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Biography

Keith Jarrett was born May 8, 1945, in Allentown, PA, USA.


Ethnically his family is a mixture of European peoples. Some people
are surprised to learn this. He has dark kinky hair and a darkish
complexion. During the seventies he wore an afro hair style, making
his ancestry visually ambiguous.

He was raised by strict Christian Scientist parents, and is the oldest


of five boys. His younger brothers are all also talented players of
music. I don't know if any are trying to play professionally, but Keith
recorded at least once with his brother Scott.

Keith Jarrett can rightly be described as a having been a genuine prodigy of the first magnitude.
His parents recognized at a very early age that he has both perfect pitch and an unusual talent
for music, and so started him taking piano lessons at the age of three, usually considered much
too young. He began composing music immediately. The Carr biography shows a legible and
correctly written manuscript he wrote at that age. He played his first full-length concert,
including intermission, at the age of six, ending with two of his own compositions.

Also at age six, when it came time for him to start school, Keith's IQ was measured in the genius
range, so they started him immediately in the third grade. Despite being two years younger
than his classmates, he adjusted and got along well with the older children, was an excellent
student, and even proved to be unusually athletic, even though as an adult he is only five feet
eight inches tall, and has quite small hands for a pianist of such prodigious technical
accomplishment.

Another photograph in the Carr biography shows Jarrett playing a concert at a Lion's Club
Convention at Madison Square Garden at age nine. By about age twelve he was playing
professionally on occasion.

He was trained entirely in classical music, and did not become interested in jazz until his early
teens, but he immediately excelled in it. He was a special student guest at various Stan Kenton
clinics, and by some extraordinarily young age, spent some time on tour with Fred Warring's
band. I believe he played marimba and xylophone.

In addition to being a virtuoso pianist of the highest caliber, along the way Keith managed to
learn to play almost every instrument he ever came near. Most of them he even plays well. He
is an excellent soprano sax player, and still plays it occasionally on albums. During his high
school days he worked primarily as a drummer, and also some as a guitarist.
His career started with Art Blakey, Charles Lloyd and Miles Davis. Since the early 1970s he has
enjoyed a great deal of success in both classical music and jazz, as a group leader and a solo
performer. His improvisation technique combines not only jazz, but also other forms of music,
especially Western classical music, gospel, blues, and ethnic folk music.

New York and Hitting the Big Time


Jarrett spent about a year at the Berklee School of Music in Boston, and played some cocktail
piano to help make a living. Then he went to New York to break into the big time, but was not
at all interested in playing studio work. Meantime he'd gotten married to Margot, and finances
were extremely tight. He hung out at the Village Vanguard Monday night jam sessions waiting
to be asked to sit in. Finally he got a single chance, and his days of being out of work came
permanently to an end, because Art Blakey was there and hired him on the spot to play with
the New Jazz Messengers.

Shortly thereafter he went on to play with the Charles Lloyd Quartet, which became for a while
the biggest group in jazz, especially in Europe, at a time when the Beatles were still together,
and jazz had lost a great deal of popularity.

Not long after that band came to an end, Jarrett was playing trios at a club in New York, and
Miles Davis, whose name appears near the top of everyone's list of greatest jazz musicians ever,
came in on at least three occasions to hear him. The last two visits Miles insisted that his entire
band come, too. Miles had a history throughout his career of spotting the best young talent;
some of the finest jazz players ever came out of his bands. Miles asked Keith if he would like to
join his group, but Jarrett declined at first because he was enjoying the trio work he was doing
at the time. Turning down an offer from Miles was tantamount to turning down a Supreme
Court judgeship. After repeated requests he agreed to join Miles, and became the second
keyboard player, playing electric piano and organ. The other keyboardist was the great Chick
Corea.

Miles was pioneering avant garde fusion jazz rock at the time. Most people didn't understand
what it was all about, including some of his players. Despite this the band was one of the most
popular Miles ever had, and even played jobs at the Fillmore. Jarrett's presence in that band
was one of primal influence, and Miles himself, who was prone to moodiness and would barely
play if things weren't happening to his satisfaction, responded as well as anyone to Jarrett's
presence. He was known to play night after night in that band until his lip bled.

By the time he left Miles, Jarrett was ready to begin doing things on his own. Since the early
seventies he has worked as a sideman on only a very few occasions.
Jarrett's discography indicates he was working constantly in these days. He did a delightful and
highly original album with Gary Burton. Jarrett got second billing. Then Columbia records picked
him up and he did a superlative double album called Expectations, using about six people, and
on a couple of tracks he added strings and brass. I still love that album myself.

Then unexpectedly Columbia dropped Jarrett in favor of Herbie Hancock. For some reason they
didn't feel they could carry both artists. It was initially disappointing to Jarrett, but turned out
to be one of the best things that ever happened to him. My comment is not intended as a
criticism of Columbia records.

One of the most fortuitous collaborations in recording history then began. Jarrett met producer
Manfred Eicher, who was forming a record company and had only one or two albums out so
far, one a record of solo improvisations by Chick Corea. He asked Jarrett to come in and record
a solo album. So one afternoon he wandered into the studio with just a few sketchy ideas in his
head and in a few hours created the album Facing You, which forever changed the history of
solo jazz piano. I've been listening to it periodically since it was new, and it still leaves me
breathless every time.

The record was an enormous well-deserved success. This gave a boost not only to Jarrett but to
Eicher and his fledgling record company, which today is one of the most respected labels in jazz.
Although Jarrett also recorded for some time thereafter for Impulse, he has recorded almost
exclusively for ECM since about 1977. Most of his albums have been done with Eicher, who has
used the best recording equipment and has given Jarrett everything he has wanted in the way
of instruments, artistic license, and whatever else he has needed to do his job. (Jarrett is
justifiably very fussy about his Steinways.) Almost all of Jarrett's albums have sold well.

Jarrett's Diversity
There have been many superlative improvising musicians in this century. One could cite players
like Art Tatum, Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, and composers like Duke Ellington.
But there has certainly been no one as diversely talented as Keith Jarrett. Jarrett's influences
have been many, and his output has been correspondingly prolific and multi-faceted.

Jarrett's first major group with him as leader was a quartet that showed his avant garde side. It
included tenor player Dewey Redman, bassist Charlie Haden, who played a long time with
Ornette Coleman, and drummer Paul Motian, who played for years with Bill Evans. They made
altogether eight or ten albums. Some of them may be a little hard to penetrate for persons not
attuned to the free jazz of the fifties and sixties, but the best of these, e.g., The Survivors' Suite,
my favorite of the group, contain some ecstatic music.
Solo Concerts
In 1973 Jarrett began doing what has made him
most famous: playing solo improvisation concerts.
These are not concerts of ``tunes'' in the traditional
jazz sense, but pure improvisation, with nothing
preconceived until the moment he begins to play.
The first concerts were so consistently remarkable
that people couldn't believe at first that this was
really what he was doing. It seemed impossible
that anyone could improvise that well for that long
without experiencing major lapses. But over the
years that has proven to be one of the most
remarkable facts about Jarrett's musicianship:
there are virtually no creative or technical lapses ever. (At least not in his recorded output.)

Then he put out another history-making album: a three-record set of a pair of Solo Concerts
played in Lausanne and Bremen. It was inconceivable in those days that anyone could actually
put out a triple album of nothing but pure piano improvisation, and even expects people to
actually buy it. But again, this album got nothing but the highest accolades, and it is still selling
well to this day. It contains passages of improvisation that are barely short of miraculous.

There is an astonishing story behind the Bremen concert. Jarrett was in agonizing pain the
whole time. He suffered a severe back injury when he was about twenty, trying to push a car
that wouldn't start, and it has bothered him ever since. He had done the entire tour he was on
wearing a back brace and gobbling pain pills. The night of the Bremen concert he hadn't slept in
over 24 hours because of the pain, could only play for about ten minutes beforehand to do a
sound check before he got nauseous, and was afraid he might have to cancel the concert. But
he did go on, the rest, as they say, is history.

In 1976 he one-upped the audacity of his triple album by giving a series of superlative concerts
in Japan. They were of such high quality that Manfred Eicher decided he wanted to put out the
entire set of tapes. It was released as The Sun Bear Concerts, a package of ten vinyl disks
retailing at the time for $75. I still remember the double take I did when I first saw it in a store,
but I couldn't afford to buy it, and it wasn't available in pieces, which saddened me. I finally got
it myself in 1995, in a boxed set of six CDs, for $54 (US). To my knowledge these have never
been available separately. The music is wonderful, a worthy companion to his other work in this
genre.
Jarrett has presented not just a few such concerts, but as many as fifty a year, and quite a few
have been recorded. Several of his solo concert albums surpass the original, notably the
Concerts set played in Bregenz and München.

His Köln Concert is his best-selling album ever. After many years of requests for it, Jarrett finally
authorized the publishing of a complete written transcription of the entire concert. He resisted
this for a long time because the concert was completely improvised, and he was afraid that
some persons who study the written transcription might forget that point. I have this work in
my music library. Speaking as one who made my living preparing music for publication for
twenty years, I will say without reservation that the work is both technically and graphically
outstanding. To my knowledge, no other music of Jarrett's is available in printed form. Click
here for publication information on the Köln Concert.

Jarrett is presently giving fewer solo concerts, but still does them on occasion. Regrettably I've
never been able to hear one, nor to hear him live at all. He scheduled a solo concert here in
Phoenix, Arizona, about 1980, but then canceled it, reportedly because of poor advance ticket
sales. I bought mine the day after I heard about it! The concert was to be in Symphony Hall,
which is large, too large for a solo piano concert, and in my opinion has poor acoustics as well.

In 1974, when his American quartet was winding down, Jarrett started another phase of his
development when he formed his European Quartet, featuring Norwegian Jan Garbarek on
tenor, bassist Palle Danielsson, and drummer Jon Christensen. Their music was more
mainstream and lyrical than what came out of the fiery American quartet, which I believe never
had a name. Manfred Eicher finally called the European group Belonging, after they made an
album by that name, another milestone album for Jarrett. I'm not sure exactly how many
records they made altogether, but it was around a half dozen or so, including My Song and
Personal Mountains, both albums of the highest quality.

1968 Restoration Ruin 1977 Ritual 1991 Vienna Concert

1971 Facing You 1980 Sacred Hymns 1997 La Scala

1973 Solo Concerts 1981 Invocations 1999 The Melody At Night,


Bremen/Lausanne With You
1981 Concerts
1975 The Köln Concert 2005 Radiance
1985 Spirits
1976 Staircase 2006 The Carnegie Hall
1988 Dark Intervals
1976 Sun Bear Concerts 2009 Paris/London:
1991 Book Of Ways
Testament
1976 Spheres
1990 Paris Concert
Classical Work

Jarrett never abandoned classical music. He


loves that music as much today as he ever did.
And through the years he has written many
completely composed non-jazz compositions.
Early in his association with Eicher, he put out
a double album called In the Light that includes
numerous early works: a fugue for
harpsichord, a brass quintet, a string quartet,
various other chamber pieces, and a fine piece
for guitar and strings, played by Ralph Towner
and conducted by Jarrett. These pieces are not
earth-shaking ground breakers, especially to
one who is experienced in listening to better
works of ``new music'' from the twentieth
century, but most of this work is at least competent, and highly listenable.

About the time Jarrett formed the Belonging quartet, he also put out an album called
Luminescence, consisting of an extended suite for solo improvising tenor sax, played by Jan
Garbarek, and string orchestra. It's very pleasant music. Later he produced another similar and
even better album called Arbour Zena, which he and other soloists play on.

In the middle seventies Jarrett was prolific beyond comprehension. In one span of two calendar
years he recorded 22 complete albums, a movie score, played concerts constantly, played as a
sideman on at least one album for trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, and completed the 200-page
score of The Celestial Hawk for orchestra, percussion, and piano, commissioned by the Boston
Symphony and Seiji Ozawa. Ozawa ultimately lost interest in the piece, because they were
expecting a piece for orchestra with improvising jazz soloist rather than an orchestra piece with
completely composed obligato. Jarrett ultimately recorded it himself with the Syracuse
Symphony. (Not a leading orchestra.)

The movie score Jarrett did was for a French director. (I've forgotten her name.) He wrote some
things, she loved them, and contracted a long studio day to record it. They were done to the
director's complete satisfaction in a couple of hours, and when she left, Jarrett and Eicher
looked at each other, shrugged, and said, ``Heck, we have free studio time, let's do an album.''
About four hours later they had completed the album Staircase, a double album of solo piano
works that is still one of my personal favorites.

In 1976 Jarrett, who says he basically didn't practice for 16 years, went on a practicing binge
that lasted for years. He began working as though he were starting from the beginning again.
Something that people who know Jarrett as a jazz artist don't realize is that he never practices
jazz or improvisation, or so he claims. When he practices he works on Beethoven, Bach, and the
other composers he loves. So for a remarkable period of several years he dove headlong back
into seriously playing this music.

Some musicians might do such a thing to demonstrate their versatility, or to show their
audiences that they can ``really play.'' In Jarrett's case he has always played the classics with
complete devotion and integrity. But he hadn't given classical concerts since he was a teenager.
So that became his next goal.

Jarrett was well aware that if some unknown conservatory graduate were to give a big concert
in New York and blow it, the critics would forget it, but if he were to give a bad concert, the
reviews would appear all over the world. This knowledge added to the stress. Nonetheless, he
began accepting concert engagements, but started by playing unusual and unfamiliar music; for
instance, he played some pieces by Lou Harrison with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, one of
the premier chamber orchestras in the world. Then he commissioned Harrison to write him a
concerto, which he did, and Jarrett subsequently recorded it. It is an excellent piece, and is
quite difficult to play.

After a while Jarrett started playing a heavy schedule of classical concerts, including some
extremely difficult stuff, such as the Samuel Barber Concerto and some Stravinsky. He
performed with the best musicians, including Ashkenazy and Christopher Hogwood. He played
Mozart on period instruments with Hogwood, whose specialty is playing eighteenth century
and earlier music.

Jarrett has recorded the entire two volumes of Bach's Das Wohltempierte Klavier, 24 Preludes
and Fugues per volume, one in each major and each minor key. Volume one is on piano, and
volume two is on harpsichord. Then he recorded the very difficult Goldberg Variations, also on
harpsichord. It's actually easier on a double manual harpsichord than piano because of some
technical hand crossing problems. A few years ago he did a double-CD recording of the 24
Shostakovich Preludes and Fugues. I bought it and believe it is superlative. I have not heard his
Bach, but the word is it's quite good.
1983 Pärt: Tabula Rasa

1987 Bach: Das Wohltemperierte Klavier Buch I (BWV 846-869)

1988 Harrison: Piano Concerto

1989 Bach: Goldberg Variations

1989 Hovhaness: Lousadzak

1990 Bach: Das Wohltemperierte Klavier Buch II (BWV 870-893)

1991 Händel: Recorder Sonatas

1991 Bach: Flute Sonatas

1991 Shostakovich: 24 Preludes and Fugues

1991 Bach: The French Suites

1991 Bach: 3 Sonaten Für Viola Da Gamba Und Cembalo

1993 Händel: Suites For Keyboard

1994 Mozart: Piano Concertos

1996 Mozart: Piano Concertos

1996 Hovhaness: Mysterious Mountain

1996 The Songs Of Robert Burns, Volumes 5 & 6

2000 Whale Spirit Rising


The Standards Trio
Then Jarrett's musical explorations took
another turn. He called bassist Gary
Peacock and drummer Jack DeJohnette,
whom he'd known, worked with, and
loved for many years, and asked them if
they wanted to get together and do an
album of standard tunes. He knew the
standard repertoire very well from his
days playing cocktail music in Boston.
Mind you, in these days you had to be a
little bit nuts to consider putting out a
piano trio album with songs like My Funny Valentine and God Bless the Child and All the Things
You Are. It just wasn't being done any more. But Jarrett's approach to jazz is complete: he is a
total improviser, and can make anything come alive. So one day the three got together for
dinner, Jarrett discussed the project with great animation, and the next day they went to the
studio. All Jarrett had was a long list of songs, and asked the guys ``What would you like to
play?'' They'd say ``Let's try ...'', the tape rolled, and out came the album Standards, Volume 1.
They recorded all of their first three albums at the same session. The reviews were ecstatic, so
they started playing concerts as a trio, Jarrett's third major group as a leader.

In a 1996 interview, Jarrett said that their concert programming is done exactly the same way
as the albums. There is no preparation or song list. They decide what to play when they get on
stage, choosing from the entire gamut of the Great American Songbook. When they play a song
in concert, it is not unusual that right then is the first time they ever played it together.

The trio has since put out quite a few more albums, all outstanding, and the group continues to
concertize. In 1995 ECM released yet another Jarrett collection that is certain to be considered
a historical milestone, a six-CD set entitled Keith Jarrett At the Blue Note, the complete
recordings of a three-night engagement at the club. Critics, fans, and other commentators are
now beginning to use expressions like ``best piano trio in history'' to refer to the Jarrett
Standards Trio. I can't personally think of a close contender myself, not even any of the
legendary Bill Evans or Oscar Peterson trios.
Overcoming a Crisis
In 1985 Jarrett experienced a personal artistic crisis. Although he loves playing classical music,
he found more and more that he didn't relate well to the world of professional classical
musicians. The musicians seemed to talk more about the ``notes'' than about the ``music.'' So
although he was playing with some of the best musicians and was getting great reviews, he
began to feel distant from that world. He also felt frustrated in that he had much to say
musically, and the notes he was obligated to play in a classical setting were not saying it for
him. It seems he is too much of a composer and improviser to be happy being an interpreter for
very long.

One night he played a solo recital in Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center. He was happy about the
music, and comfortable about his playing, since he played music he'd known for twenty years.
He gave it his best shot, and it came off beautifully as always. He drove home that night. (He
lives on a small farm in New Jersey.) The next day he got a review of the concert from the New
York papers, and it was a rave. Whereupon he proceeded to have what amounted to a nervous
breakdown. It was a quiet one. For about two weeks he sat on his front porch and stared into
space and didn't want to talk to anyone or do anything while he just sorted things out.

Then suddenly one day, in an instant of time, he leaped to his feet and made two simultaneous
decisions. The first was that he must accept no more engagements to play live classical music,
though he would continue to study it and to record it. The second was that he must go to his
studio and begin to play a Pakistani flute. He had the presence of mind to turn on his tape
recorder--cheap equipment, just a cassette recorder with overdubbing capability. He worked
continuously from morning until night every day for over a month, just playing mostly simple
instruments: that flute, tablas, recorders, percussion, glockenspiel, soprano sax, guitar, and
even a little piano. He created a total of 26 short tracks of overdubbed music characterized by
directness and lack of virtuosity, almost like folk or ethnic music. The experience was cathartic
for him, and by means of it he cured himself of his depression.

This collection of recordings was so important to Jarrett personally that rather than mail the
tape to Manfred Eicher, which he had no fear about doing with other work, he got on a plane
and hand carried it over to Germany, holding it in his lap. Eicher did the best he could to
improve the sound using better equipment. Ultimately it was released as a two-CD set called
Spirits.
Keyboard Albums on Miscellaneous Instruments
Besides piano Keith Jarrett plays electric organ, pipe organ, electric piano, harpsichord, soprano
sax, drums, guitar, trumpet, percussion, folk flutes, recorders, clavichord, marimba, vibes, and a
little bit of just about everything else. Some of these secondary instruments he plays
superlatively, e.g., the soprano sax.

In 1976 Jarrett went to Ottobeuren Abby in Germany to make a recording on their remarkable
pipe organ. In a few hours he created a double album called Hymns Spheres containing some of
the most original pipe organ music I've ever heard. Years later he put out another double album
called Invocations / The Moth and the Flame. The first record again uses pipe organ, this time
with some overdubbing of soprano saxophone. The second record is a solo studio piano album.
It's kind of an odd pairing, but the music is wonderful.

Then in 1986 he recorded another double studio album of improvisations, this time entirely on
clavichord, called Book of Ways, one of Jarrett's own personal favorites. This has to be heard to
be appreciated. Normally a clavichord can barely be heard across a quiet room, but if you mike
it very closely, it sounds a little like a lute, very rich in sound. Jarrett takes full advantage of it. I
love this album. Although he played electric instruments in the late sixties and early seventies,
Jarrett has played only acoustic instruments since about 1972, and has never been at all
interested in computers, MIDI, or electronic instruments.

Fighting Illness
In 1996 a mysterious illness caused Keith Jarrett to stop performing and doing much of anything
for an extended period of time. For a long time little was said publicly about the nature of his
malady, causing some concerned fans to become gravely concerned, expecting the worst.
Finally it became known, by means of Steve Cloud, Jarrett's manager, that Jarrett has parasitic
bacteria in his system, which causes symptoms of chronic fatigue. To remove the bacteria from
the system is a very complicated process. Antibiotics take care of it while it's in the
bloodstream. Then it harbors in other parts of the body, activity stirs it back up, and it starts
another strain. When the strain is at full force, it causes flu-like symptoms.

For a period of about two and a half years Jarrett was unable to perform. Then finally, in
November, 1998, the Standards Trio got together for a performance in Camden, New Jersey,
which was reportedly every bit up to Jarrett's usual highest standards. Other concerts have
followed since then, but not many, as Jarrett eases back into playing very cautiously, hoping to
avoid stimulating a relapse into a debilitating condition. We who love to hear his music certainly
wish him a complete and early recovery.
Summary
You are likely to hear almost anything from Keith Jarrett. He is certainly one of the greatest
improvisers in the history of jazz, and probably in the whole history of music.

To appreciate his solo performances the listener must be willing to go along for the ride,
wherever it takes him. The format of Jarrett's solo concerts is usually two longish halves, about
ninety minutes of music interrupted only by an intermission, and usually an encore, sometimes
two. Jarrett needs time to work. It may seem remarkable to think that a man can improvise at
the peak of inspiration for such long stretches, but it's really not much different from the way
classical East Indian music has always been played.

In the course of a single concert you may hear segments of foot-stomping gospel style, melodic
ballads, hymn-like open chordal passages, polytonal neoclassicism, heartrending romanticism,
minimalism, ostinatos that go on for fifteen minutes, rock and roll, arrhythmic atonality, playing
inside the piano, and spectacular virtuosity with exploding cascades of intensely original melody
the likes of which has never been matched by any other jazz pianist including even Art Tatum,
all normally accompanied by the extreme physical gyrations and unfortunate groaning for
which Jarrett has become well-known, and which annoy many listeners. Interestingly, when he
plays classical music, the contortions and vocalizations do not happen.

Jarrett has been a classical musician all his life, and has played forms of jazz from cocktail piano
to mainstream to hard bop to avant garde. He was a pioneer in jazz-rock fusion, and is
considered a progenitor of New Age music, that incredibly bland pulp played by musicians like
George Winston and his imitators. Jarrett single-handedly revived and redefined the art of solo
jazz piano playing.

Jarrett has done all this with total uncompromising commitment to music as an art form. He
loves to play.

Perhaps most remarkable is that being born in 1945 Jarrett is still relatively young. His playing
skills have never been better, and his creativity is continuing to mature. He is a disciplined and
mentally well-balanced, emotionally controlled, and inwardly happy person who has not fallen
victim to the abuses that some lesser persons have. He has no drug or alcohol story to tell. If
this world continues and he doesn't meet up with some unexpected misfortune, he still has his
best years ahead of him. The recent At the Blue Note set and his recording of Mozart piano
concertos verify this is true.
One disappointment was the way his marriage to Margot broke up, though he did try very hard
for a long time to work things out, if we believe the account of it given in the Carr biography. He
has two sons from that marriage. In the late 70s he began a relationship with Rose Anne
Colavito. They are now married, and by all accounts it is a very strong relationship.

To be sure, Jarrett has a few detractors, but so have all the greatest artists in history. I try to
ignore critics. But when I read negative comments about Jarrett's music, they haunt me,
because I can't really understand why they say some of the things they do. In any case these
people are in the minority.

Although Jarrett has never had the kind of popularity enjoyed by successful pop or rock
musicians, he has built up a substantial following all over the world and at the same time has
earned the admiration of his peers--a very rare duality of recognition. As professionals used to
come from long distances and crowd in whenever Art Tatum was playing, or Bach, Mozart,
Beethoven or Charlie Parker, they do likewise for Jarrett because he is a musician's musician
and always has something new and startling to teach alert and astute listeners.

Although Jarrett is not a religious man in the usual sense, despite his upbringing, or more likely
because of it, he clearly manifests a spiritual side. For years he was deeply affected by the
writings of a mystic named George Gurdjieff.

Whatever his present thinking about such matters, two concluding points are worth noting.
Since he was young Jarrett has been uncomfortable with the personal attention, accolades, and
fuss that stardom bring. He mentioned this to his mother when he was a child, and she replied
to him, as quoted from the Carr biography: ``Tell you what you do; we believe this talent comes
from the Creator through you. When somebody praises you, you send the praise back through
you to the Creator!'' It seems to me to have been a fine piece of advice.

Finally, the depth of Jarrett's own commitment to his work can be seen in a quote. It happens
that there are probably two dozen or more tracks in his recorded output that are all entitled
Hymn. One day he commented: ``If I could call everything I did Hymn, it would be appropriate,
because that's what they are when they're correct.''

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