Time Will Tell: Conversations with Paul Bley
by Norman Meehan
ISBN 1-893163-54-7
Berkeley Hills
Press
Realease Date: November 2003
“But even more compelling than the
anecdotes about jazz greats
are Bley's outrageously freewheeling bits of advice to
new jazz
pianists.”
from review by Norman Weinstein (below)
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Review by Norman Weinstein
from allaboutjazz.com
Time Will Tell: Conversations With Paul Bley
by Norman Meehan
Berkeley Hills Books, 2003
Paul Bley's jazz career has been marked by a burning creative
restlessness continually leading to new musical discoveries. An
earlier book about Bley, Stopping
Time, was a collaborative effort matching Bley the grand
raconteur with writer David Lee. Time Will Tell repeats that
formula,this time with jazz academic and journalist Norman
Meehan, although with strikingly more success. Bley's
storytelling about himself and his inspired and inspiring fellow
musicians (Ornette Coleman, Don Cherry, Sonny Rollins)is marked
by both intelligent admiration and disarming candor. His
love/hate relationship with pianist Bill Evans is wonderfully
illuminated through Bley's detailed description of a recording
session they shared creating George Russell's complex Jazz In
The Space Age album. Quite unsparing of his ruthlessly
competitive spirit toward other pianists, he admits thinking of
Evans, “I'm going to knock this guy out, and he's going to sound
bad,” only finding that Evans in his own sweet way elevated his
playing to the point where Bley met his match.
But even more compelling than the anecdotes about jazz greats
are Bley's outrageously freewheeling bits of advice to new jazz
pianists. There's exciting advice about synthesizing world
musical styles with jazz: “If you can establish an aesthetic
that is not metrical, and apply it to world music, which is
metrical, you have opened up a whole range of possibilities.”
What young musician wouldn't benefit from Bley's perfectionism:
“I love the expression, “Going past excellence. . .” And Bley,
while not pretending to possess literary skills, -- hence this
book as a second installment of a jazz oral history -- reveals a
poet's awareness of the restraints of vocabulary: “There are not
enough words to describe the details of what we do. A lot of
people are called musicians, but there should be ten or twenty
terms used to refer to people who make music. . .That's always
the goal, to make interesting or beautiful sounds.”
The jazz book as oral history, often stitched together by a
professional writer, has had a checkered history. Yet Time Will
Tell is an extraordinary feat: a “talked” document replete with
lyrical turns of phrases, raucous humor, unorthodox advice for
the novice or seasoned player, and instructive gossip about jazz
greats. Bley the reconteur is just as seductive as Bley the
pianist, a free spirit reinventing jazz with a romantically
playful imagination always on the move.
REVIEW
by Norman Wienstien on AllAboutJazz.com
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