Intro
Ahmad Jamal was born as Frederick Russell Jones and allegedly converted to Ahmadiyya in the early 1950’s (see the photo in the below with Nur ul Islam (left), Maulvi Abdus-Shakoor Kunze, a Qadiani-Ahmadi Maulvi in-charge of Chicago). 5 months after he died (2013), the 5th Qadiani-Ahmad Khalifa (Mirza Masroor Ahmad) also claimed that he accepted Ahmadiyya from 1950 to 1965, as he eulogized him. Ahmad Jamal was born as Frederick Russell Jones in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on 2 July 1930, Jamal began playing piano at age three. He studied under Mary Cardwell Dawson—noted singing instructor and founder in 1941 of the National Negro Opera Company—at the age of seven, and pianist James Miller during his early teens.
However, his wife and daughter (Sumayah Jamal) didn’t allegedly convert to Ahmadiyya. His daughter seems to be over 40 and she has nothing to do with Ahmadiyya, the 5th Qadiani-Ahmad Khalifa (Mirza Masroor Ahmad) also admitted to this in his eulogization. He isn’t mentioned in any Ahmadiyya newspaper and his daughter must have been born in the 1960’s, and his wife never converted! This proves that Ahmad Jamal wasn’t a chanda paying Ahmadi at all, he was a fair-weather Ahmadi, if he was an Ahmadi at all. There were many Jazz players who accepted Ahmadiyya and then left Ahmadiyya, however, they retained their deviant beliefs, Ahmad Jamal seems to be another example of that. Is Ahmad Jamaal’s version of Nature Boy was his tribute to HMGA? If it was, he never openly stated that.

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1950’s in Chicago
Nur ul Islam (left), Maulvi Abdus-Shakoor Kunze (middle), Ahmad Jamal (right).

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Ahmad Jamal
Ahmad’s Blues
A very groovy live recording from one of jazz music’s enduring maestros. Like Blakey, Jamal was born in Pittsburgh and converted to Islam by way of other musicians who found, in Jamal’s words, “brought me peace of mind” in navigating the painful racist world of Jim Crow America. Jamal continues to play around the world, including a visit to Bangalore earlier this year.
I have often wondered whether Ahmad Jamaal’s version of Nature Boy was his tribute to HMGA. If it was, he never openly stated that. You can hear the lyrics in that jazz version of Nature Boy at the link I provided, but here they are:
There was a boy, a very strange enchanting boy.
They say he wandered very far, very far over land and sea.
A little shy, and sad of eyes, but very wise was he.
And then one day, one magic day he passed my way.
And while we spoke of many things, fools and kings, this he said to me:
The greatest thing you’ll ever learn, is just to love and be loved in return.
I have often thought that the second line about Nature Boy “wandering” over land and see referred, in Jamaal’s mind, to HMGA’s teachings being spread “over land and sea.” The words “There was a boy” may have referred to HMGA’s name, Ghulam, which means boy or little boy. I think it also means slave, servant, etc., as I recall. The words, “sad of eyes” in the song always reminded me of this picture. “Just to love and beloved in return” is probably what Jamal felt after he became Ahmadi.
Back in the day, Islam was really a refuge for Black folks. And, at one time, Ahmadiyyat was the only Islam around in America. Blacks were rejected in American society. So the lines, “just to love and be loved in return” would have meant a lot to Jamal, as, I am sure, he felt love in the Jamaat and perhaps saw that line in Nature Boy as being reflective of the love he felt amongst Ahmadis.
Islam offered Black folks a sense of being connected to the wider world, not just despised “niggers” in white society. So, though there’s no way I can prove it, I feel very confident that Jamal created his jazz version of Nature Boy in tribute to HMGA. He was an artist; a musician. Artists often express themselves through their art, whether it’s painting, music, sculpture, etc.
Jamaal didn’t create those lyrics. He just did his own jazz version of Nature Boy. Nat King Cole, long before Jamaal, did a version of Nature Boy. But I still think that Jamal had HMGA in mind when he did his version. By the time I heard that he’d come back to The Movement, I had discontinued activity and discontinued going to Jalsa. The classism [CASTE-ISM, quite frankly] at Jalsa began to be overbearing, and, for me, that just destroyed the spirit of Jalsa.
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Sumayah Jamal’s Letter to her Father Ahmad Jamal – Cable Street
Sumayah Jamal’s Letter to her Father Ahmad Jamal
Editor’s Note
Another great jazz musician passed this year. Ahmad Jamal, died at age 92 on April 16, 2023. Born on July 2, 1930, Jamal was a jazz pianist, composer, arranger, influencer of other important jazz figures including Miles Davis, Ahmad Jamal had such a light, sure touch with the piano one could say the phrase “tickled the ivories” was made for him.
His daughter, Doctor Sumayah Jamal is a friend. Before her father Ahmad Jamal passed, she wrote him a letter. Cable Street is pleased to publish it here.
—Jan Schmidt

From Sumayah Jamal
Yesterday, April 16, I lost my father and best friend, Ahmad Jamal. He was 92. His oncologist told me a year ago that he would not survive the summer. I wrote my father this letter last year to thank him for everything he gave to me during his amazing life. I thought he only had a month or two left to live at the time of its writing but being the stubborn fellow that he was, he lasted for almost another year. The letter made my father very happy; he called it his “treasure.”
I prayed every day for the last year that I would be with my father when he passed away. I was holding his hand when he departed. My prayers were answered.
May you Rest in Peace Dad.
June 9, 2022
Dear Dad,
I know you have reflected often on the things you think you did wrong as a parent. I am writing this letter to you to talk about all the things you did that were right.
First, I want to thank you for visiting me every day in the hospital where I was kept in an incubator for the first few weeks of my life because I was too little to come home. Back then they didn’t let the parents hold the premature babies like they do now. But you came every day anyway and watched me through the glass window of the nursery. Although we had no physical contact, I am sure that I sensed your loving presence and did not feel alone.
I thank you for inspiring me to learn from an early age. I remember you and Mom playing scrabble. I wanted to play with you so badly, but did not know how to read or write. I walked around for days with a pencil and paper and copied every word I saw. Once the page was filled, I asked to play with you, confident that my list would allow me to join in the fun. But I never got the letters I needed to make the words I had written down. Nevertheless, by the time I got to kindergarten, I was reading at the second-grade level.

I want to thank you for making sure I got a good education. You sent me to a respected private school and it was a given in our household that I would attend college, even though neither you nor Mom had attended college yourselves. My education is a precious gift that no one can ever take away from me and that opened doors of opportunity that were not available for the earlier generations of our lineage.
I want to thank you and Mom for taking such special care to give me a strong, cultural identity and pride in being African-American. I was born during a very scary time for African-Americans in this country. You and Mom went out of your way to find me dolls to play with that looked like me. You found coloring books and children’s books with characters that looked like me. I remember books about Frederick Douglass, Harold and the Purple Crayon, The Snowy Day and books illustrated by Romare Bearden. I was not allowed to watch The Little Rascals or any other show that promoted negative stereotypes about African-Americans. I came home once from nursery school with a drawing I had made of the children in my class. There was a sea of pink faces and one brown face. I told Mom that I wish there was one pink face and many brown faces. You and Mom then made a decision to send me to an international school with many different kinds of children so I wouldn’t feel so different anymore. This gave me from early on, a sense that I was part of a global community. Yet another priceless gift.
When we moved from Manhattan to Westchester in the early 1970s, they were just beginning to integrate the school system. The African-American children were being met with hatred and the threat of physical violence. You and Mom did not want that for me. You decided to keep me in school in Manhattan, requiring that Mom, drive to the city twice daily in rush-hour traffic to drop me off and pick me up. You made that sacrifice in order to spare me from experiencing racism during my formative years and internalizing the external hatred and transmuting it to self-hatred. Yet another priceless gift.

You taught me about standing up for what you believe and having the courage to be different. You were the first African-American public figure to reject the name given to our family by those who owned us as property. You chose a new name that better reflected the ancestry and culture that was stripped from us when we were brought here against our will. You also began your scholarly studies of the religion of your choosing, Islam, which better reflected the religion of our ancestors, the first of whom arrived on these shores from Senegal in 1706. Your righteous decision cost you a lot. It hurt your career and was frowned upon and not understood by Caucasians and African-Americans alike. Your courage and strength of conviction paved the way for the Malcolm‘s, and the Mohammed Ali’s and many others who came after you. You were the first Jamal in the African-American community. It is now one of the most common names in our community and few, if any of the modern day Jamals have any idea of the sacrifice behind the privilege of carrying that name, a privilege that they take for granted.
Your scholarly approach and devotion to your faith garnered you the label of “mystic” as a young man. I watched you as a child, and your spiritual quest informed my own spiritual quest, which has also been scholarly and deep. Although the outer form of our respective beliefs is different, we both believe that constant contact with and submission before the Creator is the most important part of our lives.
You gave me my love of music. As far as I am concerned, music is the highest form of expression of which humans are capable and your music channels an aspect of the creative forces that is very unique to you as a creative conduit. I remember being a child in night clubs dressed in my footy pajamas and falling asleep in the leather booths. The smell of leather permeated with cigarette smoke and liquor-soaked sawdust on the club floor is imprinted in my memory as the “night club smell,” which I actually liked back then. Music was everything to me when I was little. You gave me a portable suitcase record player that was my pride and joy. I’d listen to vinyl for hours on end. I was so proud of my famous dad, and entertained the thought of also being a musician like you.
My first concert was so important to me that I refused to go on a cruise with you and Mom because I would’ve missed the concert. After the concert, however, I became so homesick for you and Mom that I asked Arif Mardin, at whose home I was staying at the time, if he could hire a helicopter to fly me to the cruise ship you were on. When he said no, I burst into tears. I was wearing a mood ring, which was very trendy at the time. I looked at it, and it had turned jet black, a sign of deep despair. That depressed me even more. I cried myself to sleep.
Thank you for teaching me to drive with the patience that only a father can show a daughter. I remember you saying to me when you were teaching me to parallel park “OK. You only took eight maneuvers that time” and you gave me a round of applause. I felt special and accomplished. “Let’s see if we can get it down to three or four moves the next time,” you said with a glint in your eye. You didn’t get upset when I scraped your car backing out of the garage. After that you rented a car for me to practice on. I remember you driving me to my driving test somewhere near the Canadian border and getting me there on time against all odds after a commercial jet made an emergency landing on the highway we were on. This created the worst traffic jam known to mankind. I remember almost flunking the test once we got there.

African-American greeting card company
It is from you that I got my entrepreneurial spirit. While many are aware of your musical accomplishments, few know that you were also an entrepreneur. You opened one of the first Middle Eastern restaurants in the country, you had your own record label. You had one of the first African-American greeting card businesses. The artwork on the cards was stunning, elegant and sophisticated. You are a visionary and a big picture person. Visionaries need the support of those who can execute upon their vision. It is rare for anyone to be able to both dream and execute the dream fully. In a different world, a different time, your dreams could’ve been realized more easily. But you were in your heyday at a time when someone who looked like you faced many obstacles. You were a musical genius in a Jim Crow era, a time when you weren’t allowed to use the facilities in the concert halls you filled a capacity. Going on the road and not being served at restaurants, not being able to stop in certain towns to get gas because it was too dangerous.
A flower growing in the dark.
I am so sorry for all of the hardships and indignities you suffered, both as a child and beyond. You deserve the waterfalls, sunlight, irises, orchids and forsythia in your life now.
I want to thank you for believing in me and coming to my aid when my company was in its early stages and we were strapped for cash. Your contributions paid for the synthesis of a novel drug that is now being used to help patients who don’t respond to cancer treatments. If we succeed, it is because of you. I truly stand on the shoulders of a giant.
I respect you immensely for your accountability. You not only admit when you are wrong, but you make a living amends and take meaningful corrective action. This takes courage and humility that very few have. I thank you for all of the beautiful birthday bouquets, Amazon cards, spa gift cards, our unforgettable trips to Switzerland, France, Tokyo, Holland, Turkey.
I thank you for looking for Moe, my cat, in the middle of the night in the East Village when I lost her.
You are my best friend and confidant. You are the person I go to with everything. It has been a very difficult last few years for me and you have been my rock. I would never have made it without you. I have a tendency to second-guess myself, and you always say “give yourself the benefit of the doubt.” Who will remind me of that when you leave me?
I want you to know how very deeply I love you and how much I appreciate everything you’ve done for me and everything that you are. I am grateful and blessed to have you as a father.
No matter where you are you will be in my heart and my heart will still speak to you every day, sharing my defeats, my victories, and many things mundane. And I know that no matter where you are, you’ll be watching over me, just like you were at the very beginning of my life on this Earth
As-salamu alaykum, my dear father.
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A tiny sampling of links to Ahmad Jamal music:
Ahmad Jamal – Poinciana – LIVE HD ZYCOPOLIS TV https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cytUz9KkK9M
Ahmad Jamal – “Marseille (feat. Abd Al Malik)” [Official Music Video] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmSJYD88wVw
AHMAD JAMAL, Trio “Darn That Dream” 1959 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oA9GhIyP_zI
Or go directly to the Official Website on youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCo7nZkespt10yaW2-U3vAKQ
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Ahmad Jamal, innovative and influential jazz pianist, dies at 92
Ahmad Jamal, influential pianist and composer, has died – Los Angeles Times (latimes.com)
Ahmad Jamal, a pianist, composer and arranger whose innovative, chamber jazz style had a powerful impact on his contemporaries while gaining widespread popularity via such recordings as his bestselling interpretation of “Poinciana,” has died, according to the New York Times. He was 92.
Jamal died Sunday of prostate cancer at his home in Ashley Falls, Mass., his daughter, Sumayah Jamal, confirmed to the New York Times.
The crisp, carefully tailored but deeply swinging arrangements he created for his trios of the 1950s and ‘60s had a long-term effect on the piano trio format as well as the individual work of other pianists, composers, arrangers and horn players.
“No single artist after the great alto saxophonist [Charlie Parker] has been more important to the development of fresh form in jazz than Ahmad Jamal,” wrote critic musician Stanley Crouch.
Miles Davis, Keith Jarrett, John Coltrane and Randy Weston were among the numerous iconic jazz artists whose own music revealed, directly or indirectly, the influence of Jamal’s style.
Davis, an assertive and dedicated fan of Jamal’s creative choices, noted in his autobiography that Jamal “… knocked me out with his concept of space, his lightness of touch, his understatement, and the way he phrased notes and passages.”
Many of the standard songs that Davis recorded in the ‘50s clearly seem to have been chosen as the result of his attraction to prior versions by Jamal. “New Rumba,” a Jamal composition, was recorded by Davis in a Gil Evans arrangement that closely followed the original version. And Davis reportedly urged the pianists in his groups to learn from the Jamal style.
Jamal’s most successful recording was the now-classic 1958 live performance LP, “At the Pershing: But Not for Me.” The first jazz album to sell more than a million copies, it was a rare example, for the period, of a bestselling recording that was not made in a studio. Its popularity drove it to the top 10 of the national sales charts for a staggering 108 consecutive weeks.
The album’s achievements were energized by Jamal’s memorable version of the standard tune “Poinciana.” The appeal of the song’s arrangement continued well into the 21st century when Jarrett, another dedicated Jamal fan, frequently played it in performances of his own piano trio. In 1995, it was heard on the soundtrack of the Clint Eastwood film “The Bridges of Madison County.”
The timeless qualities of Jamal’s music reached into the contemporary world as well. In 2010, he topped JazzWeek’s annual survey of American radio stations to determine the top 100 most frequently played artists. In the pop genre, more than 40 hip-hop tracks — by performers such as Jay-Z, De La Soul, Common and Gang Starr — sampled his music.
Ahmad Jamal was born July 2, 1930, in Pittsburgh. His birth name, Frederick Russell Jones, was changed to Ahmad Jamal when he converted to Ahmadiyya Islam in 1952.
Jamal recalled his initial encounter with the piano in a video interview for “Jazz on the Tube.”
“At 3 years of age,” he said, “my wonderful Uncle Lawrence stopped me while I was walking past the piano in my parents’ living room. He was playing the piano and challenged me to duplicate what he was doing. Although I had never touched this or any piano, I sat down and played note for note what I had heard. The rest is history.”
At 7, his mother made arrangements for him to begin taking lessons. His first performances for an audience took place at a local Pittsburgh club when he was 11.
“I can’t remember the place,” he told Boston Globe writer Marian Christy. “I only remember that people threw loads of money on the bandstand.”
In high school, he studied classical music with concert singer and teacher Mary Cardwell Dawson and piano with pianist James Miller. By the time Jamal joined the musicians’ union at 14, he had already begun to supplement his classical training with an attraction to jazz.
One of his early influences, he often said, was a fellow Pittsburgher, the jazz pianist Erroll Garner. After graduating from Westinghouse High School in 1948, his professional career began via a national tour with the George Hudson Orchestra.
Jamal made his first recording, an original titled “Ahmad’s Blues,” in 1951 with his trio, the Three Strings — the title tracing to the instrumentation of piano, guitar and bass. But his success began to escalate in 1956, when the guitar was replaced by drums, creating the basic trio format that he continued to maintain for decades.
In the ‘70s, he occasionally added a percussionist to provide the proper coloration for his interest in Caribbean and Latin rhythms.
Starting in the ‘80s, however, his repertoire emphasis shifted from the imaginative interpretation of standard songs to the creation of his own works. Although the source material changed, the fundamental Jamal style remained the appealing sound it had always been, enhanced by growingly rhapsodic pianistic touches.
It is music, said a 1994 Times review characterizing the full range of the Jamal trio’s performances, “that can be simultaneously detailed and spontaneous, thoughtful and entertaining.”
Jamal continued to tour and record well into his 80s, including a 2018 stop at Segerstrom Center for the Performing Arts in Costa Mesa. On his longevity, the musician said, “There might be some sidemen still living, but I’m the only living headliner.”
“I’ve toured enough. I’ll only go out on the road on occasion,” Jamal said. “That’s it for me. I don’t travel like I used to. I’ve traveled the last 70 years. I started when I was 17. That’s enough, right?”
Jamal advised young musicians to attack the industry from multiple perspectives. If you play, he said, also learn how to compose and conduct.
“If you can’t find a venue, then teach for a while. And if you can’t teach, then write for a while,” he said. “Go to school and increase your knowledge.”
“When you stop discovering things, you’re dead,” he said. “I sat at the piano when I was 3 years old, and I’m still discovering things within me.”
Heckman, a longtime jazz critic for The Times, died in 2020. Former Times Community News contributor Eric Althoff contributed to this report.
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Ahmad Jamal, Jazz Master – Pittsburgh Quarterly

I’ll bet that I’m the only musician ever to record a CD simply titled “Pittsburgh,” which is a tribute to my beloved hometown. It’s a “miracle city,” really. When it comes to industry, culture and the arts, Pittsburgh has contributed more to the world than most people can begin to imagine.
Pittsburgh was once home to Andrew Carnegie, George Westinghouse, and the Mellon family. It was the birthplace of August Wilson, the great playwright, and pop artist Andy Warhol. Perhaps lesser known is the fact that it was also a breeding ground for many world-class musical talents such as Earl “Fatha” Hines, Billy Eckstine, Erroll Garner, George Benson, Stanley Turrentine, Mary Lou Williams and Billy Strayhorn (to whose family I sold newspapers when I was a kid). As an aspiring jazz musician, I was lucky enough to grow up in one of the best jazz cities in the world.
People often call me a prodigy, to which I always say, “Well, if the shoe fits…” I started playing piano at age 3, which is very unusual. As the story goes, my Uncle Lawrence was sitting in our family’s living room at an old upright piano that my mother had purchased because she wanted to learn to play, although she never did because of her full-time job doing domestic work and the demands of raising four kids—two boys and two girls, of which I was the youngest. Anyway, one day, my uncle was playing my mom’s piano and he started teasing me. “Can you play this, young man?” he asked. Well, I sat down next to him and played just what he had played, note for note—and the rest is history. You see, miracles really do happen, especially in the “Miracle City.”
It’s true that I always had an affinity for the piano, and I’ve explored the instrument fully. I’m still exploring it now, even at 87 years of age. Coming up in Pittsburgh, I had the best teachers and fine mentors. I began studying with Mary Cardwell Dawson, who founded the National Negro Opera Company and was responsible for placing the first African Americans in the Metropolitan Opera. When she left for Washington, I studied with James Miller in the Hill District. Few people remember James Miller, I’m afraid, but he was a good teacher and a master musical technician.
I was born and raised in the East Liberty section of town and attended elementary school there, with the likes of Dodo Marmarosa and Erroll Garner, great jazz pianists in their own right, who were both a bit older than me. After that, I went on to Westinghouse High School and played piano in the “K-Dets,” under the tutelage of one of jazz music’s great local enthusiasts and educators, Carl McVicker. It should be noted that the K-Dets were one of the first high school orchestras anywhere to play jazz, or what I call “American classical music.” I coined that term some years ago because that’s just what jazz is. Our music has contributed much to the global musical village.
The biggest contributing factor to my eventual success in music and in life, too, was my mother. I look at her picture every day. She worked hard raising us kids and through her long hours of domestic work, but still found the time and resources to ensure my music lessons. I think mostly about her when I think about Pittsburgh. My father labored every day in an open-hearth steel mill in Homestead for 23 years. I wouldn’t have lasted five minutes in his job. It was hot, dirty and dangerous. And it was a bit unsettling when I learned that, as a young teenager, I was making more money from playing music at local clubs than my father was for making steel.
At 14, I joined the local musicians’ union and continued performing, but chose to leave Pittsburgh at just 17 for a life on the road. Looking back, maybe I left home too soon, but I did so with another Pittsburgher named George Hudson, who had moved to St. Louis and founded one of the most important jazz orchestras in the world. Sadly, as an African American in this society, George didn’t have the opportunities that were afforded people such as Glenn Miller or Tommy Dorsey. Nonetheless, we toured with Dinah Washington and The Ravens, and I turned 18 in Atlantic City while we were holding forth at The Club Harlem there. My first concert at Carnegie Hall was in 1952 for Duke Ellington’s 25th Anniversary. On the bill were Charlie Parker, Billie Holiday, Dizzy Gillespie, Stan Getz, and me, and I’m the only headliner from that concert who’s still alive. In time, I “graduated” from “Hudson University,” but never did get to Juilliard, which was the real school of my choice. I just kept touring. I got my “PhD” on the road. My degree came from the streets.
When I think back on my upbringing in Pittsburgh, my mind floods with memories of the Musicians’ Club on Wylie Avenue, where musicians from all over the world came and played. It was a treat, for example, when drummer Joe Harris and bassist Ray Brown, both born Pittsburghers, hit town and came to the club to sit in on our allnight jam sessions. What an education that was for a kid like me. And who could forget The Crawford Grill, The Bamboola or The Washington Club, the after-hours joint where I met the legendary pianist Art Tatum when I was just 14 and working with Harold Holt, the sax player. But international stars aside, many great musicians either never left or left and returned to Pittsburgh. Johnny Costa, who played piano for “Mr. Rogers,” was one such musician. He was a phenomenal talent. And then there was Dodo Marmarosa. The world has forgotten him, but he played on some of Charlie Parker’s early records, “Relaxin’ at Camarillo,” for one. He also played with Artie Shaw. And there were many more, too.
I usually don’t do interviews. After all, I’m a musician and most of what I have to say I say with the piano. Yes, I have an Arabic name, but generally don’t discuss religion or philosophy publicly because life has taught me that if you tarry and talk to fools, sometimes you end up sounding like one yourself. But basically, I get my approach to life from the Holy Qur’an. I belong to the Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam. Our motto is, “Love for all; hatred for none.” I started studying religious philosophy when I was just 21 years old. I accepted Islam because it took me from darkness into light and gave me direction. Whenever I veer off the straight-and-narrow, that’s when I make my mistakes, and I’ve made a lot of them in my life, believe me. Today, I try to be a guiding force for young people, particularly musicians, offering them the benefit of 87 years of life experience. But I can only lead them to water. I can’t make them drink. The Christian Bible says “Do not…cast your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under their feet…” Young or old, some people wouldn’t recognize a pearl of wisdom if they held it in their hand, no matter what you say or do.
“I usually don’t do interviews. After all, I’m a musician and most of what I have to say I say with the piano.”
—Ahmad Jamal
As a successful touring musician, I’ve been fortunate enough to have traveled the world for many years and, in doing so, I’ve learned some things. I always tell kids that the most important words in life are “Yes” and “No.” You must know when and how to say “Yes,” and when and how to say “No.” Most young people haven’t the ability to discern when or how to say one or the other. I tell them to say “Yes” to education and “No” to the streets, because most people are not equipped to handle street life, but they don’t know it. And while there are some deficiencies in all institutions of higher learning, the positives far outweigh the negatives. On the streets, young people can easily get distracted to their detriment, unless they’re fortunate, as I was. My mother and my philosophy saved me; otherwise, I’d have been dead many years ago. Look at what happened to Charlie “Bird” Parker, a genius who changed the music industry. He was a true revolutionary, as was Dizzy Gillespie. But Dizzy was able to outfox, survive and benefit. Bird succumbed to the streets, to the distraction of drugs. Billie Holiday did the same. On the streets, if you’re not grounded spiritually, you’re going to be overwhelmed and end up in trouble.
Personally, I believe that people’s lives are affected 80 percent by their outside environment. (The other 20 percent is what they get at home.) And the effect of that 80 percent can be devastating if they don’t have the proper grounding. Sure, even in universities, kids are going to have problems. But university life is far preferable to life on the streets. And if you’re a musician, your chances of survival are better if you have more than one “exit door.” I always tell young musicians to learn how to perform, to conduct, to compose and to teach so that, if and when one door closes, all they have to do is open another. Think of it this way: If a fire breaks out in a building and there isn’t more than one exit, people are going to get trampled. The bottom line for youngsters is to go to school and acquire tools to work with. If they do, things should work out.
Today in America, we have civilization, but we have very little culture. And without culture a civilization is ultimately doomed. The U.S. is not like Egypt or China. As a nation, we’re just a baby when compared to those ancient societies. In my view, the only indigenous culture we really have here, other than Native American art, is this music we call “jazz,” which isn’t promoted much. How often do you see Duke Ellington on television? How often do our kids see Billie Holiday or Art Tatum? If you asked someone about Louis Armstrong, would they know who he was? But they know all about Beyonce. They know all the rappers. And I’m not saying that’s bad, necessarily. But you’d have to travel to Europe to see Duke, Billie or Art. In America, jazz artists are strangers in their hometowns. Thankfully, Wynton Marsalis was able to establish “Jazz at Lincoln Center,” through his celebrity and a lot of hard work. I must hand it to him: He made it happen. But my point is that there should be “Lincoln Centers” all over this country. Today, we have only two prominent jazz institutions in the U.S.—“Jazz at Lincoln Center” and “San Francisco Jazz.” That’s a sad commentary on the state of affairs in our country, culturally speaking.
Essentially, I’m now retired. I performed my last concert in 2014 in Prague. But I hardly ever say “never,” so I do go out and play on special occasions, from time to time. Ironically, I’m busier now than I’ve ever been in my life. I’m doing so many things. I’m putting out a transcription book. I’m helping to launch a couple of young musicians in whose work and talents I believe. I’ve been all over the world and people still want me to perform in various places. In fact, I just finished a studio project last year in Paris. People wanted me to come and record there so I produced a project called “Marseille,” a tribute to one of my favorite French cities. They opened up their opera house for me, and it was the first time they’d presented “American classical music” there.
Long before you reach my age, you must cultivate an ability to examine and understand not only the history of others, but your own history as well. As the saying goes, “How do you know where you’re going, if you don’t know where you’ve been?” If you can look at and honestly assess your life and work, you’ll see the good you’ve done, and the not-so-good, too. In my case, I remember my best performances, but would rather forget the heartaches I gave my mother. I miss her, even now, and pray for her every day. Long ago, she left this “world of illusion,” as we all will. None of us will get out of here alive, so we must prepare for the “real world” that comes next. The ups and downs of life are worthy of only a chuckle. Physical and spiritual health are your most valuable possessions. If you are blessed with good health and are left with a chuckle, you know you’ve arrived.
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Links and Related Essay’s
Ahmad Jamal, influential pianist and composer, has died – Los Angeles Times (latimes.com)
Ahmad Jamal, Jazz Master – Pittsburgh Quarterly
Sahibzadi Amatul Qudoos Begum Sahiba: A true servant of Allah (alislam.org)
Sumayah Jamal’s Letter to her Father Ahmad Jamal – Cable Street
The Ahmad Jamal Interview (Complete) (youtube.com)
When was the first Ahmadiyya temple acquired in the USA? – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog
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