums, bass, and piano, highlighting its complexity and spontaneity alongside solo performances.
In this book, Monson juxtaposes musicians’ dialogue with musical examples to explore how jazz musicians express identity, politics, and race through their art. Through interviews with notable figures such as Jaki Byard and Billy Higgins, she emphasizes the concept of “interactiveness” in jazz improvisation, illustrating how music creation fosters social communities and shapes cultural meanings. This comprehensive view of jazz improvisation will appeal to jazz enthusiasts, ethnomusicologists, and those interested in the cultural implications of music.
Official synopsis Publisher
This fresh look at the neglected rhythm section in jazz ensembles shows that the improvisational interplay among drums, bass, and piano is just as innovative, complex, and spontaneous as the solo. Ingrid Monson juxtaposes musicians’ talk and musical examples to ask how musicians go about “saying something” through music in a way that articulates identity, politics, and race. Through interviews with Jaki Byard, Richard Davis, Sir Roland Hanna, Billy Higgins, Cecil McBee, and others, she develops a perspective on jazz improvisation that has “interactiveness” at its core, in the creation of music through improvisational interaction, in the shaping of social communities and networks through music, and in the development of cultural meanings and ideologies that inform the interpretation of jazz in twentieth-century American cultural life.
Replete with original musical transcriptions, this broad view of jazz improvisation and its emotional and cultural power will have a wide audience among jazz fans, ethnomusicologists, and anthropologists.
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