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George Varga

Appreciation: Ahmad Jamal, dead at 92. Revisit our 2007 interview with the jazz piano giant

Ahmad Jamal was a jazz piano master whose feathery touch, lyrical elegance and pinpoint command of dynamics and the space between notes profoundly inspired Miles Davis and a host of other famous admirers. While he could play spirited cadenzas with the best of them, Jamal made saying more with less an art form.

His death Sunday from complications from prostate cancer at the age of 92 leaves a major void in a music world that he indelibly influenced.

It comes just three years after the final concert of Jamal's storied career took place at at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 8, 2020. If not for the pandemic shutdown, he would have continued to perform.

The first jazz artist to score a million-selling album, Jamal earned a Lifetime Achievement Grammy Award in 2017 and was named a Jazz Master in 1994 by the National Endowment for the Arts.

In the 1950s, Jamal became one of first African American musicians to publicly become a member of the Muslim faith.

Over the course of a career that took off in the 1950s, Jamal appeared in many of the world's most prestigious concert halls. But by his own account, he didn't perform in San Diego between the 1970s and 2007, when he did a three-night, six-concert residency at Anthology in Little Italy.

It came a year after his tour of Thailand with San Diego-based jazz sax legend James Moody, whose 2010 death here was also the result of prostate cancer.

"I don't do too many club dates," Jamal, then 77, told the Union-Tribune in an interview previewing his 2007 shows here.

"But the offer from Anthology was attractive enough and they provide a hotel of my choice. (Bill Charlap Trio drummer) Kenny Washington described the venue and told me they have a wonderful piano."

Here is the complete 2007 interview with Ahmad Jamal.

'My career is peaking like it hasn't ever peaked before'

By George Varga

Dec. 6, 2007, The San Diego Union-Tribune

Ahmad Jamal has been one of the most eloquent and influential pianists in jazz for more than half a century, in large part because he has devoted so much of his time to nurturing his greatest passion.

"It's a paid vacation!" the bearded keyboard legend said with a chortle from France, where he last week completed a new album with his trio.

But Jamal, who has been leading bands for 56 of his 77 years, works as hard as he plays. And he plays with such a unique combination of elegance and intensity — as well as with one of the most supple touches in jazz — that he puts many musicians half or a third his age to shame.

"My career is peaking like it hasn't ever peaked before; we are in more demand now than we were years ago," said the bearded pianist, whose landmark 1958 live album, "At the Pershing," became the first jazz LP to sell a million copies.

Jamal's live performance contracts stipulate that he be provided with a digital electronic keyboard in his hotel rooms at each stop on his tours. His most recent trek took him from Portugal to England, then over to France for more concerts and a four-day recording session, followed by a tour-closing date Saturday in the northern French port city of Boulogne.

After returning to the United States, the Connecticut-based pianist and composer had only a few days off before flying here, where he opens a three-night, six-show engagement tonight at downtown's 6-month-old Anthology. It is, he believes, his first San Diego performance since the 1970s.

"I don't do too many club dates," said Jamal, whose acclaimed engagement at Ronnie Scott's last month marked his first London club appearance in 35 years.

"But the offer from Anthology was attractive enough and they provide a hotel of my choice. (Bill Charlap Trio drummer) Kenny Washington described the venue and told me they have a wonderful piano."

"Wonderful piano" is an apt description of any keyboard Jamal plays. Like few others, he is blessed with a pinpoint command of his instrument and the ability to strike a fine balance between freedom and discipline, fire and finesse.

When Jamal performs, he makes the spaces between notes as important as the notes themselves.

A master of dynamic control and of musical tension and release, he can create perfectly formed new compositions within any given piece to make his improvisations sound both surprising and completely logical.

Able to craft arrangements that make a jazz trio sound almost orchestral, he is also one of those rare players who never runs out of intriguing musical ideas.

Or as esteemed saxophonist Cannonball Adderly once noted of Jamal: "He always gives the impression of having something in reserve. 'Don't shoot everything in one tune and play 50 choruses or it'll all sound the same,' he told me."

Miles Davis was an even bigger fan, writing in his autobiography: "(Ahmad) knocked me out with his concept of space, his lightness of touch, his understatement and the way he phrased notes and passages."

Davis not only asked some of the pianists in his own bands to play like Jamal, he asked one of his best drummers, Philly Joe Jones, to rhythmically emulate the accents Jamal's guitarist, future San Diegan Ray Crawford, played with his thumb. Davis also recorded Jamal's 1955 composition "New Rumba," and performed it in concert.

That the iconic trumpeter didn't thank Jamal personally for being such an inspiration never concerned the pianist, then or now.

"He didn't have to do that because actions speak louder than words," Jamal said. "He was quite a fan of mine and I accept that. I was a fan of his, too, so it worked both ways."

A proposed music project that would have teamed Jamal with Davis and Adderly was bandied about in the late-1950s. It never reached fruition.

"There was talk," Jamal recalled. "But we were all (band) leaders, so it was too complicated."

Jamal's current trio features his longtime bassist James Cammack and top New Orleans drummer Idris Muhammad, whose propulsive playing provides a fluid yet flexible foundation for ballads and up-tempo numbers alike.

The two are the latest in a long line of notable Jamal band members. It's a musical fraternity that dates back to guitarist Crawford and the redoubtable rhythm section of bassist Israel Crosby and drummer Vernell Fournier, who replaced Crawford in 1956.

"Richard Davis, the bassist, his first job was with me," Jamal noted proudly. "Art Davis also worked with me; I've had a host of wonderful musicians.

"What I look for is character, perception, understanding of the music, philosophically, and some ability to empathize with the leader. If you don't have character, you can't really perform up to a certain level."

Like San Diego saxophonist James Moody, with whom he did a concert tour of Thailand last December, Jamal does not record nearly as often as befits his legendary status. Yet, while his fans crave more releases from him, the veteran pianist prefers to bide his time.

"I don't go in the studio often," he acknowledged. "I haven't done anything for two or three years, which is my usual modus operandi. I don't go in the studio, willy-nilly to make an album; I never have. I don't go by deadlines, I go by inspiration."

For Jamal, the inspiration to play piano came at the age of 3, when an uncle challenged him to sit at the keyboard and try and replicate what the uncle had just played. Jamal did precisely that.

"Music chose me, I didn't choose it," he said. "At that age you don't make decisions, as such; decisions are made for you. So, I've been with the piano and the music scene ever since. I was doing professional work at 10. I joined the Musician's Union at 14, when the minimal age was 16.

"How? I just put my age up two years and didn't get found out."

———

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