99% Invisible - 438- The Real Book [rebroadcast]
Episode Date: February 27, 2024Since the mid-1970s, almost every jazz musician has owned a copy of the same book. It has a peach-colored cover, a chunky, 1970s-style logo, and a black plastic binding. It’s delightfully homemade-l...ooking—like it was printed by a bunch of teenagers at a Kinkos. And inside is the sheet music for hundreds of common jazz tunes—also known as jazz “standards”—all meticulously notated by hand. It’s called the Real Book. But if you were going to music school in the 1970s, you couldn’t just buy a copy of the Real Book at the campus bookstore. Because the Real Book... was illegal. The world’s most popular collection of Jazz music was a totally unlicensed publication. The full story of how the Real Book came to be this bootleg bible of jazz is a complicated one. It’s a story about what happens when an insurgent, improvisational art form like Jazz gets codified and becomes something that you can learn from a book.The Real BookThis episode originally aired in April 2021Roman note: I love this episode. An all time favorite. Pass it along to someone jazzy if so inclined.
Transcript
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
Since the mid-1970s, almost every jazz musician has owned a copy of the same book. It has
a peach-colored cover, a chunky 70s style logo, and black plastic binding. It is delightfully
homemade looking, like it was printed by a bunch of teenagers at Kinkos. And Inside is the sheet music for hundreds
of common jazz tunes, also known as jazz standards,
all meticulously notated by hand.
It's called The Real Book.
When I started playing jazz, I remember the first thing
my guitar teacher said was,
well, you gotta buy a real book.
That's producer, Mikhail McCaffinall.
Everybody had one.
It just felt like something you were expected to own if you were a serious musician.
My high school jazz teacher, Mr. Leonard, had stacks of real books on his desk.
And he told me that he actually got his first real book at the place where they were originally
published, Berkeley College of Music in Boston.
He had just arrived for his freshman year.
I heard people talking about the real book, the real book. It was just all
around Berkley. They were everywhere. You were told when you had an ensemble,
bring a real book. We're gonna do some tunes out of that.
But pretty quickly, Mr. Leonard discovered that the real book wasn't like the other
books he needed to get for his classes. You couldn't just buy a copy in the
campus bookstore. There was a guy who used to stand on the corner of Mass Ave near
Boyleson Street and he had a box and he would sit there and he'd just,
hey, wanna buy a real book?
Wanna buy a real book?
That kind of thing.
From Mr.
Leonard's description, this guy basically sounded like he wandered
out of a ZZ Top Concert.
You know, Jean's really, really long, like mid-back level hair, big beard.
Um, and as I understood it he used to get
arrested about once every two weeks.
And we get arrested because the real book was illegal.
The world's most popular collection of jazz music was a totally unlicensed publication.
A janky, self-published book created without permission from music publishers or songwriters.
It was duplicated at photocopy shops and sold on street corners, out of the trunks of cars,
and under the table at music stores, where people used secret code words to make the
exchange.
The full story of how the regal book came to be this bootleg bible of jazz is a complicated
one.
It's a story about what happens when an insurgent, improvisational art form like jazz gets codified and becomes
something you can learn from a book.
Barry Kernfeld is a musicologist who's written a lot about the history of jazz and music
piracy.
He's also a saxophonist, and at a coffee shop gig in the 1990s, he was opening his
real book.
And I started wondering, well, we're reading all these tunes and learning to play,
and where did the book come from? Kernfeld says that long before the real book ever came out,
jazz musicians were relying on collections of music they called fake books. And the story of
the first fake book begins in the 1940s. A man named George Goodwin in New York City, involved heavily in radio in the early 1940s, was getting
a little frustrated with all the intricacies of tracking, licensing, and so he invented
this thing that he called the tune decks.
The tune decks was an index card catalog designed for radio station employees to keep track
of the songs they were playing on air.
On one side, the cards had information about a particular song.
The composer, the publisher, the things you would need to know for paying rights.
And on the other side, they had a few lines of bite-sized sheet music, just the song's
melody, lyrics, and chords, so that radio station employees could glance at it and quickly
recall the song.
But this abbreviated musical notation also made the cards useful to another group of
people, working jazz musicians.
As a black art form, jazz had developed out of a mix of other black music traditions,
including spirituals in the blues.
By the 40s, a lot of jazz was popular dance music,
and many jazz musicians were making their money
playing live gigs in small clubs and bars.
The standard jazz repertoire was mostly well-known songs
from Broadway or New York Songwriting Factory, Tin Pan Alley,
like the song Night and Day by Tin Pan Alley Legend,
Cole Porter.
Cold Porter.
Jazz musicians would riff and freestyle over these songs.
That's always been a key part of jazz, the art of improvisation.
But what made the average gigging trumpeter or sax player truly valuable was their ability to play any one of hundreds of songs right there on the spot. In the 1940s, people are working steadily as musicians, playing piano in nightclubs or playing in a small group in nightclubs, fulfilling requests. You know, the cliche of the drunken
guy at the, hey, can you play, I love my art in San Francisco.
To be prepared for any drunken request, musicians would bring stacks and stacks of sheet music
to every gig.
But lugging around a giant pile of paper was really cumbersome.
And that's where the Toondex came in.
Someone figured out that you could gather a bunch of Toondex cards, print copies of
them on sheets of paper, add a table of contents and a simple binding, and then sell the finished
product directly to musicians in the form of a book.
They called them fakebooks because they helped musicians fake their way through unfamiliar
songs.
These first fakebooks were cheaper than regular sheet music and a lot more organized, and
they became an essential tool for this entire class of working musicians.
And then they could bring that to gigs instead of having to trawl through piles of sheet music
and try to keep each individual sheet in alphabetical order, what a nightmare.
You have your bound little book of 300 tunes or 500 tunes or a thousand tunes, and that
became the first popular music, fake book.
Musicians loved these new fake books,
but the music publishers, not so much.
They wanted musicians to buy their sheet music,
and so the publishing companies started cracking down
on fake book bootleggers.
The music publishers did everything they could,
FBI investigations and federal trials,
in order to suppress this new way of distributing music.
But that didn't stop the bootleggers.
And by the 1950s, there were countless illegal fake books in existence,
which were being used in nightclubs all across the country.
But as helpful as fake books were, they had a lot of problems.
They were notoriously illegible and confusingly laid out.
It can't be stressed enough how deficient the old fake books were in this regard, problems. They were notoriously illegible and confusingly laid out.
Steve Swallow is a jazz musician and thought of as a swell guy. I'm a bass player and I write tunes.
That's the salient fact of my life.
Starting off as a young jazz musician in the 1950s,
Swallow played at clubs and dances and weddings
and bar mitzvahs.
And for a lot of these gigs,
he relied on these poorly designed fake books.
Working on jazz music seriously, one of the first things I did was to buy a fake book.
And so we're just vexing and badly written.
The other big problem with these fake books at this point was that the music inside felt
really out of date.
The fake books hadn't changed since the mid-40s, but jazz had.
Disillusioned by commercial jazz that appealed to mainstream white audiences,
a new generation of black musicians took jazz improvisation to a new level,
experimenting with more angular harmonies,
technically demanding melodies, and blindingly fast tempos.
Their new style was called bebop.
The style was called bebop. That was bebop legend Charlie Parker.
And bebop was just the beginning.
Then came hardbop and modal jazz spearheaded by Miles Davis.
Then you had the wild, dissonant free jazz of people like Ornette Coleman.
And the electrified jazz fusion of Herbie Hancock.
By the 1970s, jazz had exploded into this constellation of different styles.
Meanwhile, the economics of jazz had shifted too.
There were fewer clubs and smaller paychecks.
University jazz programs also started popping up around this time, providing steady teaching
gigs to established musicians.
And increasingly, the Ivory Tower became a place for young musicians to learn.
And if you're going to jazz school, you need jazz books.
But the fake books at the time hadn't kept up with the music.
They still contained the same old-fashioned collection of standards with the same old-fashioned
collection of chord changes.
So if a young jazz musician wanted to try and play like Charles Mingus or Sonny Rollins,
they weren't going to learn from a book.
That is, until two college kids invented the real book.
I don't want to over-emphasize my role in it, which was minor.
But I knew the guys.
In the mid-70s, Steve Swallow began teaching at Boston's Berkeley College of Music, an
elite private music school that boasted one of the first jazz performance programs in the country.
Swallow had only been teaching at Berkeley for a few months
when two students approached him about a secret project.
I keep referring to them as the two guys who wrote the book because way back when
they swore me to secrecy. They made me agree that I would not divulge their names.
The two guys wanted to make a new fake book, one that actually catered to the needs of
contemporary jazz musicians and reflected the current state of jazz.
And they needed Steve's help.
That's how they pitched it.
They pitched it that they wanted to write a fake book that would actually be useful to
an 18-year-old person who wanted to become a fake book that would actually be useful to an 18-year-old person who wanted
to become a jazz musician. As a longtime user of some pretty horrible fake books, Steve was excited.
He thought that a modern, well-made jazz fake book would be an essential improvement for his students.
And indeed, that was part of my initial response to their pitch. I thought,
Jesus, why didn't I think of this? But he was also torn. He knew the students couldn't possibly pay licensing fees for all the songs they wanted to include.
So he had to decide whether helping them was the right thing to do.
Because clearly their intention was to break the law.
They would also be selling a book filled with other people's music.
But in the end, Swallow decided that the need for a good jazz fakebook was so great that
it was worth it, and he agreed to help.
Swallow and the students were going to make a fakebook that would actually be useful to
a young person trying to play jazz.
A real fakebook.
A real book.
From the very beginning, the students envisioned the real book as a cooler and more contemporary
fakebook than the stagy, outdated ones they'd grown up with. They wanted to include new
songs from modern jazz musicians who were pushing the boundaries of the genre.
They also wanted to include the old jazz standards from Broadway and Tin Pan Alley, but they
wanted to update those classics with
alternate chord changes that reflected the way that modern musicians like Miles Davis were
actually playing them. Miles Davis was a central figure in all of this and he kind of exhumed
dozens, I would say, of Tin Pan Alley tunes. And he and his sidemen, notably his pianists,
had smoothed the harmonies in a way that became definitive.
One of those standard tunes is, Someday My Prince Will Come, a song from the 1937 Disney movie musical Snow White. Here's the original.
And here's the Miles Davis version from 1961, the version that the students decided
to put in the real book. It's the same song,
but listen to how different, how complex the chords sound when played by pianist Wynton
Kelly.
Modern jazz musicians had altered a lot of classic standards in this way over the years.
And to capture these sophisticated alternate chord changes, the two students spent hours
listening to recordings and transcribing what they heard.
As best they could.
It was a huge undertaking because most of these chord changes had never actually been
written down.
They weren't necessarily thinking about it like this at the time, but the students were effectively establishing a new set of standardized harmonies for a handful of classic songs.
But the music wasn't the only part of their new fake book that the two students wanted to improve.
They also wanted to fix the aesthetic problems with the old fake books and make something that was nice to look at and easy to read. One of the two guys had a gorgeous music hand
the way he formed his quarter notes and his eighth notes and all of that.
It was lovely.
And his role in the book, among other things,
he did all the actual penmanship.
It's one guy who wrote the entire book.
He notated all of the music by hand in this very distinctive and expressive script.
He also designed and silkscreened the logo on the front cover, just the words, the real
book, written in chunky, schoolhouse rock style block letters.
And holding everything together was a plastic binding that let the book easily lie flat on a music stand.
By the summer of 1975, the book was done
and the students took it to local photocopying shops
where they cranked out hundreds of copies
to sell directly to other students
and a few local businesses near Berkeley.
There was a corner store called the Bentley Smoker,
which was not a music shop. It was just everybody
smoked and it was a cigarette store and beneath the counter was a stack of real books. And
almost overnight everybody had to have one.
Including my old jazz teacher, Mr. Leonard, he bought a copy of the real book from that
guy with the long hair on Mass Ave.
On Mass Ave, I think it was 2020, which was steep at that point.
It was like, wow, okay, but that's what you needed.
It was like buying a schoolbook.
In fact, I used it more than some of my textbooks or classrooms.
Mainly he used it with other students in late night jam sessions in the practice rooms.
Anybody could go in and play, and of course there were a lot of them because it was a
big school.
And if you walked in with your book, you could participate and be a part of it.
Mr. Leonard says the real book helped everyone get on the same page really quickly and Steve
Swallow noticed this too.
Before the real book came out he used to walk by the practice rooms and hear students mangling
the chord changes to all of these jazz tunes.
And all of a sudden the re-book came along and I was making this same walk and hearing
the right changes to, I love you, and the right changes to my funny Valentine's.
Whoa, this is remarkable.
As the real book's notoriety grew, so did the demand.
The two students hadn't printed enough copies to keep up.
But it turns out they didn't need to. Not long after they published, you know, a few hundred photocopied versions of this book,
somebody else photocopied the book and started selling it. And then copies of the copies were
fanning out to New York City and LA and then beyond to Berlin and Shanghai and so on.
to New York City and LA and then beyond to Berlin and Shanghai and so on. The real book had taken on a life of its own, and the students ironically found themselves
in the same position as the music publishers and songwriters that they'd originally cut
out of the process as they watched unlicensed copies of their work get duplicated and sold.
And of course they were in no position to yell about. They kind of had to just shake their heads.
After they released the first edition of The Real Book,
the students put out two more additions
to correct mistakes, and then their work was done.
But The Real Book lived on,
copied over and over again
by new generations of bootleggers.
Steve Swallow doesn't take the copyright issue lightly, but he thinks the real book
was a net positive for the composers featured inside, and he would know since he's one
of them.
When he agreed to help the students, Swallow actually donated a bunch of his own songs.
He figured it would benefit him in the long run if more young people were exposed to his
music.
They might even record a cover someday, which would bring him royalties. And to be fair, the real book is actually how I learned who Steve Swallow
was. I think to this day my songs are played to the extent that they are, chiefly because
they were available in the real book. It's been a blessing. And as the number of students
in elite conservatory jazz programs
continued to swell over the next few decades,
the real book, with its modern repertoire,
reharmonized standards, and beautiful handwriting,
became the de facto textbook for this new legion of jazz
students, the unofficial official handbook of jazz.
Just like with old fake books, the success of The Real Book was a major problem for music
publishers. Some companies released their own jazz songbooks, but they never managed
to compete with The Real Book.
It couldn't compete with The Real Book because it just didn't have all the right songs in
it.
This is Jeff Schradle. He's an executive at Hal Leonard, a print music publishing company.
You know, The Real Book was illegal, so they didn't care about licensing and they just
put all the best songs in and didn't pay anyone, which wasn't the right thing to do.
But obviously from a competitive standpoint, they had the best book out of the gate.
And the popularity of the real book meant that lots of people weren't getting paid
for their work.
That is, until Jeff Schradle decided to make a legal version.
The real, real book. decided to make a legal version. The Real Real Book. You know, I said, hey, we published jazz fake books and jazz lead sheets and jazz publications of all kinds.
And, you know, yet the real book is still the book.
And, you know, why don't we just publish the real book legally?
In the mid-2000s, Jeff Schradle and the publisher Hal Leonard secured the rights to almost every song in the real book
and published a completely legal version.
You don't need to buy the real book out of the back of someone's car anymore.
It's available at your local music shop.
And to me, the striking thing about this new version is the way that it looks.
We didn't want to make the Hal Leonard corporate real book.
We wanted to maintain that sort of homespun underground look.
We wanted the same card stock.
We wanted the same logo.
We wanted the same binding.
And they even wanted the same handwriting.
Hal Leonard actually hired a copyist to mimic the old real book's iconic script and turn
it into a digital font, which means a digital copy of a physical copy of one anonymous Berkeley
students handwriting from the mid-70s will continue to live on for as long as
new editions of the book are published.
When Hal Leonard finally published the legal version of the real book in 2004,
it was great news if you were a composer with a song in there.
You'd finally be getting royalties from the sale of the most popular book of jazz
music in the world.
But that didn't totally solve the intellectual property problems with the real book.
And to understand why not, we're going to take a look at one of the songs inside.
It's called Sophisticated Lady, and it's on page 376 of the Hal Leonard real book.
Sophisticated Lady was first recorded by the legendary pianist Duke Ellington and his band
in 1933.
A trombonist in Ellington's band named Lawrence Brown had this signature riff that he liked to play.
And if you listen to the beginning of Sophisticated Lady, you'll hear it. It's the melody.
Here's Lawrence Brown talking with journalist Patricia Willard. But mainly I had a theme that I played all the time, which is the first eight bars. That was the basic tune of Sophisticated Lady.
But according to Brown, Ellington paid him $15 for his contribution to the song.
And I got the terrific check for $15 for a place for a righty-bisplicated lady.
Ah.
Now?
Have you ever gotten co-composer credit?
No.
No, that check cancels you out.
That means that Brown wasn't legally entitled to a songwriter credit or royalties, even
though he contributed one of
the song's most recognizable elements.
I thought it was quite a bargain, wasn't it?
Yeah. That's music.
But Brown thought that sophisticated Lady wouldn't even exist without his signature melody,
and that Ellington took credit for writing a song that he merely arranged.
your melody, and that Ellington took credit for writing a song that he merely arranged.
Ironically, one person who did get co-writing credits on Sophisticated Lady was Duke Ellington's white manager Irving Mills. What exactly Mills contributed is debated,
but it's clear that he used his power to get his name on many of Ellington's songs and reap
more royalties for himself. To this day, when you open up the Howl Leonard real book and turn to
Sophisticated Lady, you'll see three listed writers, including Duke Ellington and Irving Mills.
But one name you won't see is Lawrence Brown.
And so while the legalization of the real book did resolve most of its flagrant copyright violations, it didn't clear up authorship disputes like these that go back to the early days of jazz.
And there are likely many more musicians, just like Brown, whose names will never appear on the songs they helped write, even if those songs appear in the legal real book.
Even if we put intellectual property questions aside
for a second, the real book still has plenty of critics.
The real book, the guys, when they did it,
they transcribed things and they chose standard chords
that some people were using, but not
everyone was using those same chords.
Carolyn Wilkins teaches ensembles at Berkeley College of Music, and she says that the real
book got so popular over the years that people started to treat the versions of the songs inside
as definitive. But even though jazz has all these standards, Wilkins says they're not
supposed to be played in one standard way. People, especially back in the day, considered putting
their original stamp on something to be far more important than playing it, quote, unquote, correctly.
So they might change a chord here, they might change
a note, they might decide they like the key of D-flat better than the key of D-flat.
This type of improvisation is much less common in classical music from the last two centuries,
where authenticity is more about how well you can reproduce what's on the page as precisely
as possible. When people play Mozart's piano sonata number 16 and C major, they don't
say, you know what, I'm going to try it in A major this time.
And so when musicians play a version of Bye Bye Blackbird that sounds exactly as it appears
in the real book, they're acting more like classical musicians than jazz musicians.
And once things kind of became standardized into the real book, then you have this thing of
people who just always play the same thing the same way, same key, same set of chord
changes.
Nicholas Payton is a musician and record label owner, and he compares the real book to a
study guide or a cheat sheet, basically a way to distill this complicated art form into
a manageable packet of digestible
information.
But, you see, here becomes a problem when you're talking about codifying and teaching
black music, is you can't teach free rhythmic thought.
You can't put that in a book and expect students to grasp it.
To Peyton, the music isn't just information to be learned from a book.
It's a way of thinking and a form of expression.
And it's fundamentally a black cultural phenomenon that can't be taken out of its historical context.
It's a communal music at its essence and it's a living, breathing organism.
It can't be housed or archived in that way.
Peyton says that reading books like The Real Book, even going to music school, can only
really get you so far.
At some point, you're going to have to immerse yourself in the culture of the music.
For Peyton and many other musicians, learning directly from elders in person is a crucial
part of what it means to really know the art form.
I think for many people who perhaps don't live in a thriving music culture like a Detroit
or New York or New Orleans or Chicago, if you live in Des Moines, Iowa, you know, school
might be a good resource and tool.
But eventually at some point, if you're serious about playing this music, you're going to
have to be around people who actually do it. But Carolyn Wilkins says that the real book does have its place in jazz education. Over her years
at Berkeley, she's seen how it can be a useful starting place, a tool to bring young jazz musicians
together. A traditional real book gives you at least some sense of this is the repertoire.
These are the tunes.
If you wanna walk into a jam session anywhere in the world
and unpack your instrument and say,
can I sit in, these are the tunes that you're going to need.
And if you say, all right, we're going to play beautiful love, boom. Now everyone
has a real book that there's beautiful love D minor. We're ready.
But she also says if you only play songs as they're notated in the real book, and that's
as far as you take it, you're not really playing the music the way it's supposed to be played.
To do that, you have to go further.
Then you go out and listen to 20 different people play it and find different ways and
then ultimately you must find your own way. After the break, Michele and I talk about the central mystery of the real book.
Who were the two Berkley students who compiled the first version and sold it around Boston?
We go down that rabbit hole after this. Okay. Okay, so we're back with Mikhail Makavanaugh, who reported that story.
And Mikhail, as I understand it, there is a central mystery at the heart of this story.
And that's who wrote the real book, the first real book.
The identities of the authors have remained anonymous after all these years.
But you were determined to try to figure this out.
So why did you want to know the identity of the authors?
So the real book was just this kind of omnipresent thing when I was, you know, learning jazz in high school,
and it didn't even really seem like it had authors to begin with.
It just felt like this book that everybody had, and know just popped out of thin air and so when I learned that there was this backstory
and there were these people kind of mysterious figures behind the real book
I was just like I have to know part of it too for me was really just you know the
real book had a big impact on my approach to learning jazz in high school
and the guys who put it together the choices that they made kind of directed what I was
doing, the kind of like this invisible hand, you know, guiding my musical development.
And so to kind of try and reach out and find those guys felt weirdly meaningful to me in
a way.
That makes sense to me.
So, okay, so where did you start?
So I started by talking to my high school jazz teacher, Mr. Leonard, who was a student
at Berkeley in the late 70s, a couple of years after the real book came out.
But he told me that, you know, when he was a student there, no one was really interested
in the story behind the real book or where it came from.
No, at that point, we were just concerned with trying not to get busted buying it from
the guy in the corner.
I don't even remember it being much of a topic of discussion.
Okay, so Mr. Leonard is a bust, so where did you turn to next?
So next I talked to Steve Swallow, and Steve Swallow was pretty intimately involved in the creation of the book. And obviously he knew who these guys were, but he wasn't about to tell me
because they had sworn him to a note of secrecy after they finished and put it out.
But still, you know, I asked him, do you have their contact information?
Would you be able to reach out on my behalf if you do?
And he said, yeah, I think I was in touch with one of them via email maybe like 10 years
ago.
We've had email contact maybe Jesus, maybe 10 years ago, but I would try. I would send an email to that address.
And if it still works, see what he says, sure.
Okay, here we go, all right.
And so he did, and it came back, you know,
returned to sender, just bouncing back immediately.
So that was also a dead end.
Okay, okay.
Yeah, at this point, I'm feeling a little bit frustrated, a little
bit stuck, not really sure what to do next. And then, you know, I just start reading everything
I can online that anyone has written about the real book. And one day I'm on this random
blog post somewhere on the internet, and I scroll down to the comments section. And one
of the first comments is from a guy who's claiming to be one of the original authors.
He's saying, you know, I was one of the authors of the real book and he only goes by one letter.
So no real name.
He leaves just a letter to sign off on this comment and the letter is B.
So mysterious, very mysterious.
This B guy, he also says he was in touch with Barry Kernfeld, who is a musicologist who I had actually already interviewed for this piece.
Okay, okay. So how do you know that the person who wrote this comment was the person who actually wrote the real book and not just somebody claiming to be?
Because I could go on a message board and say, I wrote the real book too, you know.
Yeah, totally. So I actually reached out to Barry Kernfeld again after I'd interviewed him and I asked, is this legit?
Did you get an email from this guy?
Were you in contact with him? This guy who said he was in contact with you who claims to have written the real book and
Barry said, yeah. Oh, okay.
He said actually about ten years ago
he got the email from this guy and you know that they were in contact and
He said he actually still had that email and so I had to ask him obviously can you get back in touch?
Can you email this guy again?
And he said, sure, I'll try it's been a long time but I'll give it a shot.
So Barry reached out to this guy a couple days later.
He tells me to reach out directly.
Okay, here we go.
I reach out and then a couple of days later, I hear back
and it's a message from a ultra encrypted email server
based somewhere outside of the United States.
And it's someone using an obviously fake name,
but it is definitely this guy.
It is B.
So this is the guy.
I mean, this is the guy.
Is this, I mean, when you're going through this,
is this level of subterfuge,
does it feel necessary or theatrical,
or how is it striking you at this point?
It feels a little bit over the top.
You know, I do feel like I'm corresponding with,
you know, like a double agent,
you know, deep in the cold war somewhere.
But it's also a little bit exciting, kind of.
It's not a huge mystery, but it is mysterious, definitely.
So what did this email say?
So I asked him if he would want to do an audio interview
and predictably he said no.
Then I asked him, do you want to answer a couple of questions
over email?
And he said, sure.
And so I sent him an email with a list of questions and waited a couple days, heard nothing
back, sent a follow-up email, waited a couple more days, heard nothing back, sent another
follow-up email.
And then this continued four or five times.
And at this point, I just kind of resigned myself to the fact that I was not going to
hear back from him. Yeah. yeah, that's too bad.
And I just started pursuing different avenues
to try and find this guy or one of the guys.
I asked my high school jazz teacher again,
do you know people from Berkeley?
Do you know some names?
Can you put me in touch with them?
And he got in touch with a teacher of his
who passed on some names to me
and I started emailing people,
not getting any more responses.
I felt like I was kind of circling the drain at this point.
And were you pretty resolved at this point that you were never going to hear from this person
or find them before we put the story out?
Yeah, I was like, we're never going to hear back.
I was so close and we lost the thread.
It's not coming back.
So where are we now?
Well, four days before this episode was set to air, I opened my email.
It's about 10 p.m.
I'm ready to go to sleep.
And it's an email from B.
Yes.
With answers to all of our questions.
Nice.
So what did they have to say for themselves?
Like what kind of questions did you ask?
So we asked kind of the gamut really of everything
related to, you know, from handwriting,
you know, was it his handwriting,
how did he feel about that handwriting being, you know,
omnipresent in real books throughout the world
to like, how did it feel to create this thing
that some people have, you know,
major beefs or major problems with in terms of how it's affected jazz?
Yeah.
And he had answers to all of those questions.
So was it his handwriting?
It was, he says, yes, the handwriting is mine, although it looks amateurish to me now,
but it's quite a hoot to see it everywhere. Someone created a real book font based on my hand.
It's close, but no cigar. Wow. Throw it throwing a little bit of shade at how Leonard there.
Did they have a sense of the phenomenon that it was going to become when they were making
it? Definitely not. So on that note, he says, we had no idea in our wildest dreams that
would become the phenomenon that it is. Countless times we've personally seen the real book used in bars, clubs, schools,
and wedding receptions. It's everywhere. In 2018, I visited a friend of a cousin who had
a home recording studio and there were six real books scattered around the room.
And if he's keeping up this level of secrecy, you can't just point to him and say, hey, I did that.
That must be a really tough temptation.
If I'm like, if I see my book that the carton I did
for the, for 9% visible out in the world, you bet.
I'm gonna say, well, hey, I'm that guy.
He said to do that for like 40 years
and never seen anything about it.
You know, I guess, you know, some of the bigger issues with the real book that we talk about,
you know, the kind of, you know, the copyright and the codification of a style.
Did he have any sort of insight into that kind of thing?
Yeah, it's really interesting what he said about that.
So, and now I'm quoting directly from what he wrote to me.
The real book truly changed the world in many good ways, but also not so good.
The intent was to create a tool for learning tunes,
but not something to be used on the bandstand.
Its proliferation into clubs created a negative effect,
seemingly dictating what and how to play.
Wow, well, that's, he's really hitting the nail on the head.
And actually even more on that,
he says,
never was there any intent to codify anything.
The book was meant to help people learn tunes,
and beyond what is in the book, it's the responsibility of the musician
to listen to as many versions as possible to form one's own sense of how to play the tune.
That's why we listed some different recording sources at the bottom of tunes.
Every recording has its own tempo and key, you know, melodic interpretation form and
reharmonizations and therein lie many opportunities to create your own version.
Wow.
That is so interesting because he basically agrees with most of the
critiques of the real book that, that people had when you talk to them.
Yeah.
He's essentially saying almost the exact same thing that Carolyn Wilkins said,
you know, the Berkeley professor that we talked to towards the end of the piece, basically almost even
word for word. It's kind of amazing. And what's also striking is that he basically
says the same thing that Nicholas Payton, who's the musician that we talked to,
also said about the real book. You know, if you remember, Nicholas Payton was
saying that you can't really learn jazz from a book. At all, yeah. And B, in his answers, says,
I think books are fine for theory and learning tunes,
but no amount of book reading will substitute
for the actual act of playing music.
Feel, timing, groove, and improvisation
need to be learned by doing.
It's kind of amazing that he is saying basically
the exact same thing that we heard
from Nicholas Payton here.
Yeah, that's really remarkable.
What about this need for anonymity?
Is this something that, I mean, obviously at this point, if people knew about it, he's
not going to prosecute for anything really realistically at this point.
So what is that all about?
Yeah, you know, it kind of seems like he likes the mystery and he likes keeping up the mystery.
I'm gonna quote again from what he wrote, the internet is full of articles and YouTube videos
about the real book and chat rooms all over the web are rife with discussions about its origins
with zillions of different opinions. That's what's fun about it. Keep the mystery alive.
Why mess with an urban legend? You know, I like this guy. I couldn't agree more. Let's not mess with it. Let him have
his anonymity. I don't think we'll mess with it.
Sounds good. Well, thank you, Macal. This was so much fun.
Thanks Roman. Thanks so much.
99% invisible was produced this week by Macell McAvenall in April 2021.
Edited by Emmett Fitzgerald Music by Swan Real.
Mixed by Amida Ganatra.
Special thanks this week to author and professor Gerald Horn, who we also interviewed for this
story.
You can check out Nicholas Peyton's music at Nicholas Peyton.com and follow him on Instagram
at Nicholas Peyton.
If you want to read more history of fake books, check out Barry Kernfeld's books, pop song piracy and the story of fake books.
Kathy too is our executive producer. Kurt Colestead is the digital director. Delaney
Hall is our senior editor. The rest of the team includes Sarah Bake, Chris Barube, Jason
DeLeon, Gabriella Gladney, Martin Gonzalez, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Le, Lashma Dawn, Jacob Maldonano-Madina, Nina
Pautak, Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, and me, Roman Mars.
The 99% of his logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are part of the Stitcher and Sirius XM podcast family, now headquartered six blocks
north in the Pandora building.
In beautiful.
Uptown, Oakland, California.
Home to the Oakland Roots soccer club, of which
I'm a proud community owner. Other teams may come and go, but the roots are Oakland first
always. You can find us on all the usual social media sites as well as our newly launched
discord, which has over 2000 members at this point. We're talking about the power broker
on there. We're marrying out about architecture. There's even a music channel so you can post
your favorite jazz tunes and also talk about this episode, which is an
all time favorite of mine. But please do not try to start an amateur internet detective
hunt looking for the real book authors because that is a mystery. That should stay a mystery.
There's a link to that discord as well as every past episode of 99PI on our website.
It's 99pi.org.