Current:Home > StocksThe lessons of Wayne Shorter, engine of imagination-InfoLens
The lessons of Wayne Shorter, engine of imagination
View Date:2025-01-09 18:53:09
Composer, saxophonist and devout Buddhist Wayne Shorter died last week at age 89. His visionary composition and improvisation shaped not only 20th-century jazz but also pop, world and classical music. Shorter was as beloved personally for his philosophical character and colorful aphorisms as he was for his musical accomplishments. Michelle Mercer is the author of Footprints, a 2005 biography of Shorter, and shares this personal essay on her experiences "translating" the artist and his life.
In remembrances last week following the passing of legendary composer and jazz musician Wayne Shorter, nearly everyone seemed to have a story of a "Wayne-ism" – epigrammatic, poetic, or allegorical words he'd deliver in order to spur reflection. "I'm not into composition. I'm into decomposition," he once told musician Jason Moran.
In the years I spent with Wayne for Footprints, the biography I wrote with his cooperation, I observed him dispensing these pearls to everyone – bookstore clerks, hotel breakfast chefs, young musicians backstage, fellow Buddhists at home. The meanings of Wayne's isms were heightened for me by years of listening to his music, itself rich in existential questions and radical presence. I eventually grew skilled at translating his koans partly because I was so often asked, "What do you think he meant?" I enjoyed the role. Characterizing such a unique and original artist and crafting the story of his long and varied history in music was a writer's dream.
By the middle of 2004, I'd been researching for Footprints for over two years, talking with scores of people who were part of Wayne's life and career, digging through university and home archives that he and his colleagues opened up to me. Still, the book's deadline loomed, and sooner than I'd hoped. I went on another of what had become a familiar flight, down to Wayne's home outside Miami, to explain the project's urgency to him and his wife, Carolina. Wayne and I sat down; I asked him something about a later Weather Report period.
"Oh, that was 'It's-later-than-you-think' time . . . have you seen that movie with–" and Wayne was off.
But Carolina swept in: "Wayne, Michelle just told us she has to finish the book in a matter of weeks," she said.
"Weeks?" asked Wayne.
"A firm, firm deadline," Carolina said.
He looked at me. "What do you need to know?"
Then came a great surprise: Wayne proceeded to answer every question as clearly and concisely as an encyclopedia entry. I'd known him to speak directly, in non-Wayne-isms, with his wife, his band and me, but didn't know until then that he had the capacity to unspool reference-book paragraphs on command.
Wayne chose to communicate unconventionally and creatively because that style was most uniquely him, truest to his imagination. Most of us grow out of our imaginations, or at least compromise them with age. Wayne never did and, as a Buddhist, he treasured and nurtured a state of wonder in others as well, attempting to activate the imagination in everyone he met.
In early 2005, at the end of some demanding days of book promotion, a transportation mix-up left Wayne late for a joint interview with me. He'd never been late before – his Weather Report co-leader Joe Zawinul once told me that an enduring image of tour life was arriving in the hotel lobby at call time to find Wayne "always already standing there with his little saxophone, neat and ready to go." Touring for decades makes most professional musicians punctual – imagine what tough bandleaders like Art Blakey and Miles Davis said or did to any sideman who made their groups late for a flight.
We went ahead and started the interview without Wayne, but moments before we went on the air, the interviewer leaned over and murmured some cynical asides to me, about Wayne and other jazz musicians' propensity for lateness and irresponsibility. The remarks were stunningly unprofessional, stereotypical and dated. We went live to millions before I could respond.
Wayne arrived and entered the studio at the first break. I shot him a look that warned, "this interviewer can't be trusted. Let's just get through it." He shot back a look that answered "already ascertained – and believe me, I've seen it all before. Stay cool."
We got through the otherwise-standard interview and headed to the elevator with Carolina. When the doors closed, I was surprised to find myself falling apart. For years, I'd been nothing but self-possessed and fully composed in Wayne's presence. Now, tears fell before I could stop them; I slumped into the elevator's corner. The scornful interviewer hadn't undone me. Not alone. I'd been bridging the linear and operational worlds to Wayne's vast creative universe for years, first with a book narrative and then with that book's publicity. This work had been a privilege and serious fun besides, but it was on the elevator that, finally, exhaustion sank in. Wayne's vast creative universe was a lot to bridge.
Carolina hugged me, offering some soothing words in her Brazilian Portuguese. "You've done so much for the book," she said. "I understand." Of course she did. She was Wayne's primary bridge in life, a role she fulfilled with angelic constancy.
"Hey," Wayne said, as tenderly as anyone had ever spoken to me. He put a hand on my shoulder. "All this, right now?" he said, gesturing at my tear-stained face and defeated posture. "I'm going to use it in a composition. It will be transformed."
My sorrow vanished, replaced by the usual pleasure in Wayne. Transforming challenging emotions, turning poison into medicine, using resistance to fly. These were the great themes of Wayne's mission in art and life. For the 600th time I marveled at the unshakable conviction of his Buddhist practice and laughed at the shrewd assessment of what he could create from a situation. I found comfort in the greatest living jazz-and-beyond composer making something out of my little elevator breakdown, as he did from anything and everything. I found even deeper reassurance in knowing Wayne would transfigure my emotion into one element of a dense and epic musical dream. He'd compose me well.
After seeing Carolina and Wayne off, I walked down through Manhattan and across the long, solid Brooklyn Bridge in the morning sun. Wayne's characterization of his first time playing onstage with Miles sprang to mind: "I felt like a cello, I felt the viola, I felt liquid, dot-dash, and colors started really coming." Improvising my own experience in the moment felt brighter with Wayne there, composing even a small part of my story.
veryGood! (97375)
Related
- Businesses at struggling corner where George Floyd was killed sue Minneapolis
- Kentucky Senate passes bill allowing parents to retroactively seek child support for pregnancy costs
- Rising debt means more would-be borrowers are getting turned down for loans
- Get 57% off Abercrombie Jeans, $388 Worth of Beauty for $40- Peter Thomas Roth, Tarte, Oribe & More Deals
- The results are in: Peanut the Squirrel did not have rabies, county official says
- Women guitarists are increasing in popularity on social media and changing the face of music
- Brian Austin Green Defends Love Is Blind’s Chelsea From Criticism Over Megan Fox Comparison
- Defendants in US terrorism and kidnapping case scheduled for sentencing in New Mexico
- 32-year-old Maryland woman dies after golf cart accident
- Avalanches kill 2 snowmobilers in Washington and Idaho
Ranking
- Justice Department says jail conditions in Georgia’s Fulton County violate detainee rights
- Rewritten indictment against Sen. Bob Menendez alleges new obstruction of justice crimes
- Cookie Monster complaint about shrinkflation sparks response from White House
- Mexican gray wolves boost their numbers, but a lack of genetic diversity remains a threat
- Texas mother sentenced to 50 years for leaving kids in dire conditions as son’s body decomposed
- Travis Kelce Details Reuniting With Taylor Swift During Trip to Australia
- Get 57% off Abercrombie Jeans, $388 Worth of Beauty for $40- Peter Thomas Roth, Tarte, Oribe & More Deals
- Why don't lithium-ion batteries work as well in the cold? A battery researcher explains.
Recommendation
-
Mariah Carey's Amazon Holiday Merch Is All I Want for Christmas—and It's Selling Out Fast!
-
Homes near St. Louis County creek are being tested after radioactive contamination found in yards
-
You’ll Adore Anne Hathaway and Nicholas Galitzine’s Steamy PDA in The Idea of You Trailer
-
Trump-backed Mark Robinson wins North Carolina GOP primary for governor, CBS News projects
-
Melissa Gilbert recalls 'painful' final moment with 'Little House' co-star Michael Landon
-
Lululemon's New Travel Capsule Collection Has Just What You Need to Effortlessly Elevate Your Wardrobe
-
Miami Beach keeps it real about spring breakers in new video ad: 'It's not us, it's you'
-
Shirt worn by Colin Firth as drenched Mr. Darcy in 'Pride and Prejudice' up for auction