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- From: smehta@kwela.nynexst.com (Sandeep Mehta)
- Subject: Re: On Drugs, Bebop and The Wire
- In-Reply-To: hellers@cs.wisc.edu's message of 30 Dec 92 18:23:27 GMT
- Message-ID: <SMEHTA.92Dec30143534@kwela.nynexst.com>
- Sender: news@nynexst.com (For News purposes)
- Reply-To: smehta@nynexst.com
- Organization: Speech Technology, AI Lab, NYNEX S&T Inc, White Plains, NY
- References: <1992Dec29.034842.28962@cbnewsl.cb.att.com>
- <RSHAPIRO.92Dec29154328@kariba.bbn.com>
- <1992Dec29.211926.11248@pony.Ingres.COM>
- <SMEHTA.92Dec30115921@kwela.nynexst.com>
- <HELLERS.92Dec30122327@cleo.cs.wisc.edu>
- Date: 30 Dec 92 14:35:34
- Lines: 38
-
-
- > hellers@cs.wisc.edu (Joe Hellerstein) writes:b
-
- > While we're debunking the myths about drugs and jazz, I have heard
- > people claim that steady heroin use increases your lung capacity.
- > Coltrane was given as a case in point, the myth being that some of his
- > solos simply could not be played by a person who had remained clean
- > all their life. Anybody got the medical bottom line on this?
-
- Dunno about medical bottom lines :), but from Simpkins' biography of
- Coltrane it seemed fairly clear to me that, if anything, Coltrane
- found his earlier drug habit and alcoholism to be an impediment. In
- addition, being deeply religious he found his dependency on
- drugs/alcohol to contradict his beliefs and he struggled mentally and
- physically to kick his habits while continually battling various
- personal demons, social suppression and hostile criticism that he
- faced.
-
- If there is anything that made Coltrane produce those incredible
- solos it was his phenomenal skill on both saxophones acquired by
- hours and hours of practice each day. He would often fall sleep on
- the couch with the horn in his mouth. Sometimes he hadn't finished
- saying what he wanted to and would simply walk off stage at the end
- of the set and continue playing by himself in the dressing room for
- another half hour.
-
- Very few people, in Coltrane's time, really understood that Coltrane
- was working on his ideas every night on the stage and he wouldn't
- stop until he thought he'd said it all. One person who did understand
- was pianist Zita Carno and there are lengthy excerpts from her
- writings in Simpkins' book which are well worth reading.
-
- /sandeep
- --
- smehta@nynexst.com
- --
- "This space of time is organized. We need not fear these
- silences, -- we may love them." -- John Cage, Silences, 1961.
-