Max Roach |
Kenny Clarke (Klook) is almost universally regarded by jazz scholars to be the originator of the 'Bebop' style of drumming. But how much of this is fact rather than jazz mythology? The received knowledge surrounding who invented Bebop drumming is that Clarke was the first drummer playing in this style, and that Max Roach developed and refined Kenny's ideas into what we now understand to be 'modern jazz drumming'. However, there are very few facts to back up this theory, and much more evidence pointing to Clarke merely being a brilliant self-promotionalist, using ideas he had mostly picked up from Count Basie's drummer 'Papa' Jo Jones. In reality Jones, Roach and other lesser known players were the true innovators. To support this claim let us first look at the developments made in drum kit playing during this period.
Bebop drumming innovations
- Shifting time keeping from hi-hats and bass drum to the ride cymbal
- Adding accents on the '2' and '4' quarter note beats of the ride pattern
- Very high tempo grooves
- Accented bass drum hits (bombs)
- Syncopation of the bass and snare drum against the ride cymbal pattern (limb independence) to support and enhance melodic soloists
Confusion surrounding the development of drum kit playing in the late 1930s/early 1940s can be attributed to several reasons. Firstly, due to poor recording technology it was often impossible to accurately tell what a drummer was playing on a recording. Many recordings which sound as though the drummer is only playing the bass drum on accented hits and pushes are actually a misrepresentation of what was really going on. Most drummers were still playing 'four-on-the-floor' bass drum, feathering some beats and accenting others, but microphones weren't good enough to pick up this feathering, instead sounding like they were only playing the accents.
A good example of this is Clarke's playing on 'Stomping at the Savoy' from the 1941 recording Thelonious Monk – After Hours at Minton's , one of the few pre-1949 recordings that exist of Clarke playing anything other than big band Swing. Clarke's playing has elements of what would become bebop drumming, particularly his left hand comping patterns, however Clarke spends almost the entire track on the hi-hats (in the Jo Jones style) rather than the ride cymbal, and though the recording is of poor quality you can make out that while there is some bass drum syncopation many of his bass drum 'bombs' are simply accented beats rather than individual syncopated ones, he is still playing a regular four-on-the-floor with his bass drum through large parts of the performance, very much in the style of big band Swing. This can be heard best during Charlie Christian's guitar solos at 02:24 and 05:56 respectively. So whilst this track demonstrates some limited degree of limb independence with a few syncopated bass and snare drum phrases, it does not feature the other key ingredients of Bebop drumming, sounding somewhat antiquated when compared for instance with Max Roach only four years later.
Another reason for the confusion regarding Clarke's influence on Bop drumming stems from his own statements on the subject. For example, in Arthur Taylor's book 'Notes and Tones' (p190) in which Taylor conducts interviews with a number of jazz musicians including Clarke, Taylor asks: “Would you tell me something about Minton's and that period, in regard to the development of our own music?” Clarke responds:
“Rhythmically, music has progressed quite a bit, because the drummer was liberated during the Minton era. Before, drummers were just required to keep a four beat, dig coal in the snare drum and hit the cymbal at introductions and endings. Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk encouraged me to continue in the style I was playing. This liberated drummers, and from then on they have progressed tremendously.”
Kenny Clarke |
He was clearly painting himself here as an innovator, as he often would. However, in a 1984 interview with Ed Thigpen in Modern Drummer magazine (again presenting himself as a pioneer), Clarke contradicted himself. While discussing one of the innovations credited to him, shifting time from the bass drum and hi-hats to the ride cymbal, he said:
“Of course, Jo (Jones) was a hi-hat man. But, I couldn't make that hi-hat thing. I wanted my arms free. I just moved over from the hi-hat to the ride and played the same thing that I'd been playing on the hi-hat. The hi-hat then became another instrument! I could play with my left hand. It opened up the whole set, you know. Before that, cats didn't use the cymbal except for accents, endings and stuff like that.” (Modern Drummer, Vol. 8, No. 2, Feb 1984, p17). But later in the same interview when asked who his early influences were, he revealed that this innovation actually came from elsewhere:
“There was one cat who taught me everything about cymbal playing. His name was Jimmy Peck. He was mean, baby - a smart player. He just sat me down and said, 'Look, if you're going to play it up there, make it sound pretty. It's all in here, in the wrist, and you kind of throw it out.' When you throw it out, it changes the sound. There are so many things you can do when you get the idea.”
Regarding another innovation Clarke credited to himself, dropping 'bombs' with the bass drum, in an extensive eight hour radio interview in 1989 on the history of jazz drumming, Loren Schoenberg of WKCR radio in New York and celebrated drummer Mel Lewis were dismissive of claims that Clarke had invented this technique. Discussing the performance of Clarke on the recording 'Indiana' also from Minton's in 1941, Mel Lewis had this to say:
Jo Jones |
“What, that Klook was the first one (dropping bombs)? No I don't believe that. A lot of these people that write, they weren't there. These great drummers who played every night somewhere, you don't know what was going on. Who knows what Jo Jones did in the course of a week on the road? He might've hit on some things that he never did again and they never heard in New York. These guys (writers) are judging everything by what they hear on records mostly, and on records everybody played it safe most of the time because they had to.”
Herein lies another problem. 'After Hours at Minton's' is often regarded as the first Bebop recording, but this notion is perhaps blurred by the fact that it is a series of jams recorded by university student Jerry Newman on a portable disc-cutting machine. The musician's performances were unhindered by record companies or band leaders and perhaps most crucially, Newman was able to cut 12” records at 33rpm. This produced 15 minutes of music on either side, allowing the musicians to stretch out their songs, no longer confined to 3 minute pieces. It should also be noted that these recordings weren't commercially available until the mid-1970's, over thirty years after they were made. As Mel Lewis points out, had Jo Jones been recorded in this context he may well have sounded very similar. Indeed, Jazz writer Robin D.G Kelly noted that “Kenny Clarke's recollections of what happened at Minton's were inconsistent” (Thelonious Monk – The Life And Times Of An American Original, p69) adding that “although Minton's did become a kind of laboratory for new music, what was played in 1941 can hardly be called Bebop.” (p70)
Sid Catlett |
In conclusion, given the lack of physical evidence that exists, it is impossible to say that Kenny Clarke, as writer Thomas Owens claims, is the undisputed founding father of bebop drumming (Bebop: The Music And It's Players p181). From what evidence there is it seems more probable that the innovations in drumming that led to the Bebop style came from many different sources including Jo Jones, Sid Catlett, and perhaps Clarke. What is undisputed is that the first recording of a fully realised Bebop drum kit performance took place at WOR Studios, Broadway, NYC on November 26th, 1945 by The Charlie Parker Rebeboppers, and it featured 21 year old drummer Max Roach. The original modern drummer.
Extract from 'The History Of Modern Drumming'
Interview with Mel Lewis by Loren Schoenberg of WKCR radio in New York, 1989
The rest of the interview can be found here:
LS: “Now, what's the difference between what he (Clarke) was doing behind the trumpet solo, what he was doing with the snare drum and like the patented Jo Jones stuff? Is it the same concept?”
ML: “Yeah, you know. He made a little more out of it, that's all. But basically if you look at it from chronologically or historically, Jo Jones and (Sid) Catlett, well Jo Jones more, they were doing things that would be considered evolutionary or revolutionary or whatever. But I don't think they knew they were doing it.”
LS: “Right, it was just something that happened sometimes as opposed to someone like Kenny saying this is the main part of what I'm doing, is that what you mean?”
ML: “Kenny was trying to create something whereas Jo, I think whatever happened, happened. Jo had been through that era already for himself and was always 'adding on' in other words. And now everybody else would dig that of course, and it would enter your repertoire of tricks and things because you heard Jo Jones do it. And some of those things must have fallen on Kenny.”
LS: “That's one other question I want to ask you. They make a big deal in jazz history books about Kenny Clarke was the first one to drop 'bombs' on the bass drum. Now of course, that's not true because there are records of (Gene) Kruppa doing it with Benny (Goodman)'s band, and of course Jo Jones being very independent on some of the Basie records, doing these off-beat things. Is that statement true, and if not, what?”
ML: “What, that Klook was the first one? No I don't believe that. A lot of these people that write, they weren't there. These great drummers who played every night somewhere, you don't know what was going on. Who knows what Jo Jones did in the course of a week on the road? He might've hit on some things that he never did again and they never heard in New York. These guys (writers) are judging everything by what they hear on records mostly, and on records everybody played it safe most of the time because they had to.”
Bibliography
Goia, T., 1997. The History Of Jazz. Oxford. Oxford University Press
Kelley, R.D.G., 2010. Thelonious Monk The life and times of an American original. London. JR Books.
Owens, T., 1995. Bebop The music and its players. New York. Oxford University Press.
Taylor, A.,1977. Notes and Tones. New York. Da Capo Press
Yanow, S., 2000. Bebop. San Francisco, CA. Miller Freeman Books.
Howland, H., 1979. Max Roach Back On The Bandstand. Modern drummer Magazine, 3 (1), p16, 17-21.
Thigpen, E., 1984. Kenny Clarke Jazz Pioneer. Modern Drummer Magazine, 8 (2), p17-21.
Schoenberg, L., Lewis, M., 1989. The History of Jazz Drumming. [online audio] Percussive Arts Society. Available at: <http://www.pas.org/experience/oralhistory/mellewis.aspx>
Discography
Monk, Thelonious. After Hours at Minton's. Definitive. 359204. Published 2006 by Definitive.
Parker, Charlie. The Complete Savoy Masters. Definitive Classics. 11140. Published 2000 by Definitive Classics