Jazz U, Pt. 2
There’s another side to yesterday’s conversation about the value of an elite jazz education beyond issues of cost to the student or quality of instruction. Comments to my post by Bill Kirchner and Savagemusic remind us that many top-drawer musicians are able to make a living thanks to jazz programs like Oberlin’s (where Savagemusic matriculates) and the New School’s (where Bill teaches). The rise of university-level jazz programs has been a godsend to many veteran jazz musicians, as economic opportunities become fewer with each passing year. The persistence of poverty among elderly jazz musicians is a problem. Teaching jazz in university has certainly provided a lifeline for more than one great artist who might otherwise be destitute.
However, any good done by putting these guys to work doesn’t ameliorate the fact that by charging kids so much, big-time jazz schools are committing legal larceny. A bachelors degree in jazz is hardly worth the paper it’s printed on. Pay-for-play opportunities are exceedingly rare, and in any case don’t require a diploma. You can talk all you want about the many benefits afforded a student at The New School or NEC or Manhattan or Julliard — and they are no doubt real — but when the student loan bill comes due, how will these kids pay? With the money they make driving cabs? Those $30K high school band directing gigs?
Maybe one percent of jazz grads will make a living playing jazz (and of those, only the Brad Mehldaus can hope to make the kind of bread needed to pay off a sizable debt … the Brad Mehldaus tend not to stay in school very long … and in any case — as Savagemusic points out — their way is usually paid). What of the rest?
(Advising them to take up bass — while perhaps wise — would only partially solve the problem.)
In a world where great jazz musicians regularly play for the door in abject dumps, surely we can agree that saddling a 23 year-old kid with $70,000 in debt is a hideous idea, even if it allows a relatively few teachers and administrators to make a decent living.
That’s not to say the educators are getting rich, because they’re not. Bureaucracy is a sponge that soaks both teacher and pupil. It would be nice if someone could figure out a way to get the old cats and young cats together in a way that bypasses that extra layer.
Ideas, anyone?

