Everything about The Modern Jazz Quartet totally explained
The
Modern Jazz Quartet was established in
1952 by
Milt Jackson (
vibraphone),
John Lewis (
piano, musical director),
Percy Heath (
bass), and
Kenny Clarke (
drums).
Connie Kay replaced Clarke in
1955. Through the years the quartet had performed in several jazz styles, including
bebop,
cool jazz and
third stream.
History
Milt Jackson, John Lewis, and Kenny Clarke had originally played together in a quartet while in the
Dizzy Gillespie orchestra from
1946 to
1950. Together with
Ray Brown they played during interludes designed to give the trumpeters time to recover from the challenging upper register
trumpet parts. This line-up recorded as the Milt Jackson Quartet in
1951.
Jackson and Lewis originally shared the role of musical director but Lewis eventually took over the entire responsibility of this position.
In their middle years the group often played with classical musicians, but their repertoire consisted mainly of
bop and
Swing era standards. Among the original compositions from the band's book are "Django" by Lewis (a tribute to the Belgian jazz guitar player
Django Reinhardt), "Afternoon In Paris," also by Lewis, and "Bags' Groove" by Jackson (Bags was his nickname).
The group was first signed by
Prestige and later in the fifties with
Atlantic. In the late 1960s, in between their two periods with Atlantic, they signed with
Apple, the Beatles' label (the sole jazz group on the label), and released two albums:
Under the Jasmine Tree (1967) and
Space (1969).
Jackson left the group in
1974 partly because he liked a freer flowing style of playing and partly because he was tired of playing for little money (compared to rock and roll stars). As there could be no Modern Jazz Quartet without the two principals Lewis and Jackson, the group disbanded. In
1981 the MJQ reorganized to play festivals and later on a permanent six months per year basis. The MJQ's last recording was issued in
1993. Heath, the last surviving member, died in 2005.
Modern Jazz Quartet's style
The enigma of the MJQ's music-making was that each individual member could improvise with an exciting vibrancy but
in toto the group specialised in genteel
baroque counterpoint. Their approach to jazz attracted promoters who sponsored "jazz packet" concerts during the 1950s. One show would consist of several contrasting groups. The MJQ were ideal participants because no other group sounded like them. They provided a visual contrast as well, attired in black jackets and pin-striped trousers.
The group played
blues as much as they did
fugues, but the result was tantalising when one considered the hard-swinging potential of each individual player. Their best-selling record,
Django, typified their neo-classical approach to
polyphony.
Partial discography
Some notable albums by the Modern Jazz Quartet:
- M.J.Q. (1952) Prestige Records
- Ben Webster and MJQ - An Exceptional Encounter (1953)
- Django (1953-55)
- Concorde (1955) (first recording featuring Connie Kay on drums)
- Fontessa (1956) (first album on Atlantic Records)
- No Sun in Venice (1957)
- Modern Jazz Quartet: 1957 (1957)
- Third Stream Music (1957)
- Pyramid (1959)
- Odds Against Tomorrow (1959)
- Lonely Woman (1962)
- Collaboration with Almeida (1964)
- Plays George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess (1964)
- Under The Jasmin Tree (1969) (Apple Records)
- Space (1969) (Apple Records)
- Plastic Dreams (1971)
- Blues on Bach (1973)
- The Complete Last Concert (1974)
Further Information
Get more info on 'Modern Jazz Quartet'.
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