Having an ear for Jazz


Anyone else start to like Jazz mid way through life , and start to move away from Rock and other noisy sounding music ?
tmsorosk
I was into all kinds of music as a kid and my dad was a big jazz fan and i grew up listening to Miles, Coltrane, Cannonball but in 1973/74 I was listening to alot of rock and then I discovered the group Chase. As a young trumpet player I thought I was pretty good and the I heard Bill Chase play....he OWNED his trumpet and while the 3 albums of jazz infused rock didn't stand the test of time like say Blood, Sweat & Tears it did open up my mind that the lines can sometimes be blurred in the hands of the right person. Anyway, Bill Chase died in a plane crash and the lead trumpeter Jay Sollenberger joined Stan Kenton's Big Band and I was like WTF? A year went by and I was invited to study at 1 of the Kenton clinics his band put on each summer and I jumped at the chance to get to study with a guy like Sollenberger. Well, I went, absorbed knowledge like a sponge and discovered i didn't have the commitment to be really great...those guys lived their craft but it in infused in me a lifelong love of jazz and serious music in general. Mr. Kenton was committed to education and while we don't often hear his name mentioned, he almost single handedly kept the big band alive and furthermore, his gifts, guidance and relationship with North Texas State and their jazz program will continue to pay dividends for all of us. There are more working pros come out of that program today than probably any other University anywhere. Their 1 o'clock lab band is the nuts.
The more I listen to jazz the more I love and appreciated it. I`ve gone through R/B,blues,rock,reggae and some classical and like them all. There`s just something very special regarding jazz muscians and vocalists.They can take a simple standard and make it unique and personal. Big band,smaller combos,duets or solo, it`s all special. The better your system becomes, the emotion/communication of jazz increases. For example Miles Davis, Chet Baker, Clifford Brown or Lee Morgan, all jazz trumpeters, yet each is easily recognizable by their individual sound and approach. This is true for all the various instruments and singers.

The fact that most jazz is played with acoustic instruments and very often recorded well(compared to most of pop and rock) is an added bonus.
Always liked it. Watching Ken Burn's Jazz series when it ran on PBS took my appreciation to a higher level.
Ken Burns' Jazz was what turned me on to Jazz.
I was around a LONG time before that was made, but i never liked Jazz. It was 'too busy' in ways i just did not get. So I totally avoided it.
Until i happened to see some of the Ken Burns program, then watched the entire series. Suddenly i understood what the players were doing, and was hooked.
Now, about 40% of my listening is to Jazz, 35% Rock etc, and 25% Classical.
And NO, Jazz has not diminished my interest in Rock.
I never was a 'metal' type anyway, nor The Carpenters.. LOL.
Jazz did incease my appreciation of more complex music. (aside from Classical, where I was at a pretty deep level of appreciation anyway.)
Yes, I have learned to appreciate good jazz. I have also learned to appreciate classical, opera, and even some country, However, my new found appreciation for an even broader range of music has not made me move away from rock. Just the opposite, in fact. I have more understanding about what many classically trained rock musicians were/are trying to accomplish. I guess I can say I have learned to appreciate all kinds of music as I have gotten older.