Jazz, Innovation, and Scripting

Maybe you figured out that I love jazz. I enjoy many musical genres, and musical styles, but lately I’ve been really exploring jazz. In a recent article I described jazz as being full of  images, mirrors, and reflections.  Jazz is like a bridge — always going from someplace to another place. Jazz is always asking questions, bending notes, refactoring routines, revisiting and revising themes, and making analogies. Jazz energizes me with its innovative musical poetry of patterns, parallels and allegories.

Jazz Piano Art - found at Detroit River Days

Jazz Piano Art - found at Detroit River Days

Back in April, I started talking about creativity, innovation, improvisation … and how it relates to jazz and the blues… meditating on the mysteries of musical creativity  … compared to creativity , innovation, and risk taking in other domains (like art, architecture, design, entrepreneurship, computer programming, product design, web design, etc.) … pondering the amazing results that often happen when a skilled musician begins  to improvise with a good idea and the right attitude.

Surprising success and fantastic results can happen in your life (or your business) when you understand how it all works.  Innovation – It’s not a new idea, and I’m not the only one talking about this. I’m just improvising on a great theme.

Nick Sieger (no relation to the Detroit rocker Bob Seger) wrote a great article in July called Jazzers and Programmers. I found Nick’s article while researching some things about Ruby on Rails, and JRuby.  NIck describes the history and styles of jazz and compares it to the history and styles of programming. He talks about jazz fundamentals, and compares the rhythm section (piano, bass, and drums)  to programming libraries, frameworks, and patterns. He compares Bass-Drums-Piano to Model-View-Controller. It’s really great stuff — and even includes a musical score from one of the jazz standards, Blue Monk.

Nick spiced up the article with nifty quotes from famous jazz musicians like: “It’s taken me my whole life to know what not to play” – Dizzy Gillespie … “Anyone can make the simple complicated. Creativity is making the complicated simple” – Charles Mingus  …  I won’t steal anymore of Nick’s thunder. Go read the whole article.

Are you catching my drift? We’re not done with this jam session yet. I’m just taking a breather in between songs.

Detroit Jazz Festival

The 29th annual Detroit International Jazz Festival is happening now!

You know I love jazz.

The Detroit Free Press says it’s A New Jazz Age.  It’s a huge event with six stages, and hundreds of thousands of people attending, but this Monday it could get crazy if Obama stops by. So, if Obama visits Detroit to “rally the labor” and gather more “workers” for Uncle Sam’s Plantation, I won’t be attending the rally. Detroiter Angelica Brown feels the same way.

Blue Monk – Dualing Pianos Tokyo Jazz Style

Another recording of Blue Monk from Thelonious Monk — appears to be recorded at the Tokyo Jazz Festival. Features dualing pianos by Hiromi Uehara,  and Chick Corea, and Sadao Watanabe on the sax, along with “The Great Jazz Trio”.

Near the end of the song, two more piano players wander out on stage, and there are four people playing the dualing pianos. Not sure who everyone is, and don’t have much background on this recording, so please make some comments and help me fill in the blanks.