Jazz musician, scholar, and educator Ed Sarath (Univ. of Michigan) offers an engaging study of jazz music as inextricably linked to black heritage and race relations in the US; improvisation and creativity within the arts, primarily music; and, most significantly, the need to restructure music curricula in public schools. Sarath situates this restructuring with regard not only to jazz but also to other improvised, non-Western musics. The book has two main sections—"Jazz and the Creativity Turn" and "Jazz and the Consciousness Turn"—but, as Sarath points out, the “closely intertwined nature of creativity and consciousness is evident throughout” the book. In the introduction, he submits that “lower order” change in music education has, to date, amounted to adding “improvisation, composition, and engagement with diverse musical traditions” to the existing pedagogical framework. He asserts that a “higher order” vision should stem from rebuilding the entire “learning enterprise”—a restructuring that would examine issues including diversity, integrative learning, embodied musicianship, and entrepreneurship. Sarath also argues that learning models should focus more on creativity and less on students as “interpreters” who occasionally improvise and compose. The endnotes and bibliography are extensive.Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals.
A compelling and timely solution to paradigms of dominance and control that deny music students the value of African American-based jazz improvisation. Sarath challenges the fragmentation of people and practices that persists despite our best efforts at diversity in U.S. music degree programs. He offers a blueprint for the what, how, and how not to teach an integrative studies of music from performance and education to history and ethnomusicology. One that does not leave a core national practice of music to an elective. As we progress towards curricula that promote co-constitutive competence in performance, composition, and improvisation across diverse cultures and classical traditions, this book is a must-read.
Sarath engages the reader in the critical questions facing us today, how we understand, maintain, uphold, and use American heritages of Black music culture and appreciate its importance globally. His thesis and arguments are sound, soulful, and hugely sensible.
Jazz musician, scholar, and educator Ed Sarath (Univ. of Michigan) offers an engaging study of jazz music as inextricably linked to black heritage and race relations in the US; improvisation and creativity within the arts, primarily music; and, most significantly, the need to restructure music curricula in public schools. Sarath situates this restructuring with regard not only to jazz but also to other improvised, non-Western musics. The book has two main sections—"Jazz and the Creativity Turn" and "Jazz and the Consciousness Turn"—but, as Sarath points out, the “closely intertwined nature of creativity and consciousness is evident throughout” the book. In the introduction, he submits that “lower order” change in music education has, to date, amounted to adding “improvisation, composition, and engagement with diverse musical traditions” to the existing pedagogical framework. He asserts that a “higher order” vision should stem from rebuilding the entire “learning enterprise”—a restructuring that would examine issues including diversity, integrative learning, embodied musicianship, and entrepreneurship. Sarath also argues that learning models should focus more on creativity and less on students as “interpreters” who occasionally improvise and compose. The endnotes and bibliography are extensive. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals.
Jazz musician, scholar, and educator Ed Sarath (Univ. of Michigan) offers an engaging study of jazz music as inextricably linked to black heritage and race relations in the US; improvisation and creativity within the arts, primarily music; and, most significantly, the need to restructure music curricula in public schools. Sarath situates this restructuring with regard not only to jazz but also to other improvised, non-Western musics. The book has two main sections"Jazz and the Creativity Turn" and "Jazz and the Consciousness Turn"but, as Sarath points out, the “closely intertwined nature of creativity and consciousness is evident throughout” the book. In the introduction, he submits that “lower order” change in music education has, to date, amounted to adding “improvisation, composition, and engagement with diverse musical traditions” to the existing pedagogical framework. He asserts that a “higher order” vision should stem from rebuilding the entire “learning enterprise”a restructuring that would examine issues including diversity, integrative learning, embodied musicianship, and entrepreneurship. Sarath also argues that learning models should focus more on creativity and less on students as “interpreters” who occasionally improvise and compose. The endnotes and bibliography are extensive.
Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals.