So, columnist Froma Harrop wants to know what’ll happen to jazz music when all the aging jazz greats kick their respective buckets. I’ll tell you where its going: it’s going into sweet oblivion.
Jazz is a discordant cacophony, hateful to the ear. It’s piercing little horns drill right through the ear and the string bass sounds like an elephant’s trumpet. It’s practitioners have been a motley sort: drunkards, addicts, philanderers and shameless debauchers of young women.
Jazz has ruined more good Hi-Fi and stereo sets than even rock-a-billy (another disagreeable genera) or church music. That a grown man or woman will sit around and listen to jazz music, pretending to like it, is a sure sign they’ve adopted an affectation. You know: like the fellow who’d hold a glass of Mogen David up to the light so he can judge its clarity. It’s so very camp.
Yes, jazz music is indeed dying out. I just hope no one tries pull off a resuscitation.
Tom LaBelle
Snohomish
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