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The Touch of Your Lips, Part 2: Touch and Tone Color in Jazz Piano

With Monk, however, we find, for the first time, tone color coming to the fore as a defining feature of the music. Whereas most pianists then (and today) work incredibly hard to mitigate the percussive nature of the instrument as much as possible, Monk revels in it, proudly emphasizing its percussive nature.
As mentioned in Part 1, tone color took on a prominent role in classical music in the 19C. The Romantic composers like Wagner, Strauss, Berlioz, Chopin and many others were, I think it is fair to say, somewhat obsessed with it. The composers before them were certainly aware of tone color, but it was not a primary concern; in the Baroque era, they were exploring counterpoint and harmony (Bach) and in the Classical period, they were interested in the beauty and simplicity of homophonic music. The Romantics had a different vision, a vision filled with emotion and drama, and for that, they focused on the extremes in all areasdynamic range, pitch range, timbre, and tone colors.?
Jazz shows a similar progression: Dixieland is the Baroque era of jazz, with a focus on polyphony, Big Band/Swing is the Classical era, with its turn to homophony and orchestration, and then bebop quickly leads to the Romantic eraCool Jazz, which is where tone color became a prominent and defining feature. There seems to be a general rule in artistic development that the initial style periods are more focused on one or more of the primary elements of music, namely melody, rhythm, and harmony. After a period of time, however, they need to move on to the more esoteric aspects, like tone color, to successfully develop and expand the expressive range into more nuanced areas. This is precisely what happened in jazz and in jazz piano.
The predecessor to the first jazz piano styles is Ragtime, which was an enormously popular style of music from the late 1800s into the first decades of the 20C. It spread throughout the country using the new recording technologies (records and piano rolls) and through the sale of printed sheet music. Here is

Scott Joplin
piano1868 - 1917
Piano rolls are certainly somewhat crude recording devices, but they do record all elements of the player's performance, including dynamics and pedaling. Assuming that this recording is a fairly accurate representation, we can hear that Ragtime focuses primarily on a driving rhythm with lots of syncopation, and, of course, some impressive finger work, especially in the right hand. It's fun music, but it has a very limited expressive range. In terms of tone color, it is largely monochromatic and without a great deal of variation in touch or articulation. (This is not a criticism of the styleit seems quite typical of a new genre, whose attention is on the foundational and defining aspects of its style.)
As the first jazz pianists, who were rooted in Ragtime, emerged, they loosened the reins and introduced some improvisation. Here is

Jelly Roll Morton
piano1890 - 1941
This is not Ragtime anymoreit's stride piano, a name given by the "striding" quality of the left hand as it plays a bass note in the lower register, then "strides" up to the middle register and plays a chord, and in doing so provides a powerful rhythmic pulse. Ragtime's squarer rhythms give way to a more fluid and flexible rhythmic feel that foreshadows the swing rhythms of the 1930s. As with its predecessor, this music focuses on the powerful rhythms and exciting melodic and improvisatory figures in the right hand. In terms of tone color, there is not much variation here at all.?
And why should there be? Or perhaps a better question would be,?how could there be? Jazz, in the early years, was not music played in concert halls for enraptured audiences sitting quietly like they do at classical piano concerts; it was played in bars, restaurants, and hotels where people were enjoying the music and partying. This music needed to be loud enough to project above the crowd noise and fill the room. Variations in touch would be completely lost in this environment, where power, projection, and excitement required a muscular approach from the pianists that left little room for a softer touch. (My guess is that a performer during this period using a softer touch would be seen as too delicate and effete, and would not be very successful.)
As jazz piano moves into the 1920s and 1930s, we begin to hear more coloristic effects and more dramatic dynamics that shape the right hand improvisations and melodies. These recordings of

Earl Hines
piano1903 - 1983

Teddy Wilson
piano1912 - 1986
While pianistic effects and dynamic shaping and tiering were clearly important to Hines, those elements are more about creating an overall texture than they are the focus of his playing. Tone color is there, but it serves in a supporting role rather than as a defining feature.
These piano stylings became the template for the jazz pianists that followed. The rhythmic play between the two hands became more intense, as demonstrated by this performance from

Erroll Garner
piano1921 - 1977
We find similar stylistic featuresa subdued left hand, pianistic effects in the right hand, but the right hand is so rhythmically free, toying with the left hand's pulse in a way that is simply breathtaking. So, once again, tone color is found, but the defining feature here is the improvisatory inventiveness and the intoxicating swing feel.?
Others, like

Mary Lou Williams
piano1910 - 1981

Art Tatum
piano1909 - 1956
We should also remember that recording technology was advancing quickly during the pre-and post-WWII period, and the ability to capture these subtleties increased with it. In the recording studio at least, pianists could play with as much variety of touch as they wished, knowing it would not be lost in the din of the restaurant or bar. It was also during these years that jazz moved into concert halls where the acoustics were good and audiences were silent, creating an environment that allowed for deeper exploration of texture and tone color than was previously possible. Additionally, microphone technology made it possible for instrumentalists and singers to project the softest sounds by amplifying them, something that Miles Davis used to significant effect. Even in the jazz clubs, it was now possible to use a much larger array of tone colors and timbres than ever before.
The bebop pianists who followed had to develop a new approach that fit the new style that was developing. Tempos were faster, and the pianists developed a more linear style that mimicked the lines played by the horns. And bebop was exclusively a small group format, where the pianist is an accompanist and a soloist, and where the bassist plays the bass linesthere was no place for the striding left hand, and thus pianists had to develop new left and right hand techniques in the bebop landscape.?

Bud Powell
piano1924 - 1966

Red Garland
piano1923 - 1984

Wynton Kelly
piano1931 - 1971
?
Wynton Kelly and Red Garland,

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
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