| I like to talk about the history so much that I can go on and on and on.
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| To save you the pain of that experience I have managed to condense everything I
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| know about jazz in America into three simple constituent parts.
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| And it is my belief that after I lay these three simple elements on you,
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| you too will know everything you need to know about jazz music.
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| How can he do it, they ask?
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| Can he do it?
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| Yes indeed he can.
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| You see I have studied scientifically how to synthesize this material,
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| and in the caldron of knowledge known as the road, the bebop road,
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| that goes on and on and on, I have boiled the information down to three little
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| pearls of wisdom.
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| The most important thing about jazz in America — it has been true since the
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| first note turned blue in 1902 — number one the most important thing in jazz?
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| It’s a bad romance.
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| You got to have a bad romance to play this music.
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| Now I don’t mean a little sad romance.
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| No baby.
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| I don’t mean a little one or two week affair that just turned square.
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| No buddy.
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| I mean a really, really bad hurt, somebody had to get their just desert.
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| And given all the bad romance in the world today, it’s a surprise there aren’t
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| more jazz players trying to play with us here today.
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| Number two, the second most important thing in jazz, what could it be?
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| It’s a good travel agent.
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| The second most important thing in jazz music is a good travel agent.
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| Because nothing will get you out of town faster than a bad romance.
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| And I have proof of whereof I speak.
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| To whit:
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| Cast your mind back to that time when that note first turned blue, 1902.
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| The place, Lake Ponchetrain, Louisiana.
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| It’s a hot summer night, it’s August and the crickets are cricketing and the
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| chirpings are chirping.
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| And out on the end of a pier, he’s got a cornet in one hand, he’s got his eyes
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| on the prize way up in the skies, a wonderful trumpet player named Buddy Bolden.
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| Now let me ask you: how many people in the room here tonight have heard the
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| music of Buddy Bolden?
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| No you’re lying brother.
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| You never heard Buddy Bolden.
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| Buddy Bolden never recorded.
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| He didn’t make record one.
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| And why?
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| He didn’t have a good travel agent.
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| But that same night, that same pier, that same moonlight, that same year,
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| another young man had a horn in his hand but he had himself a better plan.
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| He picked it up and put it down: he got out of town.
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| He went to Chicago.
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| He went to Kansas City, Kansas, way beyond, San Francisco, Moscow, Bejing,
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| Seoul.
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| I’m talking about Pops, Louis Armstrong.
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| That man had himself a terrific travel agent.
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| You got to get out and move if you want to keep this groove.
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| This song is really about a young man whose true love was blind
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| He was crying all the time
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| Thought he would find a new love
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| In Paris France (he's gonna do the Paris dance)
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| But when he got to town all he found was he couldn’t speak French
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| He was sitting on a bench)
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| All alone not mentioned embarrassed
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| Ah but music is the language of love (play on play)
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| Bud Powell was in town
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| So he thought he’d make it down
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| And order a round of the rarest
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| (wine that is)
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| But as so often happens in this world of travail and cheap wine
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| The ridiculous becomes sublime
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| (it's part of the great design)
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| Your final reward,
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| It’s down at the end of the line
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| Because just then someone put a side on the box
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| And Bird flew bye like he was chasing a fox
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| Bird fluttered by
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| Sang a hipper melody from the sky
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| Bebop bebop
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| Nothing like the sound of bebop
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| It’s steady going on
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| And it won’t never stop
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| But I digress.
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| I promised you three simple constituent parts to take to your hearts and have
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| so far delivered only two: let’s review.
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| Number one, the most important thing in jazz, a bad romance.
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| Number two, a good travel agent.
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| Number three.
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| What could it be?
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| I’ll tell you right now.
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| Sea Food.
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| Well what do you think Buddy Bolden was thinking about back there at Lake
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| Ponchetrain?
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| I happen to know: Soft shell crab.
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| And what do you think got Louis Armstrong out of town so fast?
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| He was gonna go out with some trout.
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| But nobody said it better than that fine philosopher of jazz, Thomas «Fats» Waller.
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| He gave us those immortal lines, «Shrimp and rice, mighty nice.
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| Give me some seafood mama!»
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| That’s what I want, you know what I need…
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| Nothing like the sound of bebop going on and it won’t never stop. |