Thelonius Monk grew up in a place
called San Juan Hills, which was made up of many diverse people which came
along with very diverse cultures. The
different blocks in San Juan Hills, made up the different cultures of the
people that were living within this community.
According to Kelly, “every block is a different town” (Kelly 19). Unfortunately
though, this happened to be a very violent community. Monk was fortunate to stay out of the
violence for the most part, and focus all his frustration and emotions into his
new style of music he was creating and the community that he was shaping.
Living in this violent, diverse community, Monk found many
impacts that influenced his style of music.
Monk took piano lessons from a man named Simon Wolf who taught him “works
by Chopin, Beethoven, Bach, Rachmaninoff, Liszt, and Mozart” (Kelly 26). Simon was not a jazz musician and was not the
one who taught Monk jazz. Monk learned
how to play jazz music from his surroundings and local musicians from the
community, which he later learned to integrate the two different styles that he
knew. Another major impact on Monk’s
style was the church he attended in the community. His mom would always take him and he grew to
love the sounds of the church hymns being played. One last major influence on Monk was the
Columbus Hill Neighborhood Center, which was an “elaborate after-school and
summer program for children and adults” (Kelly 28). This became Monk’s second home where it
taught him not only social and musical skills, but also discipline and how to
act in this violent community.
Being a black musician in a community that was full of blacks
and whites, Monk had to face racial issues that no one ever wants to face. Because of his color, he was a target for
racial inequality and experienced it many times. For example, “the word “nigger” flowed easily
from the lips of many teachers, who were also quick to side with white children
whenever fights broke out” (Kelly 20).
Instead of fighting back, Monk used all his frustration to create his
style of Bebop and used his music to escape from all the racial inequality
chaos.
Although Monk was gathering all his frustration from racial inequality
and putting it towards his music most of the time, there were a couple of
times, including an incident in Delaware with Nica in 1958, when he let the
tension get to him. Monk went into a
motel looking for a glass of water where he was rejected by the owner’s wife
and told to immediately get out. When
the police came and asked Monk to get out of the car, Monk responded “Why the
hell should I?”. Being punished for
something he did not do left a mark with Monk and shows that the racial tension
happening in the community even affected Monk.
The community that Monk wanted to and did create was a very
modern one. Monk had a very eccentric
behavior about him, and nobody ever knew what he was going to do next, which
made his style exciting. One of his band
members said, “the one thing above all that Monk has taught me is not to be
afraid to try anything so long as I feel it” (Kelly 231). When Monk would dance to his music, it would
allow his band members to know that the music being played was actually
swinging. The music Monk would create
always had everyone on their toes waiting for what was going to happen next.
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