Jazz Renaissance


I first started listening to jazz in my early college years in the mid-late 70's and have been an avid fan since, taking it to an addictive level from the mid 80's on. I've had the pleasure of seeing the popularity of this art form slowly (re)gain momentum thru the 80's, seemingly take off in the early 90's, and reach an apparent zenith as of late. I've seen the record bins increase in size and variety. Being a frequent traveler to hear live jazz, for the better part of 20 years,I've seen the number and variety of live performances increase significantly from Manhattan to Portland (Or), the crowds swell at the shows and "walkin" opportunities, which used to be an always viable option, become virtually non-existent. And not the least, the variegated and copious jazz commentaries on the web, such as A'gon( sdcampbells erudite threads come to mind). These are all good things. But even more interesting, I see the crowds becoming increasingly younger( contrary to my live classical music experience) and younger. Refreshing, to say the least. I've been wondering as of late, what to attribute this to. The increased availability of software, Wynton's popularity and promotion beginning in the 80's, the proliferation of young talent,? etc. 15-20 years ago this seemed like a closet passion, now I see the record bins being ransacked by, and shows from Marcus Printup to Jimmy Heath populated by more and more who are younger and younger. I'm puzzled in a good way.
mes
Mes(mark I think?)- I am a younger guy(20 years old) and am very into jazz, and have been for the last 4 or 5 years, started with smooth jazz and evolved to appreciate all forms. I think the main reason is what else am I going to listen to? most current music-for lake of a better word-sucks. For most people my age whom have any inteligence see this wool that has been pulled over our eyes and jazz is the light at the end of the tunnel, I have several friends my age who are not audiophiles and have been listening to more and more jazz, its contagious-once exposed there is NO cure, except more. I think the late 90's was the pinnacle of bad music and poor taste, influenced heavily by the 80's, don't get me wrong good things happened in the music business during both decades but less then any decade prior to recorded music(technology being the one saving grace of the 80's and 90's) Not only are less talented musicians being praised for there work, they are making exponentially more money producing what ever it is you call what they produce, then there predecessor's made. I think most people have had enough of that stuff, and are ready to enjoy the good stuff. I could be wrong but that is how me and most of my buddies see it.
Tim
Damn Tireguy, my confidence level in you rose to a new high after reading your post.
Agree Albertporter, looks like there's hope for the younger generation after all!
To the younger jazz listeners: I still have a couple of CD copies I made of "What is Jazz", a program by Leonard Bernstein that was recorded around 1956-57 for the Omnibus TV series. If anyone is interested in a copy of the recording (dubbed onto CD from an old mono LP), send me your mailing address and $2 to cover postage, etc., and I'll send you a copy. The recording quality is decent, and the program is very informative and entertaining.
Thank you for the kind words guys! Hope that helps explain the phenomenon that a lot of you have been seeing as of late.
Tim