Stan practiced sax eight hours a day and later referred to it as learning to talk musically “off the top of his head”. He loved playing so much throughout his life he would happily play alone for the sheer joy of playing. He spent hours learning Lester Young solos note for note until he had them down perfectly. Hawkins had turned sax from a vaudeville shtick instrument into a jazz instrument and ruled until Lester Young came along in 1936. Until then the Hawkins/Armstrong school would see chords as tyrants that rule until the next chord arrives; they saw chord tones as the spine of the song to which you add non-chord tones as a spice. Lester changed it and made it a melody floating on top of an atmosphere below; instead of focusing on the notes that go with a A flat chord he wanted to instead play whatever he heard and make it fit. This included a liquid sense of metric shifting. Interestingly, Pres didn’t play songs until he had the lyrics done cold. Anyway, Pres glorified melody and Stan saw that all he had to do was spin melodies instead of acrobatics, however tough the song was. What’s more important, dazzling others with your dizzying navigation through complex chord changes (like Sonny Stitt) or your ability to sing a song? Stan also noted of Pres that “there was no hate in his music, even though this was at a time when racial things were very bad”. The criticism of Pres at the time was that his music was too simple but Stan knew better. Stan said often prep for recording meant consciously relaxing before the red light so his notes would never come out forced (probably originally to channel Pres). Stan worked with major names but didn’t get enough solo time with them and so he kept switching bands. Maggin along the way mentions many important things about the history of racism surrounding jazz musicians that all Americans should know. My favorite quote of the book; “There will always be exciting times for anyone who’s in a position to be experimenting and doing new things, new music, and so on. That’s the life blood of the whole thing” – Woody Herman A great roadmap for all of us who love playing jazz. Stan for a long time sounded like others before his sound became his own by adding to his take on Pres, what Maggin refers to as the “Jewish ache”. Bob Brookmeyer says that even though your instrument is metal and your mouthpiece metal, you are trying to get a human sound and once achieved, you are trying to say musically how you feel. Stan said he would let the mood of ballads tell him what to play but sometimes the melody itself was so beautiful he’d think why not just play the melody? Sometimes he’s say “it’s not the mode, it’s the mood”. Jobim says Brazilian music is beautiful because sadness is more beautiful than happiness for those with a soul. Jobim and Joao Gilberto didn’t want Astrid to sing as she would do on Stan’s soon to be hit record. Maybe Astrid found out they didn’t want her and got sad and sang better. ☺ The bulk of Stan’s money came from his performances not recordings because strangely most of his catalog didn’t sell much. Stan said it would take him four days to get his embouchure back after not playing. I’m a huge Stan Getz fan so I’m super-happy this book was written and the fact that it also had really musical info in there. The most boring part of the book was the chronic mistreatment of Monica Getz by her drug-abusing husband. The abuse is a dominant theme throughout the book but once you remove the fact that addicts hurt everyone around them and Getz was no different, you get back to Getz’s music itself: the sound, the choice of notes, the phrasing, dynamics and timing, and it’s all good…