"Ever up and onward"
About this Quote
"Ever up and onward" is Strayhorn distilling an entire survival strategy into four brisk words: keep moving, keep climbing, don’t look back long enough to get trapped there. As a composer who worked in Duke Ellington's orbit yet rarely received equal billing, Strayhorn understood forward motion as both artistic discipline and quiet self-protection. The phrase has the pep of a backstage pep talk, but it’s too clean to be simple optimism. It reads like a mantra built for people who know that stagnation is not neutral; it’s dangerous.
The intent is practical, almost managerial: progress as habit. "Ever" gives it permanence, as if momentum isn’t a phase but a lifelong posture. "Up" suggests aspiration without specifying a destination - smart, because Strayhorn’s genius lived in arrangement, shading, and structure, the kind of mastery that doesn’t always come with a marquee. "Onward" adds a marching cadence, the sense that you keep going even when the applause is for someone else.
The subtext is especially pointed given Strayhorn’s life as a Black gay man in mid-century America. In a culture eager to consume jazz while restricting the people who made it, "up and onward" can sound like refusal: refusal to be reduced, refused credit, refused room. It also fits the ethic of jazz itself, where the work is iterative - chorus after chorus, night after night - turning constraint into propulsion. The brilliance of the line is its ambiguity: it’s motivation, yes, but it’s also a mask for fatigue, a way of saying, keep rising even when rising costs you.
The intent is practical, almost managerial: progress as habit. "Ever" gives it permanence, as if momentum isn’t a phase but a lifelong posture. "Up" suggests aspiration without specifying a destination - smart, because Strayhorn’s genius lived in arrangement, shading, and structure, the kind of mastery that doesn’t always come with a marquee. "Onward" adds a marching cadence, the sense that you keep going even when the applause is for someone else.
The subtext is especially pointed given Strayhorn’s life as a Black gay man in mid-century America. In a culture eager to consume jazz while restricting the people who made it, "up and onward" can sound like refusal: refusal to be reduced, refused credit, refused room. It also fits the ethic of jazz itself, where the work is iterative - chorus after chorus, night after night - turning constraint into propulsion. The brilliance of the line is its ambiguity: it’s motivation, yes, but it’s also a mask for fatigue, a way of saying, keep rising even when rising costs you.
Quote Details
| Topic | Perseverance |
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