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Keith Jarrett Utne Reader
Pianist Keith Jarrett is one of the jazz world's most prolific and
ambitious artists. Lately he has been devoting himself to three
pursuits: solo improvisational concerts, gigs with his jazz trio,
and classical performances, including an ongoing series of Mozart
concertos with Dennis Russell Davies and the Stuttgart Chamber
Orchestra. Jarrett's newest recording, La Scala (ECM), was made at
his February 1995 solo concert at Milan's famous opera house.
Writer Keith Goetzman spoke with him about his creative process.
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Once Miles Davis asked me, 'How do you play from nothing?' And I
said, 'You know, you just do it.' And that actually is the answer.
I wish there were a way to make 'I don't know' a positive thing,
which it isn't in our society. We feel that we need to 'know'
certain things, and we substitute that quest for the actual
experience of things in all its complexity. When I play pure
improvisation, any kind of intellectual handles are inappropriate
because they get in the way of letting the river move where it's
supposed to move.
To do an improvised concert -- this includes the La Scala
concert and every other time I walk on the stage and play from zero
-- I need to find a way to start the journey without creating the
subject matter in my mind. In other words, I cannot have a melody
or a motif in my head, because those things will protrude into the
fabric. They will be too prominent and make the music seem like a
solid object rather than a flowing process. I have to not play
what's in my ears, if there's something in my ears. I have to find
a way for my hands to start the concert without me.
Something in my awareness tells me what I should do moment to
moment before the concert. Every situation is different -- the
dressing room situation, the social situation, what I eat. These
are all big, big things, not insignificant details. If I have, say,
an eight o'clock concert, and the audience is not in the hall at
eight, I' m capable of losing my timing. I' m aiming this arrow at
the event, and I' m divorcing myself from anything that's the wrong
thing. If someone says, 'It' ll be 10 more minutes,' it can be
really horrible. My whole psychology can change.
If you are a rock climber, once you' re halfway up the face of
the cliff, you have to keep moving, you have to keep going
somewhere. And that' s what I do. I find a way to get off the
earth, and as I work my way up -- as the music is being played -- I
am very aware. I have prepared my awareness. I can respond swiftly
to the whole broad range of what my ears tell me can happen.
Creativity is misunderstood, because the result is often given
more weight than the process. The event in real life -- the mus