Current:Home > MyJon Batiste’s ‘Beethoven Blues’ transforms classical works into unique blues and gospel renditions -Aspire Money Growth
Jon Batiste’s ‘Beethoven Blues’ transforms classical works into unique blues and gospel renditions
View
Date:2025-04-11 14:07:24
NEW YORK (AP) — When Grammy-award winner Jon Batiste was a kid, say, 9 or 10 years old, he moved between musical worlds — participating in local, classical piano competitions by day, then “gigging in night haunts in the heart of New Orleans.”
Free from the rigidity of genre, but also a dedicated student of it, his tastes wove into one another. He’d find himself transforming canonized classical works into blues or gospel songs, injecting them with the style-agnostic soulfulness he’s become known for. On Nov. 15, Batiste will release his first ever album of solo piano work, a collection of similar compositions.
Titled “Beethoven Blues (Batiste Piano Series, Vol. 1),” across 11 tracks, Batiste collaborates, in a way, with Beethoven, reimagining the German pianist’s instantly recognizable works into something fluid, extending across musical histories. Kicking off with the lead single “Für Elise-Batiste,” with its simple intro known the world over as one of the first pieces of music beginners learn on piano, he morphs the song into ebullient blues.
“My private practice has always been kind of in reverence to, of course, but also to demystify the mythology around these composers,” he told The Associated Press in an interview ahead of Wednesday’s album release announcement.
The album was written through a process called “spontaneous composition,” which he views as a lost art in classical music. It’s extemporization; Batiste sits at the piano and interpolates Beethoven’s masterpieces to make them his own.
“The approach is to think about, if I were both in conversation with Beethoven, but also if Beethoven himself were here today, and he was sitting at the piano, what would the approach be?” he explained. “And blending both, you know, my approach to artistry and creativity and what my imagined approach of how a contemporary Beethoven would approach these works.”
There is a division, he said, in a popular understanding of music where “pristine and preserved and European” genres are viewed as more valuable than “something that’s Black and sweaty and improvisational.” This album, like most of his work, disrupts the assumption.
Contrary to what many might think, Batiste said that Beethoven’s rhythms are African. “On a basic technical level, he’s doing the thing that African music ingenuity brought to the world, which is he’s playing in both a two meter and a three meter at once, almost all the time. He’s playing in two different time signatures at once, almost exclusively,” he said.
Batiste performs during the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival this year. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP, File)
“When you hear a drum circle, you know, the African diasporic tradition of playing in time together, you’re hearing multiple different meters happening at once,” he continued. “In general, he’s layering all of the practice of classical music and symphonic music with this deeply African rhythmic practice, so it’s sophisticated.”
“Beethoven Blues” honors that complexity. “I’m deeply repelled by the classism and the culture system that we’ve set up that degrades some and elevates others. And ultimately the main thing that I’m drawn in by is how excellence transcends race,” he said.
When these songs are performed live, given their spontaneous nature, they will never sound exactly like they do on record, and no two sets will be the same. “If you were to come and see me perform these works 10 times in a row, you’d hear not only a new version of Beethoven, but you would also get a completely new concert of Beethoven,” he said.
“Beethoven Blues” is the first in a piano series — just how many will there be, and over what time frame, and what they will look like? Well, he’s keeping his options open.
“The themes of the piano series are going to be based on, you know, whatever is timely for me in that moment of my development, whatever I’m exploring in terms of my artistry. It could be another series based on a composer,” he said.
“Or it could be something completely different.”
veryGood! (25)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Artist who performed nude in 2010 Marina Abramovic exhibition sues MoMA over sexual assault claims
- Mississippi legislators approve incentives for 2 Amazon Web Services data processing centers
- SAG-AFTRA defends Alec Baldwin as he faces a new charge in the 'Rust' fatal shooting
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Two men convicted of kidnapping, carjacking an FBI employee in South Dakota
- Man denied bail in Massachusetts crash that killed officer and utility worker
- A house fire in northwest Alaska killed a woman and 5 children, officials say
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Mississippi legislators approve incentives for 2 Amazon Web Services data processing centers
Ranking
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Noah Cyrus' Steamy Kiss With Fiancé Pinkus Is Truly Haute Amour at Paris Fashion Week
- Man denied bail in Massachusetts crash that killed officer and utility worker
- Russell Wilson gushes over wife Ciara and newborn daughter: 'The most beautiful view'
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- With beds scarce and winter bearing down, a tent camp grows outside NYC’s largest migrant shelter
- AP Week in Pictures: Europe and Africa
- Facebook parent Meta picks Indiana for a new $800 million data center
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Pennsylvania’s governor says he wants to ‘get s--- done.’ He’s made it his slogan, profanity and all
Ohio attorney general rejects voting-rights coalition’s ballot petition for a 2nd time
NYC dancer dies after eating recalled, mislabeled cookies from Stew Leonard's grocery store
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
First IVF rhino pregnancy could save northern white rhinos from the brink of extinction.
A house fire in northwest Alaska killed a woman and 5 children, officials say
GM's driverless car company Cruise is under investigation by several agencies