I T Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com the b-side Thursday, September 4, 2014- 3B W JAZZ From Page 1B "For me, music and life are all about style."- Miles Davis The first night of the Detroit Jazz Festival is graced with a nearly cloudless evening sky; as the sun sets behind the Ernst & Young building, a light breeze sweeps across Campus Martius, resulting in a temperature that can be described only, perhaps fittingly, as cool. "Cool" is a term that gets thrown around quite often, but it is really best associated with this style called Jazz, a style noted for its freedom, improvisation and discipline coupled with an unwavering finesse. Cool can be interpreted in so many ways: attractive or impressive, calm and composed and controlled. This night, this Labor Day weekend in Detroit, it's about the music, it's about history, and most importantly, it's about cool. The festival's setup is simple enough: four stages, one at Cadillac Square next to Campus Martius,the other three scattered throughout Hart Plaza with the audience facing the waterfront. Woodward Avenue is blocked 'off for pedestrian use from Jefferson Avenue to Monroe Street, the roads filled with food trucks selling Memphis-style barbecue and grilled chicken and tents selling albums, t-shirts, concert merchandise - the works. As the evening turns to night, the streets become more packed and more lively as the sounds of jazz fill the Detroit night sky: a rolling bass line here, a smooth piano lick there and the sweet, sweet bellow of a tenor sax cutting through the air. The audience bops their heads; they close their eyes and feel the beat, applause, repeat. There's a rhythm to it. The festival spans four days, Friday evening to Monday, with Saturday and Sunday being the most filled in terms of performances. The artists span from well-known musicians to up-and-comers to University Big Bands, the content ranges from new material to tribute acts. The lineup is composed through a meticulous, year-round process "We weave artists in a way that makes sense. I don't believe in putting a bunch of artists in the room and going 'make something happen!' Bands are not just off the shelf," said Chris Collins, the festival's artistic director for the past three years and a professor and director of jazz studies at Wayne State University. As artistic director, Collins is responsible for compiling the festival's lineup, which includes a constant search for both established and new talent, nationally and local to Detroit. He places an importance on an artist's abilitytodonewinnovative things in the community, whether it's creatingnewsounds orhelping with educational pursuits. Both of these are cornerstones of jazz: Innovation couples with improvisation, and education pairs with history and recognizing one's influences. "We allbeginby beinginspired, sometimes by a single artist; it might be John Coltrane or Lester Young. Whoever it is, it started at that point, but very soon you realize you have to move forward and you have to move back equally," Collins said. "You have to move in all directions to develop as an artist, to fill inthe holes." The result is a well-rounded lineup, one that is especially impressive given that the festival is free for everyone. Mike Ross, Atlanta native and self-described jazz enthusiast, travels the country to jazz festivals like this one. He attended the Newport Jazz Festival in Rhode Island three weeks ago, but claims the Detroit Jazz Festival tops it: "This is one of the best lineups in the country I've ever seen, and it's free," he said. "Ifyousacrificeyourart because of some woman, or some man, or for some color, or for some wealth, you can't be trusted." And it's that emphasis on a free show that is most prideful to Collins. "It is the belief of the festival that it needs to remain free," he said. "It cannot exclude any person. It's essential in order to keep the bar level so that everyone involved has an experience with the art and the music." Funding for the festival comes from numerous sponsors including JPMorgan Chase, Comcast and the various casinos in Detroit. Noticeably absent are any of the Detroit 3: Ford Motor Co., General Motors and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles. Ford pulled its sponsorship from the festival back in 2005, while Chrysler pulled out just this year after serving as the presenting sponsor for the past two years. These withdrawals beg the question of just how "Detroit" a festival can be without the support of the companies that define the city, especially with GM headquarters in the Renaissance Center peering down directly over the festival grounds. But Collins is confident in the festival's ability to recoup any losses. "We rely on a lot of different funding sources, including businesses and personal donors. The festival never relies on any one single source," he said. "That being said, it is the largest free jazz festival in the world and the programming and size of it competes with many of the largest jazz festivals in the world, so it is a challenge." To encourage individuals to give money to the festival, certain rewards are offered for large donations. Becoming a "Guardian of Jazz" - requiring a donation ranging from $500 to $5,000-plus - resultsain such perks as reserved seating sections directly in front of the stage, an artist meet-and-greet and an invitation to the opening night VIP party. The party is attended by many of jazz's current great talents and features a menu inspired by Memphis and New Orleans cuisine - with a Detroit twist - as well as a small, intimate performance by a jazz band, all setting thetone for the weekend. Jazz Speaks for Life This suggests a sort of economic separation, but in reality the festival is a melding of characters, classes and cultures - men and women dressed in University of Michigan football jerseys sit next to those clad in the most expensive of suits. It's a testament to the power of jazz. "(Jazz is) emblematic of the freedom, that we all yearn for in our lives. It's about the ability to be creative; it speaks to the need for everybody to be free. Jazz is a very democratic music,"said Ellen Rowe, professor and chair of jazz and contemporary improvisation at the University, who also performed in the festival with her quintet this year. "Everybody has an equal voice." That voice, the voice of jazz, is the theme of the festival: Jazz speaks for life. It's a phrase included in the opening address of Martin Luther King, Jr., at the 1964 Berlin Jazz Festival in which he declared, "(Jazz) is triumphant music. Modern jazz has continued in this tradition, singing the songs of a more complicated urban existence.When life itself offers no order and meaning, the musician createsanorderandmeaningfrom the sounds of the earth which flow through his instrument." To Collins, "Jazz speaks for life" connects the personal to the communal. "The music of jazz reflects the time, embraces the moment and the culture. But "Jazz speaks for life" is a suggestion of how artists embrace their unique individual existence and their collective experiences. Their individual life is represented always at every club, gig or recording session; it is a reflection ofwho theyare andtheir particular lifestyle," he said. Much of that lifestyle is directly impacted by the past; so much of jazz requires looking to the past, to the old masters. "I think it'svery important to honor the legacy of the music, to honor the artists to come before us," Rowe said. "When you're creating your own shit, man, even the sky ain't the limit." To honor that past, Collins assembled more tribute acts than in years past, including Friday night's "A Night at the Apollo," a medley performance in the spirit of the Apollo Theater in Harlem that doubled as a jazz history' lesson. The night also featured tributes to Miles Davis and Nat King Cole, among others. These tributes were not impersonations, however, but rather stepping stones to achieving one's own voice. "The tribute is an homage as recognizing the importance of history and the legacy of what the music is about, but also a departure point for creating something new based on an existing model," Collins said. "Jazz musicians have always embraced the history; that doesn't mean you have to learn every solo and transcribe every piece, but everything you study, everything you break down becomes your own voice. The hope is through that exploration the artist can find his own voice, his own unique statement and through that can contribute to the history." To contribute to history is to create something eternal, resilient to time. Perhaps that's why it's so fitting - or rather, so important - that Detroit hosts and continues to host this festival. "Few cities can boast a historic connection to jazz and the jazz vocabulary as a whole. We have something very special here," Collins said. "We in this community understand the importance of that connection to that legacy. All that is very important to the Detroit sound now and in the past. I think that's why this yearI chose to havea few more nods to the past, as asway of making a strong statement." Detroit boasts a rich musical history, and despite the times,- it continues to crank out new artists. "Detroit is one of the most important hotbeds, most important spots for the development of music, right there with New York and Kansas City and Chicago," Rowe said. "In Detroit we keep turning [artists] out," Collins said. "The environment and the DNA of the culture encourage artists to pursue the art as voraciously as they did 50 years ago. The difference is we don't hear about it. I'm a believer that we keep producingthem." One of the goals of the Detroit Jazz Festival, then, is to find those artists, to give them the tools - whether it's education, instruments or a stage - to have their musical voices heard. That's how Collins sees the future of the festival. "You have to look at it as a year-round project to understand the breadth of what we're doing: different ways of enhancing the community, supporting our clubs and schools and the festival proper, continuing to hone the flow from stage to stage, from day today, continuing to enhance the festival with our projects." The remainder of that responsibility to the music, to the culture of jazz, rests with the listeners, the self-proclaimed jazz enthusiasts and newly affiliated alike, to go out and find the music. "Many are doing it at the university level which is get out and play," Collinsasaid. "There are plenty of clubs and jam sessions. Get out and play: Let yourself be heard, start bands, play at that coffee house. Practice your art and always make sure you're integrating with the mentors in your community." And when the outside search for the music is combined with the festival itself, Collins believes, the result is something incredible: "There's something emotionally and spiritually powerful about that. I want people to realize that they are a part of the functioning organism that is the Detroit Jazz Festival." "You have to play a long time to be able to play like yourself." Anne Ross of Detroit sits quietly in the back of the VIP seating area, dressed elegantly yet unassumingly. She's asked if she's ever seen Miles Davis. She grins, as though she knows a great secret, and nodsher head, "I've seen them all basically." "VIP" is a bit of an understatement to describe Ross. A native of Chicago, she not only has been listening to jazz since the 1950s; she fed and housed some of the greats before they became great.She doesn't learn the history, she lived it -she's seen the evolutionof Jazz. "It's changed. Definitely changed. But it's so good to see the young listeners getinvolved." As the first act of the festival, The Bad Plus Joshua Redman closes their set, the audience gives a standing ovation. Her age making it more difficult to rise, Ross remains seated, but claps as enthusiastically, perhaps more so, than the rest. A wide smile now rests on her face as she looks up at the stage with passion and earnestness. "I couldn't ask for abetter night for this." LTERARY COL UMN RevelIing in-.horror By GRACE PROSNIEWSKI Daily Literary Columnist Putting another book on top was never enough. I built veritable fortresses, arranging towers of. chapter books on all sides of the hideous thing to block it from' my view. Even after I would set- tle safely on the other side of the room with my Barbies in tow, there was always a prickle of awareness, as if the buried book pulsated with malevolence. Some days it proved too much for my cowardly heart to stand, and with a deep breath I would pick up the book, close my eyes, run the few steps to my older sister's room and toss it through her door. The book I'm referring to was, of course, Alvin Schwartz's "Scary Stories to Tell in The Dark," aka the nightmarish "children's" book that caused many a millennial a sleepless night. While most of the book's power to disturb lies in its ghoulish, surrealistic illustra- -tions by Stephen Gammell, it also served as the first introduc- tion for many readers, myself included, to what I consider to be the most satisfying type of short story: the horror/suspense tale. This type of short story is rooted in the format and sensi- bilities of earlier oral storytell- ing traditions, traditions that continue today when we tell ghost stories around a camp- fire or swap urban legends at a slumber party. In general, a short story uses the conven- tional dramatic structure to examine a singular event, which thus encourages a specific mood within the reader. In the case of the horror/suspense tale, this mood is fear. Fear is an innate emotion. Fear is also by its very nature fleeting. Asa reaction to a per- ceived threat, fear forces us into a fight-or-flight response, essentially making us choose between confronting the per- ceived threat or running away from it. Conflict is thus not only the essence of drama, but also of fear. The horror/suspense tale is doubly bolstered by this intrin- sic struggle towards some sort of resolution or at least change in state. The length of a short story also works to the advan- tage of this type of tale as it sustains in totality the reader's sense of fear longer than pos- sible in a novel, but with a deeper intensity than can be accomplished through a simple anecdote. The horror/suspense tale also provides the joy of emotional release for feelings we may not otherwise be able to alleviate in our daily lives. Ina perverse way, we like to be scared, but only if it's on our own terms. Things like horror movies and scary stories present us a safe, distant experience in which to work through our emotions of fear. If, dear reader, you doubt my evolutionary and structural arguments as to why the best short stories are also the scari- est, the proof is most assuredly in the pudding., We start with the undisputed master of mystery and maca- bre, Edgar Allan Poe. Though I could reiterate praise for Poe's most famous short stories such as "The Cask of Amontillado" and "The Tell-Tale Heart," and truly wax poetic on the intense- ly disturbing "Bernice," my favorite short story of his would have to be "The Masque of the Red Death." The title in and of itself is rather chilling. "The Masque-of the Red Death" tells the tale of Prince Prospero who, when the illness known as the "Red Death" rav- ages his country, holes up in his castle with other nobles in an attempt to escape the disease. In an effort to entertain them- selves, a masquerade is held. All is well until a mysterious party- goer arrives dressed as a victim of the "Red Death." The story is incredibly paced, and filled with haunting imag- ery that is unmistakably Poe. The "Red Death" is described in terrifying detail, making it steem alarmingly grounded in real- ity. The story's end, along with its message in general about death's ultimate dominion over all, doesn't leave the reader breathless from anxiety, but rather disconcertingly pensive. Another American master- piece, William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily," is a bit of a slow burner. The story centers on the eccentric and reclusive Emily Grierson, who serves as the last vestiges of the tradition and grandeur of the antebellum era for a small southern communi- ty. Upon her death, the curious townspeople enter her previ- ously isolated home and make a shockingly morbid discovery. "A Rose for Emily" attests to Faulkner's mastery of the Southern Gothic, complete with decrepit mansion and twisted psyche. While the story doesn't have quite the same opulence as "The Masque of the Red Death," "A Rose for Emily" is filled with poignant observa- tions on a society in transition and those who are left behind because of such transforma- tions. Lastly, we come to what I consider to be one of, if not the greatest, American short story of the last century: Joyce Carol Oates' "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" There's a reason-this is one of the most highly anthologized short stories, and if you haven't read it before, I beg you, go read it now. "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" cen- ters around a vain but typical teenager named Connie. Left alone at home one afternoon, Connie is accosted by Arnold Friend, a mysterious man, with only a screen door as protec- tion. If your breath doesn't quicken and your palms don't start to sweat when reading this story, you have steelier nerves than I. It's a disturbing representa- tion of the dangers girls face when transitioning into adult sexuality. And while the devil- like Arnold Friend may serve as an extreme example of these dangers, the truth behind the hyperbole ringstrue. So whether you're looking for-a good read or a good scare, you'll find the best of both worlds in tales of horror/suspense. Just makes sure to leave the light on. Prosniewski is reading Poe by candlelight. Tojoin her, e-mail gpros@umich.edu.