*****The majority of jazz aficionados like I said up thread are "stuck" in the old days listening to the greats of the 1940 -1970 era.*****
I plead guilty. I am also STUCK in the past when I listen to The Blues and Classical Music. Still stuck in the Mississippi delta with Muddy Waters and B.B. King et al. And for some reason I just can’t get past Mozart, Beethoven, Bach and folks like that. Hell, I still listen, by choice, to Motown and doo-wop. I wonder why that is?
****Name ONE trumpet player? ONE piano player? ONE bass player? ONE drummer?*****
I think you are confusing, mastering the ability to play an instrument, with making a contribution to the art form called Jazz. Current day players are better ’schooled’ in playing music and mastering their instrument.
*****Likewise Stanley Clarke could hold his own with Charles Mingus on bass to name a modern bass representative.*****
No one thinks ’Bass player’ when Mingus’ name is mentioned.. He was so much more than that. Ellington: Piano player?
*****Jeremy Pelt and Roy Hargrove come very close to Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard, Kenny Dorham and Donald Byrd on trumpet*****
Surely you jest!! No one, and I mean No one, can touch Wynton Marsalis playing the Trumpet. Greatest Jazz trumpet players? The list would have to be very long for him to be on it. But, he is so much more to Jazz than a trumpet player.
It’s not about how well you can play the instrument, it’s about what contribution did you make to the art form.
Miles once said, there is nothing a person can do on trumpet that Louis Armstrong has not done already. This means, making a significant contribution gets harder as time goes on.
No one is stuck. We are there by choice.
Cheers