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The Devil's Horn: The Story of the Saxophone, From Noisy Novelty to King of Cool PDF

285 Pages·2005·2.63 MB·English
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Table of Contents Title Page INTRODUCTION 1. THE GHOST CHILD 2. ANARCHISTE DE DROITE 3. A PARISIAN IN AMERICA 4. A VIRTUOSO ON HORSEBACK 5. THE COLLECTORS 6. IT’S ALL ABOUT RELATIONSHIPS 7. THAT SOUL THING 8. THE NAKED LADY 9. DIABOLIQUE 10. PERSONAL SOUND 11 PROVOCATEUR 12. LEGIT 13 INSTRUMENT OF THE FUTURE 14. BODY AND SOUL 15. GABRIEL’S HORN Also by Michael Segell About the Author BIBLIOGRAPHY ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INDEX Notes Copyright Page INTRODUCTION “Wynton made me play tenor,” Branford Marsalis is saying as he sleepily jabs a spoon at a cumulus of milk froth that tops his cappuccino. “I was playing alto in Art Blakey’s band, and he says, ‘Man, you don’t play the alto. Listen to the way you play. You never play in the upper register, you’re always down around the bottom of the horn. The bottom of the alto is the top of the tenor, so you should just play tenor.’” He takes a sip and licks the froth from his lower lip, which is creased in the middle and looks like the perfect home for a buzzing saxophone reed. “A couple weeks go by. He’s starting a new band and asks me to help him find musicians. He says, ‘I need a piano player,’ and I say, ‘Kenny Kirkland.’ ‘I need a drummer,’ and I say, ‘Jeff Watts.’ He says, ‘I need a tenor player, who do you know?’ I say, ‘I know a guy.’ He says, ‘Really? What’s his name?’ I say, ‘He doesn’t have a tenor yet, but he’ll have one in two weeks.’ So that’s how I started playing tenor, and he was totally right.” We’re sitting in a Starbucks in New Rochelle, a cozy suburb of New York not far from Branford’s home, where he lives with his wife, a teenage son, and a toddler daughter. It’s late morning and he’s agreeably rolled out of bed, thrown on a New Jersey Nets T-shirt, light red workout shorts, and a pair of hybrid golf shoe/sneakers, and met me for coffee. “It was like finally meeting the right woman,” says Branford, who told his friends he would marry his wife, his second, after their first meeting. “The alto was like a first love affair and soprano like a first marriage. Now playing tenor is an extension of my personality. It’s up to me what I want to project—happiness, sorrow, existential dread, whatever. It shows me all my limitations and strengths. It’s really good at that. And for jazz music, nothing beats the depth and range of the tenor. I can’t imagine songs like ‘Alabama’ by Coltrane, or the last movement of A Love Supreme, or the second movement of Freedom Suite by Sonny Rollins being played on alto.” Branford played piano as a kid, but “it was a bitch to carry around a Fender Rhodes” to the gigs he played with his R&B band. He learned the clarinet, but couldn’t imagine a career for himself other than in an orchestra. At fifteen, he talked his father into buying him an alto saxophone, a Yamaha student model that he promptly disassembled. Why? “Why not?” he says. “I just wanted to know how it worked.” Like everyone else in his brilliant family, he got good fast, but the alto never felt totally right. “For one thing, Charlie Parker already did everything one could do on the alto.” So he spent time mastering the soprano, considered by many to be the most difficult of the saxophones, a tutorial that culminated in a 1986 hit record, Romances for Saxophone. Like many modern tenor players, he now routinely moves between the big and little horns—both B-flat instruments—and rarely plays the alto. “The soprano can come off like an operatic voice,” he says. “When I worked on that record, all I listened to were singers—Kiri Te Kanawa, Kathleen Battle, Maria Callas. It amazed me how much I could approximate how they sing. And as I started working more on the instrument, I found I could make it sound like an English horn, a clarinet, or an oboe. It’s real malleable that way.” Branford’s wife, their little girl in tow, has dropped by to pick up his car, so I tell him I’ll give him a ride home. He spots a saxophone case in the back of the car; it contains my newly rented Armstrong student-model tenor. He has to see it, obeying a superstition he says is too complicated to explain. He rigs up the horn, plays a furious string of notes through the entire natural compass, and the sax-o-phone, the voice of Adolphe Sax, booms across the parking lot, dodging buses and SUVs and slipping around moms with strollers before dispersing into the woods of a golf course across the highway. “This will do until you get your own horn,” he pronounces. A natural pedagogue—he is a Marsalis, after all—Bradford can’t resist giving a beginner a little lesson. “Here’s what I want you to practice,” he says, tuning the horn by pushing the mouthpiece a little farther onto the crook. He hands it to me. “It’s a tonguing exercise. Set your metronome to 130, then articulate each note three times before rising to the next on the last quarter note and pausing. Then do the same with the next note. Go through all two and a half octaves, or until your tongue just quits.” I start with D and clumsily tongue my way up to the next octave. “Not bad,” Branford says as he writes down his telephone number on a piece of paper. “Call me if you have any questions.” Thus ended my first lesson on the saxophone, the first of several tutorials that would spontaneously break out as I explored the horn’s glorious and often controversial history with some of its finest practitioners. Saxophonists, I’ve learned, are a generous and agreeable lot, enormously sympathetic to a new convert. Immediately, they know something compelling and personal about the neophyte—namely, that he’s been seduced by a power he can’t quite understand and yet is helpless to resist. They’re happy to help in any way they can. Since meeting Branford, I’ve talked to hundreds of saxophone players— brilliant young stylists such as Marcus Strickland, Vincent Herring, and Ron Blake; middle-aged virtuosos such as Michael Brecker and Joe Lovano; and emeritus lions such as Jimmy Heath and the late Illinois Jacquet. Almost every one of them describes his virgin encounter with the horn as some kind of epiphany, conversion, mystical event—or, more prosaically, a mugging. Not long before he died, Benny Carter told me that the first time he played the saxophone, at fourteen, he felt “extraordinary joy” and that every day since had been a “religious experience.” David Murray, who grew up in the Pentecostal Church, described his initial encounter as an experience not unlike that of being “saved.” Sonny Rollins said that when his mother gave him his horn and he first put it to his lips, “I got that buzz. After that, any time I practiced I was in heaven, another place. It was more like it took me over.” Lee Konitz recalls the transfixing golden sparkle of the horn set off against the dense purple velvet lining of the case, and the narcotic smell—like that of Proust’s madeleine: “Ah, the smell.” Claude Delangle remembers the feeling of being “invaded by a virus” after first tracing with a small finger the keyboard’s beautiful, complex architecture. Phil Woods can vividly picture his mother pulling the cased instrument from its bedroom hiding place, as though it was a dirty family secret that he was now old enough to understand, and his hands trembling as his fingers magically assumed a perfect position on the sleek, sexy, serpentine vessel. For me, it was a thunderbolt, a lightning strike that instantly and permanently rearranged my brain chemistry. Not long before I met Branford, a friend of mine, Ortley, strapped his Selmer Mark VI alto saxophone around my neck and showed me where to rest my fingers and how to form my embouchure—the recruitment of several dozen facial muscles that support the lips, tongue, and teeth around the mouthpiece. I took a long breath and blew. The horn responded with a rich, resonant, low E-flat. I blew again, extending the note—my first long tone—and my whole body seemed to shape-shift into a musical instrument, my cells breaking down into their component atoms and gluons and reconstructing themselves with a unified mission: to produce a perfect tone. I noodled for another five minutes, found a simple three-note melody, and repeated it, now convinced that some long-dormant past-life musicianship had been unshackled. Since that first long tone, I’ve been in the throes of an infatuation that grows deeper day by day. The object of the only obsession that has exceeded this one is now the mother of my children. Perhaps you’ve experienced the feeling: there’s a primitive recognition, it’s all so deeply familiar. I know you, this is not new, we go way back. In the two years since my conversion, I’ve come a long way toward understanding why Adolphe Sax’s extraordinary creation, the most recent important musical instrument to have been invented, was so quickly embraced by the world, why millions of players and listeners have so willingly submitted to its spell—and why so many others, frightened by its diabolical charm, have tried throughout its short history to malign or suppress it. After an innocent first kiss—a perfect long tone, say—its mysterious energy envelops and overwhelms you. You enter into some strange unwritten devotional contract, helplessly announce your allegiance to the cult of Adolphe, and become a loyal advocate for the voice of Sax. You become, you could say, an instrument of the devil. 1. THE GHOST CHILD He was known as Le petit Sax, le revenant (the ghost-child) to the citizens of his village, Dinant, in Belgium. After one of his many nearly fatal accidents, his mother lamented, “The child is doomed to suffer; he won’t live.” Almost before he could walk, little Adolphe Sax, christened Antoine Joseph in 1814, was fascinated with the alchemical magic performed every day in his father’s workshop, where the most elemental materials were recombined into the finest brass, which was in turn fashioned into an exquisite musical instrument. Although Charles Joseph Sax, who had been appointed Belgium’s chief instrument maker by William I of Orange, was eager to pass on his skills to his firstborn son, agents of misfortune conspired relentlessly to remove the boy from the land of the living. When he was two Adolphe fell down a flight of stairs, smashed his head on a rock, and lay comatose for a week. A year later, toddling around his father’s atelier, he mistook sulfate of zinc for milk, gulped it down, and nearly expired. Subsequent poisonings involved white lead, copper oxide, and arsenic. He swallowed a needle, burned himself severely on a stove, and was badly scorched again by exploding gunpowder, which blew him across the workshop floor. He was again rendered comatose by a heavy slate tile that dislodged from a roof and landed on his head. When he was ten, a villager happened to spot the drowning lad when, after falling into a river, he was eddying, facedown and unconscious, in a whirlpool above a miller’s gate. The villager just managed to pluck him from the water. Before he entered adolescence, his head was scarred by the repeated blows, and one side of his body was badly disfigured by burns. But his misadventures proved instructive, hardening him for the nasty battles that would plague him as he tried to launch an ingenious musical invention, a serpentine horn whose provenance he secured by naming it after himself. From the moment his lips first touched his saxophone prototype, Adolphe Sax would face a juggernaut of slander, theft, litigation, forced bankruptcies, and attempts on his life that tried to suppress his new sound, a sound never before heard in nature, a sound that promised to change the timbre and soul of music wherever it was played. By 1842, the twenty-eight-year-old Adolphe Sax was widely recognized as one of the world’s top acoustical craftsmen. Far more skilled and ambitious than his brilliant father, he set out on a late-winter day from Brussels for Paris, then the musical-instrument manufacturing center of the world. In addition to his personal belongings, he carried with him an enormous brass horn, almost as tall as he, that he had fabricated in his father’s workshop, where he had thrived after surviving his calamitous childhood. It was the most recent creation of his already remarkable career. At fifteen he had fabricated a clarinet and two flutes from ivory, considered exquisite specimens by judges at the 1830 Brussels Industrial Exposition. Before he was twenty he had created a new fingering system on the soprano clarinet and reinvented the bass clarinet, transforming the unreliable and mostly unplayable instrument into a regal, elegant woodwind that provided a rich bottom to any instrumental configuration and, remarkably, played in tune. The newly rehabilitated instrument had quickly been adopted as a standard member of the woodwind group and its inventor acknowledged as an engineer of great promise in the musical capitals of Europe. Despite his success, Sax was feeling grossly maligned and unappreciated. For several years the judges of the Belgian national exhibition had refused to grant him the first prize for his innovations, reasoning that though the precocious designer may have deserved them, were he to receive the exhibition’s highest honors at such a young age, he would have nothing else to aspire to. The year before, in 1841, Sax had prepared to submit for review his new bass horn, the as- yet-unnamed saxophone, the first in a proposed family of seven that would reconfigure the sonic organization of military and symphonic orchestras. After glimpsing the instrument—a brass-and-reed hybrid that joined the body of an ophicleide, a sinuous conical horn, with a clarinet-style mouthpiece—the first wholly new one to emerge since the clarinet had been invented a hundred years before, a jealous competitor apparently booted it across the floor, damaging it so badly it was unfit for exhibition. Disappointed and disgusted, Sax had packed his belongings, carefully wrapped up his mangled creation, and fled Brussels. When he arrived in Paris he had thirty francs in his pocket. It was the first of many attempts to suppress this intrusive latecomer, this interloper, which, unlike wind instruments with ancient roots, could trace its lineage only as far as the revolutionary design specifications of a visionary acoustical scientist. Like every subsequent injunction over the next century against the saxophone and its “carnal,” “voluptuous” sound—by heads of state, local police, educators, symphonic conductors, film censors, and a host of other moral arbiters, including the Vatican—it failed.

Description:
In The Devil's Horn, Michael Segell traces the 160-year history of the saxophone-a horn that created a sound never before heard in nature, and that from the moment it debuted has aroused both positive and negative passions among all who hear it. The saxophone has insinuated itself into virtually eve
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