"I honestly can't characterize my style in words. It seems that whatever comes to me naturally, I play"
About this Quote
Hawkins ducks the branding exercise before it can pin him down. “I honestly can’t characterize my style in words” reads like modesty, but it’s also a quiet refusal of a modern demand: make your art legible as a tagline. Jazz culture has always generated labels - swing, bebop, “hot,” “cool” - yet Hawkins, one of the tenor saxophone’s architects, implies that the music outruns the vocabulary built to contain it. He’s not claiming mystery for mystique’s sake; he’s insisting that the real account of a player lives in the sound, not in the story they tell about the sound.
The second sentence is the tell: “whatever comes to me naturally, I play.” “Naturally” doesn’t mean casual. Coming from Hawkins - whose 1939 “Body and Soul” effectively rewrote the rules for harmonic improvisation - it’s a flex disguised as shrugging. The subtext is that craft has been metabolized. Years of shedding, bandstands, and hard listening disappear into instinct, until the decision-making happens faster than language. Calling it “natural” is how virtuosity feels from the inside: not effortless, but integrated.
There’s also a cultural stake here. Hawkins came up in an era when jazz musicians were often treated as entertainers first and serious artists second. By declining to theorize himself, he sidesteps the trap of proving legitimacy through intellectualization. The music is the argument. If you want the style, he suggests, don’t ask for a definition - put on the record and hear how “natural” can sound like revolution.
The second sentence is the tell: “whatever comes to me naturally, I play.” “Naturally” doesn’t mean casual. Coming from Hawkins - whose 1939 “Body and Soul” effectively rewrote the rules for harmonic improvisation - it’s a flex disguised as shrugging. The subtext is that craft has been metabolized. Years of shedding, bandstands, and hard listening disappear into instinct, until the decision-making happens faster than language. Calling it “natural” is how virtuosity feels from the inside: not effortless, but integrated.
There’s also a cultural stake here. Hawkins came up in an era when jazz musicians were often treated as entertainers first and serious artists second. By declining to theorize himself, he sidesteps the trap of proving legitimacy through intellectualization. The music is the argument. If you want the style, he suggests, don’t ask for a definition - put on the record and hear how “natural” can sound like revolution.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
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