Musical story: Let’s role back the clock to 1967. Ures truly is in high school and on weekends being the transmitter engineer at R&B station KYAC in Kirkland, WA.
There, on Sunday mornings, it was my pleasure to engineer for Sonny Buxton’s Jazz Unlimited show. And it was there I developed a taste for Jazz.
Among my favorites was a composer – Oliver Nelson – whose band had some amazing works. One in particular – Jazz and the Abstract Truth has been a favorite for coming up on 50-years now. You can find it on YouTube – provided you even know where to look.
I’ll save you the trouble; click here for the YT piece.
If you’re new to great jazz, you might want to stick with something a lot more “commercial” sounding. Nelson’s “Stolen Moments” is great – very easy listening with only limited solo and ad lib work. Another one, on his tribute to fallen U.S. President John Kennedy that gave Nelson a chance to explore his more cinematic side was “A Genuine Peace” that begins with a Kennedy speech excerpt.
No, this morning’s column is not a piece about “jazz appreciation.” It’s actually about the choice of title for Nelson’s Jazz and Abstract Truth.
If you listen to the song 50-years – off and on – you discover the “music in your head” can be a set of hangars for your thinking.
While the jazz part has tons of solos, that at times may not even seem to make sense, by the end, it’s all pulled together to a satisfying finish. Not all songs do this (that is, start, get a theme, and then wander off in all directions, only to all show up and play nicely together at the end) but it’s a fine metaphor for many things – including how to run successful companies and more.
There is – within music – much to be discovered about how we are as individual humans. Perhaps because music has the unique ability to synchronize the two halves of the brain so that they can go off doing their own things, and yet, at the conclusion of a great thought process, all wander back in with a wonderful conclusion.
But it’s not always so bright because with a nicely crafted jazz metaphor, we can also occasionally make out how the external worlds, the ones beyond our control, actually work.
My offering for your consideration this morning, is that there are probably a half dozen “great situations” playing out in America right now. Situations where we have briefly touched on purpose, but as in some of Nelson’s work, we’ve wandered off to abstract solo parts.
I get tons of emails from readers – and I read every comment submitted to this site before approving it for public consumption.
One of these dealt with the Texas Biker Shoot-out and it speaks to the “abstract truth” that seems very odd in proximity as it is to Jade Helm:
“…don’t think it was HOURS after the gang shootout that I turned on tv and found out about it. But as soon as I saw the news about it, and saw a lot of bikers sitting quietly on a curb like kindergardeners,(no handcuffs on them, etc) I had the same kind of feeling that I had the day I turned on tv and there was the news about the towers in New Yawk…..I had a calm “what is this?” feeling, and I didn’t think it was “real.” I saw that it was indeed real, yet still had a “what the heck is this?” feeling about the former .
I’m not trying to make somethin’ out of nothin’……I just think the gang thing is not what it is proclaimed to be. When I was outside of Houston, about 2 wks ago, and about 30 minutes away from Bastrop, I saw about 4-6 bikers going down the street, and thought it was odd to see them there. I don’t know that I’ve ever seen any in person before. Wonder if this could really be some part of sicko game that is part of the exercise supposed to take place soon in Tx. It just seems too odd to me to be unrelated to anything else. It SAID on tv and in print, that a number of them had been killed (9?)and something like 200 arrested, and yet all I saw was the kindergardner group lined up nicely and without cuffs,sitting on a curb. News said it was a “bloody” or “gory” scene, yet I saw no pictures like that. I don’t know……….. M
And this person was not alone…here’s another reasonable comment:
“These Texas gangs dont look like Chicago/Peoria counterparts at all!