(Excerpted and adapted from a work-in-progress, Going Outside: A Memoir of Free Jazz & the '60s.)
In the summer of 1962, Cecil lands a three-month, four-night-a-week gig at The Take 3, a coffee house on Bleecker Street. It's right next door to The Bitter End where Woody Allen had performed just weeks before. (Allen was second on the bill and I'd thrown him a quick couple of lines in the Village Voice column—something about how this new comic exploited his appearance to good advantage.)
For Cecil, 33 now, The Take 3 experience will be important for the opportunity its extraordinary duration affords him to develop new ideas and achieve deeper levels of interaction with the two musicians he brings with him, Jimmy Lyons, alto saxophone, and Sunny Murray, drums. (The trio will be joined on occasion by either Buell Neidlinger or Henry Grimes on bass, but most of the time there's no bass player.)
For me, 23, and never happier than when I'm in a jazz club and in the company of musicians I admire, it's a chance to hang in my element on a semi-regular basis. But it's something else as well. This is 1962. An increasing number of us live with the conviction that a seismic change in human consciousness is both possible and imminent. We also share a belief that the New Jazz, in its break with established forms and procedures, and with its resurrection of ancient black methodologies, is showing the way. "Man," the bassist Alan Silva (coming off an hour-long, 13-piece collective improvisation one night at another venue) can say to me, "in ten years we won't even need traffic lights we're gonna be so spiritually tuned to one another."
At The Take 3, I'll feel myself to be at the very center of the universe.
I mention Cecil's engagement in the column a few days before he opens and maybe six people a night show up in the first week. The following week, impervious to criticism that I'm functioning as Cecil's unofficial publicist, I write what amounts to a paean to him. I also discuss a simultaneous Monk date at the Five Spot. (Monk, of course, is one of Cecil's principle influences.) The Voice titles this column "The Monk and the Taylor" and gives it a banner front page headline. The next night I arrive at The Take 3 and see that the proprietors have hung a large sign over the entrance:
"CECIL TAYLOR! 'STARTS WHERE MONK LEAVES OFF!'—VILLAGE VOICE"
Not exactly the way I had put it, but so what? The column and the sign serve their purpose. From this point on the room is sometimes filled to capacity.
Among the musicians who come on nights that I'm there (and who would have come without the hype) are John Coltrane and Eric Dolphy. When the last set ends they sit at a table with Cecil, Anne (my girlfriend then) and me, and a love fest breaks out. John says to Cecil that he's "awestruck" by him. Eric calls Cecil "the spaceman—the astronaut!" After Cecil tells Eric that Eric is "about to become great," I raise my hand and say, "So what about me?" Everybody laughs except Eric. I can see him thinking: Wait a minute. Should I know...? Does Bob play an instrument?
John and Cecil had recorded together in 1958 and a word on the album they made, and their musical relationship in general, is in order here. The album, Hard Driving Jazz, was originally a Cecil date and later reissued under Coltrane's name as Coltrane Time. It was certainly an interesting album but it turned out to be less than terrific.
Tom Wilson, an early champion of Cecil's and the producer of his first record, Jazz Advance, produced this one as well. He also chose the sidemen, all of whom— trumpeter Kenny Dorham, bassist Chuck Israels, drummer Louis Hayes and tenor saxophonist Coltrane, too—were serious beboppers and, with the exception of Coltrane, very much set in their ways.
Tom believed that he was putting something seminal together, something that would foreshadow where, following Cecil's lead, bebop might go from here. But surrounding Cecil with a group composed largely of intransigent beboppers was counterproductive to say the least. While Coltrane acquitted himself decently, Dorham (a splendid bebop trumpet player) was incensed by Cecil's "eccentric" comping and he made no effort to conceal his feelings. For their parts, Israels and Hayes could only struggle with the rhythmic challenges Cecil posed.
But the album would still have failed to predict bebop's future even if these men had been more flexible. Although it wasn't entirely clear at the time, Cecil was in the process of creating a discrete system of his own; if anything, he was shedding bebop. (It would be Coltrane who'd deliver bebop to its outer limits.) Given this circumstance, what a Cecil Taylor record needed was musicians inclined and prepared to take his journey with him. Cecil had been opposed to Dorham's inclusion on the date—he'd wanted Ted Curson, a younger trumpet player who was very much in sync with him. And he hadn't been so sure about using Coltrane either. That John would be more capable than the others of taking Cecil on wasn't enough. (Jimmy Lyons, whom he didn't encounter until 1960, became Cecil's most congenial supporting player. Jimmy survived for years on odd jobs in order to be available if Cecil had work, and when Jimmy needed a new saxophone Cecil rewarded his loyalty by buying him one. "It had to be a Selmer, so that's what he got," Cecil told me. When Jimmy died in 1986, it was months before Cecil could bring himself to go near a piano again.)
Probably the closest thing to a successful number from the Hard Driving Jazz recording sessions, Mel Tormé's "Christmas Song"— "For the Noël market," Cecil said—was left out of the album.
By 1962, of course, Coltrane was all but possessed by the Free Jazz players. He was both their patron (he gave them money and employed many of them in his band) and their student. "He loved us," Archie Shepp would say. But as far as Cecil's approach was concerned, there was only so much that John could use. "That's too complicated," he remarked about it once, and he derived a lot more from Archie, Eric, Ornette Coleman and Albert Ayler, among others.
But Coltrane was always prepared to honor Cecil. I'm thinking of a night at Birdland a year or so later. John is about to go on as Cecil and a small group of us come in. We walk past the bar where Pee Wee Marquette, the club's midget and famously nasty emcee, is saying to the bartender—and just loud enough for us to hear—"How much more of this 'Greenwich Village' jazz am I supposed to take?" John sees Cecil and says something to McCoy Tyner who's already playing an intro. Tyner abruptly quits the number he's started and they open the set instead with "Out of This World."
Another musician who comes to The Take 3 doesn't stay very long.
It's between sets and the band is backstage when I hear something going on at the door. I turn to look and see Coleman Hawkins standing there. Coleman Hawkins! The "Bean" himself!
I can't make out what Hawkins is saying, but I hear the girl who collects the admission charge say: "Everybody pays a dollar, Sir."
I see what's happening and I want to rise from my chair and drop a dollar onto the girl's table, but I can't do anything. I'm frozen. Coleman Hawkins!
And it's over too fast. Hawkins glares at the girl, then turns and splits.
"Maybe 'Bean' didn't have a bean," Cecil says when I tell him about it.