The community at San Juan Hill heavily influenced Thelonius
Monk’s personality and helped shape his music. Growing up in San Juan Hill,
Monk was subject to violence, diversity, segregation, and racism. With a
diversity of people came a diversity of cultures (Kelley 18). As is seen
throughout its history, when a diversity of cultures comes together a new form
of jazz is created. Thelonius had an Austrian born Jewish piano teacher, Simon
Wolf, through whom he was taught works by Chopin, Beethoven, and Rachmaninoff
(Kelley 26).
While Thelonius did experience diversity of cultures through his
teachers and community, the diversity also lead to major racism and segregation
near San Juan Hill. “The daily violence young people endured in San Juan Hill
haunted Thelonious for many years to come (Kelley 18) Thelonious responds to
the violence and segregation in New York
by saying, “There’s no reason why I should go through that Black Power
shit now. I guess everybody in New York had to do that, right? Because every
block is a different town. It was mean all over New York, all the boroughs.
Then, besides fighting the ofays, you had to fight each other. You go to the
next block and you’re in another country” (Kelley 19). Not only did whites
fight blacks, but there was much black on black violence as well. The violence
and segregation Thelonius experienced is found in his attack and
improvisational style of play.
Though Thelonius attempted to stay away from the “Black Power
shit”, his music was a way to transcend traditional racial politics. Dr.
Stewart argues that Monk “used his art to create a new community, a bohemian
community bound together by a tolerance for modernity, for dissonance in music
and for the avant garde in art and life” (Lecture 2/28). His success in
transcending race and class lines is epitomized by his relationship with Nica,
a white woman. Nica, respect for Monk and his music led to the two spending the
last decade of Monk’s life together in a mutual friendship.
Monk’s transcendence of racial politics through music made him
an easy target of racism, as is seen in his arrest in Delaware in 1958. Upon
being falsely accused for violence and a narcotic possession, Monk was so mad
that when ordered out of the car by policemen, he refused to go (Kelley 254).
Thelonius was finally convicted of assault and battery and lost his cabaret
card. This incident made Thelonius a direct victim of racial injustice, and had
a profound effect on his mental state for years to come.
The community that Thelonius Monk and his music fostered was a
bohemian one which all peoples were on equal levels. Monk’s music embodies a
vision of new community and artistic souls—rebels against middle class
conformity (Lecture 2/28).
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