The Modern Jazz Quartet The Modern Jazz Quartet were incredibly important in the
development of jazz in the 1950s, and although they officially disbanded in 1974, theyve
reformed for both concerts and recordings several times since then, making them now an
evergreen jazz band. It was not
always so. The Modern Jazz Quartet was originally formed as the Milt
Jackson Quartet (which, conveniently, had the same initials, MJQ) and consisted of Jackson
on vibraphone, John Lewis on piano, Percy Heath on bass and Kenny Clarke on drums. Of these, Clarke was the veteran of the group, a
drummer who had been at Mintons after-hours club in 1939, where Charlie Parker,
Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Christian and Clarke invented bebop
or bop, a harmonically advanced and challenging kind of new jazz. Clarke served in the Army during World War II, and there he
met and became friends with John Lewis, who was fresh out of the University of New Mexico
where hed studied anthropology and music. In
1946 both joined the Dizzy Gillespie Orchestra, the only bop big band, and there they met
vibist Milt Jackson. Until then only two
jazz musicians were well known for playing this electrified xylophone, Lionel Hampton
(famous for his work in the 30s with Benny Goodman and a band leader himself in the
40s) and Red Norvo (whose early 50s trio with guitarist Tal Farlowe and
bassist Charles Mingus catapulted him from the swing era into modern jazz). Jackson was the first to adapt the instrument to
a bop context. And also in Gillespies
band they met Ray Brown, a bassist who appears on some early MJQ recordings. In 1948 and 1949 Lewis and Clarke were also participants in
the Miles Davis Nonet sessions for Capitol which were later dubbed Birth of the Cool.
The group, nominally fronted by Davis, was a composer/arrangers band,
showcasing the writing of Gerry Mulligan, John Lewis, Gil Evans and John Carisi. Lewis contributed two originals and arranged three
other pieces in the bands repertoire. During
this same period Jackson was making recordings for Blue Note, Prestige and Savoy, all
small but important jazz labels. The MJQ was formed in 1952; its first recording was the
10-inch Prestige album, Modern Jazz Quartet with
Milt Jackson (PRLP-160), released in 1953, which is now valued at from $60 to $150,
depending on condition. This was followed the
same year by Modern Jazz Quartet, Volume 2 (PRLP-170), another 10-inch LP which has
the same value. In 1955 the MJQ made two
12-inch albums, Concorde for Prestige
(PRLP-7005) ($30 to $75), and Modern Jazz Quartet
for Savoy (MG-12046) ($20 to $50). That
year drummer Clarke dropped out and was replaced by Connie Kay, setting the personnel in
place for the rest of the MJQs career. But 1956 was the year in which everything came together for
the group, and this was due to their signing with Atlantic Records. Atlantic was the reflection of the Ertegun
brothers enthusiasms. The sons of
Turkish diplomats, they loved R&B and jazz. Atlantic
recorded Ray Charles, the Clovers, Ruth Brown, and a number of R&B groups for singles,
and established an ambitious jazz program on LPs. Unlike
Prestige and Savoy (and, to a lesser extent, Blue Note) labels known for recording
jam sessions Atlantic spent time on preparations for each album, and many of
Atlantics jazz albums were ambitious projects. The MJQs first Atlantic album, Fontessa (1231), reflected this. The title track was over 11 minutes long and was a
suite, not an extended jam. The music
drew upon Lewiss studies of Renaissance and Baroque music, and employed fugues and
melodies in counterpoint, all done with impeccable swing.
(Due to the popularity of this and subsequent Atlantic MJQ albums, and their
widespread sales, Fontessa is valued at only $16
to $40, and most of the subsequent albums even less.) The importance of what the MJQ did with this and their
following Atlantic albums cannot be over-estimated.
They changed the face of jazz. They
were in the forefront of the movement to take jazz out of smoky clubs and recreate it in a
concert setting which went a long way toward legitimizing a form of
music which many still considered disreputable and unfit for polite company. Their music was chamber jazz, music
you could listen to in a drawing room, but Lewiss baroque excursions were always
balanced by Jacksons blues-drenched vibes, which could simultaneously weave an
intricate counterpoint to the pianos lines and swing with an element of what would
later be called funk or soul.
Lewis tended to play a spare piano, usually devoid of florid ornamentation,
giving space to the vibes and bass. Kay, like
most drummers of the bop era, kept time on his cymbals.
The overall sound of the MJQ was light and fluid. Capitalizing on Fontessas
success, Prestige reissued its second 10-inch MJQ LP and half of the first as the 12-inch Django (PRLP-7057) ($30 to $70) the same year. Django was Lewiss compositional
tribute to Django Reinhardt, the great Gypsy guitarist.
It is a lovely melody and has since become a jazz standard. While the vast majority of MJQ albums appeared on the
Atlantic label, their album Patterns appeared in
1960 on United Artists (UAL-4072 in mono; UAS-5072 in stereo; valued at $8 to $25, with
the best price for the mono release) because it was a soundtrack release from the movie Odds Against Tomorrow. (It was re-released in 1968 on Solid State
inexplicably retitled The Modern Jazz Quartet On
Tour, SS-18035, and is valued at only $4 to $10.) In 1968 the MJQ were signed to the Beatles Apple label
the only jazz group to do so on which they released Under The Jasmine Tree (ST-3353) in 1968 and Space (STAO3360) in 1969. Both are valued at $8 to $25. Subsequently they signed to Norman Granzs
Pablo label, which has recorded and released reunion concerts from the early 1980s. Much, but far from all of their Atlantic output
has been released on CD. [Separately, John Lewis was involved in recordings with The Modern Jazz Society (early Third Stream music, all of Lewiss composition) and The Modern Jazz Sextet (a group assembled for a recording session with Dizzy Gillespie and Sonny Stitt). Milt Jackson separately made a solo album and a collaboration with Ray Charles for Atlantic in the 50s. Both made a number of albums since then.] |
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