particular importance.
O. Katrich, reflecting on the possibilities of
studying the performing style in the academic mu-
sical tradition, notes: “The study of the musical per-
forming style is significantly hampered by the lack
of musical-textual fixation of the result of the musi-
cian-performer’s creativity” [2, 2]. In jazz music, this
question is especially acute, because the “manner of
playing” here turns out to be central in terms of the
idea of the improvisational principle of performing
activity. At the same time, the “manner of playing” is
the multipurpose concept that contains a very wide
range of subjects, i. e. those different aspects of the
manifestation of the musician’s creative individual-
ity, which in one way or another affect the features
of its sound manifestation. Therefore, according to
jazz researchers, the individual style of a performer is
determined not by his technique, but by his person-
ality, his intellect, his talent and coordination [7].
The originality of the performing style of out-
standing jazz piano players encompasses all the
“generic” qualities of jazz music: improvisational
thinking and technique, the ratio of the individual
and the general (the principle of dialogue in col-
lective music-making, the style parameters of the
original musical material and its performing model
that forms improvisation), a variety of performer’s
intonation vocabulary. The individual style of a jazz
musician can be understood as “the system of artis-
tic thinking and stylistics – musical idioms, speech
cliches as the basis for generating individual musical
language” [3, 9].
Let us single out the most significant factors
influencing the individual style of the jazz pianist’s
playing and the formation of his personal approach
to performing practice. Among them a significant
place is occupied by the individual characteristics
of the musician – such as his melodic, modal, har-
monic, rhythmic thinking, as well as the nuances of
the performing apparatus. All these elements are the
main points on which the piano player’s improvisa-
tional thinking is based, his idea of the main types of
improvisation – melodic, harmonic, rhythmic, tex-
tured and timbre-dynamic. These elements serve as
the foundation on which the performer’s “vocabu-
lary” and his improvisational technique are formed.
Possession of “music theory” in a broad sense and
of “jazz style” part of it in particular is a determin-
ing factor in the formation of the type of musical
thinking that distinguishes a jazz musician from an
academic one. The virtuosity of jazz improvisation
is largely due to the rational and intellectual abili-
ties of the musician, rather than the technical aspect
of the issue, since it is the combinatorial principle
of “working” with his own “vocabulary” that forms
the specificity of musical technology (performing
techniques). This does not exclude the importance
of musical technique (playing speed, for example,
etc.), which also certainly constitutes the basic foun-
dation of jazz piano performance.
Accordingly, the pianist’s “vocabulary” plays an
essential role for his individual manner of perfor-
mance, which determines the methodological idea
of the mass of didactic books on jazz improvisa-
tion. The structure of most of this books is similar
and reflects the general classification principle of
improvisation methods – harmonic, rhythmic and
melodic. Accordingly, the methodology of master-
ing jazz improvisation in teaching aids is ultimately
aimed at developing the skills and abilities of a piano
player, associated with the possibility of combina-
torial harmonic, rhythmic and melodic formula-
models. Moreover, it is important to develop a cre-
ative approach to the “initial” material in the student
(“bricks” and “blocks”, in the terminology of A. Ko-
zlov), which stimulates an individual vision of the
STRUCTURAL COMPONENTS OF THE MODERN JAZZ PIANO PLAYER’S PERFORMING STYLE
153
structural, compositional and expressive capabilities
of the musical “building material”. It is this attitude
“towards creativity” that provokes the jazz impro-
viser’s maximum coverage of rhythmic, melodic
and harmonic models, which, ultimately, should
form his vast “vocabulary”, which he can use in the
process of creating a musical composition. And the
more complete and varied this “vocabulary” is, the
more combinatorial possibilities the piano player
has, which are manifested in his virtuoso mastery of
musical material.
Also an important aspect of the formation of an
individual performing style is the imitative princi-
ple, which is relevant for various generations of jazz
piano players. We are talking about the individual
and personal orientations of the musician, which
are represented by the figures of outstanding mas-
ters, whose performing individuality and manner
are thought of as a standard. For a jazz musician, a
very important moment is the personification of the
musical and linguistic standards of jazz music in the
personality of a particular performer, the Master,
who is the ideal of “how it should sound”. Accord-
ingly, this factor determines the following principle
of the formation of an individual performing style:
a set of certain performing techniques inherent in a
performer-standard is “assimilated” and “processed”
in accordance with his abilities, which were men-
tioned above, as well as taking into account subjec-
tive musical and aesthetic ideas.
The style reference factor is similar to the pre-
vious one, but more general in terms of reference
material. For a musician-performer, the style factor
is basic in his professional activity, it is on the knowl-
edge and sense of style that the artistic usefulness of
musical performance and the creative activity of a
musician are based. Jazz performers have indisput-
able advantages in this aspect over academic musi-
cians: jazz has no centuries-old history, its evolution
fits into less than two centuries. However, the small
historical volumes of jazz music are compensated by
the breadth of its stylistic varieties and the diversity
of national and ethnic manifestations. Both audi-
tory and intellectual experience are directly related
to the most important factor in the development of
a musician’s performing individuality – the forma-
tion of his “intonation vocabulary”, which consists
of a set of intonational-rhythmic patterns inherent
in a particular style. In this sense, the thought of
O. Katrich is correct: “Direct analysis, as a rule, is
preceded by the formation of the researcher’s feel-
ing and understanding of the stylistic dominant of
the musician-performer’s creativity. The concept of
the style dominant of the musician-performer’s cre-
ativity encompasses a certain unity of the most sig-
nificant individual, national, cultural and historical
stylistic characteristics of this phenomenon” [2, 11].
The factor of “sound ideal” can be considered as
the most general, since it synthesizes the previous
ones and forms an integral system of an individual
performing style. A jazz musician is always guided
by a specific sound image of his instrument (the so-
called “sound ideal”), which is “… aggregate ideas
about sound quality, … about timbral, technical-
performing, articulatory-intonation, harmonic and
musical-stylistic characteristics” [6, 155]. The cre-
ative individuality of a jazz piano player is always
formed on the basis of a specific sound image of the
instrument (which includes all the parameters of ex-
pressiveness – sound, timbre, rhythm, phrasing, ar-
ticulation, dynamics, etc.). The sound ideal of a jazz
pianist is formed in accordance with his reference
ideas about the quality of piano sound, personified
either in the performing style of a particular musi-
cian, or in a particular style of jazz, or on the basis
of his subjective and personal aesthetic standards.
It is known that the specificity of the instrument
significantly influences the artistic intentions of
musicians. E. Nazaikinsky noted that the semantic
component of the “sound world of music” is direct-
ly related to the nature of the musical instrument
[6, 157]. Consequently, the composer’s intention
depends on the acoustic characteristics of a par-
ticular instrument or group of instruments. This is
Section 3. Music
154
exactly what A. Copland had in mind when he in-
troduced the concept of “sounding image of an in-
strument”: “an auditory representation arising in the
mind of a performer or composer; a mental picture
of the exact “nature” of the sounds that he will bring
to life” [4, 22]. A. Copland’s ideas were continued in
L. Gakkel’s musicological studies of “sounding im-
ages of the piano” of the first half of the 20th century
[1]. However, it seems to us that a more accurate
definition will still be a “sound image”, reflecting not
only the momentary, but the potential capabilities
of the instrument, which find their artistic realiza-
tion in the performing art. In this regard, the most
optimal is the definition of the sound image of the
piano, proposed by I. Sukhlenko: the musicologist
understands it as “a kind of stylistic perspective of
the complex perception of the expressive capabilities
of a musical instrument: timbre, dynamic, register
characteristics and the artistic semantics associated
with them” [5, 229].
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