Whether
you realize it or not, just about everyone has heard at least a little
something from Pittsburgh’s jazz community. For instance, Erroll Garner had a
monster hit with “Misty” and George Benson became the original jazz cross-over
artist. Even if they do not ring any bells, virtually everyone will have heard
the piano stylings of Johnny Costa, who for years scored Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood. One of the richest regional jazz
scenes gets its overdue ovation in Jeff Sewald’s We Knew What We Had: The Greatest Jazz Story Never Told, which airs this week on World Channel and throughout
the month on finer PBS affiliates throughout the nation.
The
honor roll of Pittsburgh jazz greats will make your eyes pop: Earl “Fatha”
Hines, Art Blakey, Erroll Garner, Mary Lou Williams, Billy Eckstine, Ahmad
Jamal, Ray Brown, Stanley Turrentine, Kenny Clarke, and the great Billy
Strayhorn. To use an academic term: “wow.” If you are wondering how Pittsburgh
got so hip, Sewald and his on-camera experts offer a cogent explanation of the
historical dynamics. Pittsburgh was a river town that ported riverboats that
trekked up from New Orleans. It was also strategically located as the first
logical stop on a cross-country tour for musicians based in New York. Plus, it
had integrated schools since the late 19th Century, which meant
African American student had access to music education.
Of
course, that does not explain why so many legendary musicians happened to be
born in western Pennsylvania, but the presence of so many greats clearly
inspired successive generations. To its credit, WKWWH also gives due time and credit to talent that largely stayed
local, like former Horace Silver sideman, drummer Roger Humphreys.
It
is a shame outside political and cultural factors conspired to put a damper on
the Pittsburgh scene, because this film would otherwise motivate viewers to
book Amtrak tickets to Steel City. Frankly, it would probably be even stronger
if there were a little less of the experts talking and a little more music.
However, one of those experts is the late, great Geri Allen, who hailed from
Michigan, but played Mary Lou Williams in Robert Altman’s Kansas City and taught jazz at the University of Pittsburgh. It is
still hard to believe she is no longer with us.
Will the film be airing on any other PBS stations, or online?
ReplyDeleteIts on the PBS World Channel and some regular stations. I would check on line for details
DeleteTip of the Iceberg.
ReplyDeleteA major flaw, IMHO, was not doing the research to know that Dodo Marmarosa was one of the greatest jazz pianists to hail from Pittsburgh.
ReplyDelete