I recently learned that Jeff Goldblum is a highly accomplished jazz pianist who has held down semi-regular low-key cocktail lounge residencies in Pittsburgh and LA since he was a kid, and my mind was blown. The secret to the success of one of the most titanium-clad likeable actors in all of actordom – his trademark, uhm, irregular, uhm, speech patterns, his always faintly knowing air, his spectacular spectacle-wearing? It’s jazz, of course! In that same way that the Force in Star Wars is a mythical energy that surrounds us and penetrates us and binds the galaxy together, such is jazz for Jeff Goldblum.
As he finally releases his debut jazz album The Capital Studios Sessions I’ve re-examined Goldblum’s career to date through the prism of jazz, and suddenly it all makes sense. Let’s call it the Many Jazz Lives of Jeff Goldblum, or if you’d prefer, Jeff Goldblum’s, uhm, Jazz Odyssey.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BzwxJ-M_M0
Free-jazz Goldblum: Seth Brundle, The Fly
I’ll be honest and say that I haven’t watched The Fly since I was a kid, when it basically scared the shit out of me so badly I couldn’t look at the microwave oven without thinking of everted baboon. Which makes me think of the most terrifying of all jazz genres: free jazz. The jazz you take one polite bite of, chew dutifully until no one is looking, then surreptitiously spit into a napkin and hide under your plate. It’s the steak tartare of jazz. And in the gifted but creepy sexy alpha geek Seth Brundle, Goldblum had it down to a fine art.
Smooth-jazz Goldblum: Dr Ian Malcolm, Jurassic Park
With his leather jacket, prominent chest hair and oily slickness, maverick mathematician Malcolm was smooth jazz personified. That bit when he delicately rubs water into the back of Laura Dern’s hand while wanging on about chaos theory – irrespective of sexual preference, tell me that you weren’t like “move the fuck over wispy scientist lady in small shorts, HE’S MINE.” The dinosaurs have several opportunities to rip him to shreds, and yet notice that they don’t? Here is a simple explanation for that and the explanation is jazz.