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Meet Bill Charlap
ByAs an improviser take a look at 'My Funny Valentine.' It's the perfect ballad chorus. You couldn't play a better or purer chorus on those changes.
Songwriter Moose Charlap (father) and show business childhood
He wrote lyrics to some things, not too many. He mainly wrote music, played piano, and sang. He wasn't a pianist per sehe sort of demonstrated his own music. I wasn't like a "show business brat." I just did what came naturallysome people I'd perform in front of, and some I wouldn't. Nobody ever forced me to play my cute piece.Interest in show music
That's the central part of my musical being. It's also a strong, central part of what jazz music is. Jazz, to me, is the blues, music from American popular theatre, and the great jazz composers, some of who straddle a very wide swath. Ellington is very special, a class by himself. Then you have the jazz writers like Monk,
Gigi Gryce
saxophone1927 - 1983

Thad Jones
trumpet1923 - 1986

Kenny Dorham
trumpet1924 - 1972

Benny Carter
saxophone, alto1907 - 2003
Attractiveness
You can hear the
Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
"You're Sensational"
These are all love songs, except "It's So Peaceful in the Country" which is a love song to the country (no girl!). They're about all the very adult feelings of love although some of them are very childish. This morning I was listening to Sinatra sing "You're Sensational" by Cole Porter. I don't know the exact words, but he's saying people say you're more or less aloof, and a lot of people don't think so much of you, but I think you're sensational. You get a lot of pictures in your head. Maybe it's somebody who has something deep inside that is sensational or maybe it's someone who really doesn't have something sensational, but she's such a fox you're in love with her, and she's sensational. Maybe that's a childish feeling. Or maybe that childish feeling's pretty adult, too. There are all these different types of adult love in there. But, yes they are all pretty much love songs.Greatest song writers
If you list six composers: Harold Arlen, Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, and Richard Rogers you've covered the top of Mt. Rushmore. Then you get to Frank Loesser, Burton Lane, Lerner and Loewe, DeSylva, Brown, and Henderson, Schwartz and Dietz. There's not that many more. You're talking about maybe thirty-to-fifty composers when you get it all down. It has to do with everything. It's the African-American experience, the classical music experience. I'm a Libra so I'm always looking for some kind of delicate balance.Lyrics
There's also the lyrics of coursea whole other world, the beautiful poets of feelings that wrote those lyrics seamlessly. All of it coming together to create a rich palette to draw on as an improviser and as an American musician. I know all the lyrics to all the songs I play from listening to many records and from playing with many singers over the years. Having them in the air around me when I was young.The end of the era
I know why it ended. It had to. Nothing can go on forever. Beyond that there were sociopolitical things that had to happen. You had some serious racial uprisings in the 1960's, which had to happen, and thank God they did. They're not finished happening. You had a lot of anger, a lot of kids frustrated with their parents' stiffness who needed to express their feeling for the changes they wanted. They needed to express it in the very direct ways that rock 'n' roll expressed it. American popular culture was no longer in musical theatreit was in rock 'n' roll. That had to happen. To me it's good that it happened. There's always value in any movement that happens in music. It just takes some time to figure out what that is sometimes.Later show music writers
SondheimI love his music. I think he's a genius. There's a young guy, Adam Guettel. This is the next step in musical theatre. There are some things like "The Night Waltz" that are playable as instrumentals. But this is of a different type of songwriting and musical theatre writing. I don't like when I hear someone say, "They just don't write songs like they used to." Well, you're damn right and they shouldn't. I'm not trying to do anything like it used to be done. I'm just trying to play it the way I hear it. When Kenny, and Peter, and I play together we're just playing honestly from our hearts. We don't sit there and discuss some kind of concept. I feel maybe people see that in meI'm trying to project something because I like to wear a jacket and tie. I just believe in giving the human spirit some dignity, and I like to feel dignity. I feel the music I play has great dignity and also has great sensuality, visceralness, and primitivism, too. I'd like to focus on the better things we can do as human beings.1930's chamber music
It's nice music. It's definitely got its place. I don't feel any more drawn to Alec Wilder's Octets, say, than I do to a Beethoven Sonata. Frankly I'm more drawn to a Beethoven Sonata just because I think it's more profound music. Right now I'm playing the music I care about playing, but I love all kinds of music and all kinds of players.Jimmy Rowles
I heard Rowles from
Sean Smith
bass, acoustic
Red Mitchell
bass1927 - 1992

Bill Mays
pianob.1944
Gerry Mulligan
Gerry was a profoundly original melodic voice. I learned a great, great deal from him. He was a very original thinker. It was a wonderful experience playing with him. I picked his brain a little bit. I'd say, "What did you do on this arrangement from Birth of the Cool?" He'd sit down and show me some of that stuff, and it was really nice to get it from the horse's mouth. It keeps getting passed on in jazz or in any great music. I got to hear where he was coming from, the bands he was listening to, what the popular music culture was like when he was young.Written in the Stars (Blue Note)
It's about bands. I haven't talked enough about Kenny [Washington] and Peter [Washington]they're very special musicians. Kenny knows about jazz history and the lineage of where his instrument fits into it maybe more than anybody else in the worldof his age group for sure. He really understands ensemble playing, small group playing, and he's a great big band drummer, too. He's such a great listener, and he has a command of his instrumenthe's able to speak through it without anything getting in his way technically. And the most important thinghe swings his ass off. That's really where it's atthat swing feel. The same thing's true for Peter. He understands
Oscar Pettiford
bass1922 - 1960

Doug Watkins
bass1934 - 1962

Ray Brown
bass, acoustic1926 - 2002

Percy Heath
bass, acoustic1923 - 2005

Paul Chambers
bass, acoustic1935 - 1969

Red Garland
piano1923 - 1984

Cannonball Adderley
saxophone1928 - 1975

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Ahmad Jamal
piano1930 - 2023

Vernel Fournier
drums1928 - 2000
Israel Crosby
bass, acousticb.1919

Oscar Peterson
piano1925 - 2007

Ed Thigpen
drums1930 - 2010
Monterey Jazz Festival 2000
Thank you. We had a good time. Peter was previously engaged, and we had
Ray Drummond
bassb.1946
Touring with the trio
There's not a tour per se, but we've got quite a bit of work lined up through the year already. We're going to be in New York a number of times. We're going out to do the West Coast Jazz Party right now, Canada in June, Saratoga also in June, we're going to Chicago in July [sings] (Sorry, but we can't take you!). Luckily, we're very busy.Jazz education
Yeah, I do some teaching. I teach pretty much what the student comes to me for and feels is needed. I teach improvisation: how to get your basic tools together and how to get deeper as an improviser; a lot of pianistic thingshow to play the instrument, getting a sound; a lot of work with rhythmic conceptsget them to hear not just piano, but drummers, bass players, horn players, singers; a whole spectrum of musicnot just have your eyes glued to your hands. Try to look out; draw your music from the outside.Accompanying singers
I love to do it when it's a great singer. I've accompanied many, many great singers:
Tony Bennett
vocals1926 - 2023

Carol Sloane
vocals1937 - 2023

Margaret Whiting
vocals1924 - 2011

Bobby Short
piano1926 - 2005

Sheila Jordan
vocals1928 - 2025

Ethel Ennis
vocals1932 - 2019
The gift of music
To me music is such an important thing. Why do people go out and pay money to hear some accomplished musicians play? They're searching for a moment of magicsome feeling or expression they can't get in words. I've had that feeling when it's really clicking up there on the bandstand. We're able to give something very beautiful to people as musicians and to ourselves. We're very blessed to have the gift of music. As a musician it's a struggle, too, to develop yourself and to be honest with yourself.Tags
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Bill Charlap Concerts
Sep
24
Wed

Bill Charlap
Jimmy's Jazz & Blues ClubPortsmouth, NH
Sep
25
Thu

Bill Charlap Trio
The Side Door Jazz ClubOld Lyme, CT
Sep
26
Fri

Bill Charlap Trio
The Side Door Jazz ClubOld Lyme, CT
Sep
27
Sat

Bill Charlap Trio
The Side Door Jazz ClubOld Lyme, CT
Sep
28
Sun

Bill Charlap Trio
The Side Door Jazz ClubOld Lyme, CT
Oct
22
Wed
Dee Dee Bridgewater & Bill Charlap
Dakota Jazz Club & RestaurantMinneapolis, MN
Oct
22
Wed
Dee Dee Bridgewater & Bill Charlap
Dakota Jazz Club & RestaurantMinneapolis, MN
Nov
1
Sat

Bill Charlap
RegattabarCambridge, MA
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