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Buster Williams: Bass to Infinity


Director: Adam Kahan
Distributor or Film Company
USA: 90 minutes
Premier Date: Nov. 12, 2019
This is an exceptional jazz film that most likely would have made its way into art theaters around the world were it not that four months after its premier in New York City, the pandemic struck, and most theaters closed down. However, it is readily available on the web, for example at Amazon Prime, so you don't have to wait for the COVID restrictions to be lifted in order to experience and enjoy it.
Just please make sure if you can that you use a really good sound system, for this is a film built around sound, the sound of the bass violin, otherwise known as the upright or acoustic bass. The film provides as intimate a portrait of the upright acoustic bass as you will ever see or hear it, with closeups of Buster Williams' fingering along the strings, while all the overtones and undertones contribute to the beautiful sound this instrument can make. You can hear the wood vibrating as if to convey infinity, which is one of the several reasons for the film's subtitle: "Bass to Infinity." And Williams' conversations about it illustrate how personal and deep the relationship between instrument and player can get.
There is one thing about this film that may be controversial at least in some circles. The concern does not become apparent until the end of the film, so I will save it for the end of my discussion. Overall, I think it is a uniquely great achievement in documentary film making.
The Incredible Sound of the Bass
Most jazz aficionados think of the bass as part of the rhythm section, and up until the 1950s, what was expected of a bassist was to keep good time and lay down the chord progression with a little bit of filigree along the way.
Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Paul Chambers
bass, acoustic1935 - 1969
Far from an instrument that you pluck to keep time, like the bathtub bass of the early Dixieland era, the bass violin (I use this term to emphasize that it is part of the string or violin section of the orchestra) has a magnificent sound and infinite abilityin the right hands of courseto create written or improvised lines that are rich and expressive and because of its low register are powerfully moving and supportive of the other instruments. You can hear this power in different guises in the great bassists of the post-bop era, like Chambers,

Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Scott LaFaro
bass1936 - 1961

George Mraz
bass1944 - 2021

Rufus Reid
bass, acousticb.1944
Playing with the Time Machine
Although centered around Buster Williams and his bass playing, the film is also about an era that is going to be gone soon, the time when the giants of the 1940s to 1960s bebop and hard bop periods are still mingling with the up and coming aspirants and the new leaders of jazz in the New Millennium. The recent passing of jazz greats
Jimmy Heath
saxophone, tenor1926 - 2020

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021
The vocabulary of jazz expanded vastly then, as it continues to do now, as if a door was opened to "infinity." So when, in one of the opening scenes, we encounter

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
Bringing in Williams' Jazz Master Friends
One of the wonderful features of this film is that the musicians are relaxed, responsive, and in good spirits. None of the self-conscious artificiality that you see in some other documentaries is present here. The extent to which director Adam Kahan and his crew achieved such rapport with the musicians while at the same time providing almost flawless cinematography will become a model for other documentary filmmakers to learn from. The net effect is a film about jazz greats that does justice to and respects them as both musicians and human beings. In this way, the film is a breath of fresh air in this genre and something to delight in.The film next takes us with Williams to a visit with another great bassist,

Christian McBride
bassb.1972

Terri Lyne Carrington
drumsb.1965

Kenny Barron
pianob.1943
Williams then goes back to his childhood, his father being a band leader and bassist, and Buster finally settling on the bass as his own instrument. There is obvious love, affection, and parental wisdom in this family, and we see how, as in many other instances of that era, the future jazz musician is exposed to the music on the radio and phonograph from early childhood.
Jammin' with and Gettin' Jammed Up with Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt
The next scenes show what a great story teller Williams can be. He recounts the almost epic tale of being called as young man to serve as a substitute bassist for
Gene Ammons
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1974

Sonny Stitt
saxophone1924 - 1982
For some reason, Kahan uses animated cartoons rather than still photos or film footage to visualize parts of Williams' story. Opinions will be mixed about this approach. I personally was initially put off by it, but on subsequent views I became more comfortable with this media mix. The story itself is one of the strongest, heartfelt descriptions of how addictions sabotaged the lives and work of otherwise brilliant and gifted individuals. Animation imagery does not seem to fit with the seriousness of the message, but it works, perhaps, as a way to provide some emotional distance from these musicians' very stressful and often tragic lives. The real point the film is trying to make is how some musicians like Williams avoided the traps.
In the midst of some further reminiscences, we are called back to the present when Williams and another great bassist from the same generation,

Rufus Reid
bass, acousticb.1944
Workin' with Sarah Vaughan, Nancy Wilson, and other Vocalists
A central point of From Bass to Infinity is about the practical choice that Williams made during part of his career to go tour with women singers rather than with some of the great instrumentalists he could have worked with. The reason was simple: their gigs were more dependable and paid more money!
Nancy Wilson
vocals1937 - 2018

Sarah Vaughan
vocals1924 - 1990

Carmen Lundy
vocalsb.1954
Musicians at Play
Staying in the present moment now, we next see Williams in a trio rehearsal with Kenny Barron and drummer
Lenny White
drumsb.1949
Nam Myoho Renge Kyo
The film began with the ringing sound of a Buddhist cupped chime, another suggestion of "infinity," but little is said about it until the later scenes in the film, beginning with
Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Bobby Zankel
saxophone, altob.1949

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
The Race Card
Finally, the great and under-recognized pianist
Larry Willis
piano1942 - 2019
Although it is never mentioned in the movie, we cannot doubt that an African American like Williams coming up in Camden, NJ in the 1940s-50s experienced some bullying and discrimination. Aspiring to be a jazz musician, Williams being black probably brought him favor among other black musicians. Conversely, it almost certainly meant that he would be manipulated by record company executives, although he had a very savvy business sense. So why are these issues of race and ethnicity, which emerge in almost every biography of a black jazz musician, never raised in the movie? The only thing I could find that might explain it is an almost shocking statement by the director Adam Kahan in an interview about his film on

Rahsaan Roland Kirk
woodwinds1935 - 1977
"I think in order for what we know as Jazz to progress, we have to kill it. It's like the race problems we have in this world. They are not going to disappear until we get rid of all the white people. And black people. And all the others. And everyone just screws each other until the color line is forever blurred."**
In a histrionic way, Kahan is saying that differences such as color, race, religion, ethnicity, etc. inevitably polarize groups, and jazz has suffered from that polarization. Of course that is only partly true. The opposite is also true. White, black, brown, yellow, red jazz musicians from all over the world have learned from their cultural and musical diversity to create new forms, new genres, new ways of playing that have increased the power of jazz since its inception. The future of jazz depends on diversity. But Kahan seems, intentionally or not, to have minimized it in this film, until the very end, where it is raised as an issue.
Another aspect of this film that I was unaware of until I watched it through a second time is that all or nearly all the cast in this film are African American! In other words Kahan reversed the usual discrimination against black actors in Hollywood movies. Does this mean that all the significant figures in Williams' life are black? Does it mean that the director was trying to make a point? All I can say is that I did not feel any "reverse discrimination" in the film. But Williams did many gigs with white musicians, including Stan Getz and Chet Baker. Were none of them close friends with him?
I suspect, without any evidence to prove it, but based on reportorial instinct, that Kahan used the race card to make a point. What that point is, I don't know. But the beauty of this film is that it tells a story in a symbolic, allegorical way which is rarely found in a documentary. Everything in this film has symbolic significance, which is what draws the viewer more and more deeply into it. Thus Spake Zarathustra! Like the protagonist in Nietzsche's novel, Buster Williams strives for transcendence. There are many mountains to climb in that quest. One of them will be the next time he solos on a gig.
References
- * Herbie Hancock, Daisaku Ikeda, and Wayne Shorter. Reaching Beyond: Improvisations on Jazz, Buddhism, and a Joyful Life. Santa Monica Press, 2017.
- ** Quoted from interview: Meet the Filmmaker: Adam Kahan (The Case of the Three-Sided Dream)
Tags
Film Review
Buster Williams
Victor L. Schermer
Paul Chambers
Ron Carter
Scott Lofaro
George Mraz
Chick Corea
benny golson
John Coltrane
Thelonious Monk
Christian McBride
Terri Lyne Carrington
Kenny Barron
Gene Ammons
Sonny Stitt
Rufus Reid
Nancy Wilson
Sarah Vaughan
Carmen Lundy
Lenny White
Herbie Hancock
Wayne Shorter
Bobby Zankel
Sonny Rollins
Larry Willis
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
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