Letโ€™s begin with The Six Million Dollar Man. The TV show ran from 1973 to 1978. The star, Lee Majors, played an astronaut who, after his body is damaged in the crash of a test plane/spaceship, is transformed, with the top technology of the day, into a cyborg: part human but mostly wires, circuits, metal gears, and synthetic skin. The operation cost $6 million (roughly equal to $40 million in todayโ€™s money). The opening for the show is just mesmerizing.

After the test craft hits the ground and explodes, an off-camera narrator, Oscar Goldman, speaks to the members of a secret government agency with the deepest pockets. He says: โ€œGentlemen, we can rebuild him. We have the technology. We have the capability to make the worldโ€™s first bionic man. Steve Austin will be that man. Better than he was before. Betterโ€ฆ strongerโ€ฆ faster.โ€ At the last word, the showโ€™s theme erupts into accelerating bongos, whirling and blasting horns, and a hard-funk bass line. By the end of the sequence, you are sold. Indeed, the show could never be as good as that opening: Lee Majorsโ€™s fast-motion running to a funky beat. It has to be downhill from there. But no matter. All of the garbage in the show had nothing on the music, which was written and produced by one of jazzโ€™s greatest intellectuals, Oliver Nelson.

This arranger, composer, conductor, and saxophonist also made, in 1961, the jazz classic The Blues and the Abstract Truth, a work that is everything that The Six Million Dollar Man theme is not. It is not the kind of music that can capture the incredible speed of a human/machine. Its structure, pace switches, and harmonic innovations are too heady for that sort of entertainment. Here we are presented with the art of a highly educated musician.

In the late โ€˜50s, Nelson studied composition and music theory at universities in his hometown, St. Louis, Missouri. (He also studied, according to an article on JazzProfiles, โ€œtaxidermy and embalmingโ€ because his family was โ€œin the funeral home business.โ€) A few years after obtaining a masterโ€™s degree in music, Nelson released his first masterpiece, The Blues and the Abstract Truth, which featured some of the best jazz musicians of the timeโ€”Freddie Hubbard, Eric Dolphy, Bill Evans, and Paul Chambersโ€”and contained the definitive version of Nelsonโ€™s most famous piece of music, โ€œStolen Moments.โ€ After that work, his future in the funeral business closed permanently. The rest of his life, which was tragically short (a heart attack killed him at the age of 43), was devoted to writing, conducting, and arranging music during jazzโ€™s modern period (the 1960s) and composing scores for movies and TV shows. Had he lived a long life, there is no doubt that his name would be as recognizable, as mainstream as Quincy Jones.

โ€œYou know, I just love Blues and the Abstract Truth, I just love the way it bounces around to different meters and the angularity of the melody, and the sound of the ensembleโ€”all of these things appeal to me greatly,โ€ says Michael Brockman, the artistic director of Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra (SRJO). We are on the phone. We are talking about the orchestraโ€™s upcoming tribute to Oliver Nelson, โ€œSRJO Plays Blues and the Abstract Truth.โ€ A few moments before, Brockman, who founded SRJO with Clarence Acox in 1995, said Nelson is one of โ€œthe leading icons in the history of jazz. And, in the jazz industry, heโ€™s recognized as one of the people who established the art form into something composers could take part in.โ€ SRJO is primarily devoted to the work of composersโ€”โ€Charles Mingus, Gil Evans, Thelonious Monk… and of course, Count Basie and Duke Ellington.โ€

Indeed, one of the best musical shows I experienced last year was โ€œSRJO Plays Charles Mingus.โ€ It happened on February 11 at Benaroya Hall. The players, many of whom will be on the stage for โ€œSRJO Plays Blues and the Abstract Truth,โ€ were just in top form. Mingus had a spirit that was as huge as it was singular. For musicians, even our cityโ€™s best ones (Randy Halberstadt, Dโ€™Vonne Lewis, Kate Olson, Jay Thomas), to successfully capture that singularity and even revisit the extraordinary expansiveness of the composer was nothing less than remarkable. The performance made it very clear to me that SRJO is not just one of our cityโ€™s core jazz institutions but one of its most vital art institutions.ย 

โ€œFor the [โ€œSRJO Plays Blues and the Abstract Truthโ€] show, weโ€™re going to do most of the pieces from the original album [The Blues and the Abstract Truth] and the second album [More Blues and the Abstract Truth],โ€ says Brockman near the end of the interview. โ€œSo weโ€™ll do โ€˜Stolen Moments,โ€™ โ€˜Hoe-Down,โ€™ and โ€˜Cascades.โ€™ Iโ€™m still considering whether to do the entire [first] album or draw from music from his other records, but we will definitely play Blues and the Abstract Truth.โ€

But what about the theme for The Six Million Dollar Man? He does not answer the question because he never heard it; it never left my mind. The Blues and the Abstract Truth is for this great orchestra; the theme for the battery-charged android is for me and my American childhood.

The Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra will perform โ€œSRJO Plays Blues and the Abstract Truthโ€ at Benaroya Hall Saturday, April 20, at 7:30 pm. Tickets are available at srjo.org.

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Charles Mudede—who writes about film, books, music, and his life in Rhodesia, Zimbabwe, the USA, and the UK for The Stranger—was born near a steel plant in Kwe Kwe, Zimbabwe. He has no memory...