Post by kathy Robunson
Teacher / Tutor / Mentor / Professional Tutors of America
In 1973, Thelonious Monk gave his last public performance. He was 55 years old. He moved into the home of his longtime friend and patron, Baroness Pannonica de Koenigswarter, in Weehawken, New Jersey. There he became increasingly withdrawn. He watched television. He paced. He rarely spoke to visitors. He gave no interviews and never returned to the stage. His wife Nellie cared for him, alongside the Baroness. Very few other people saw him. Exactly what happened during those final years remains uncertain. Some biographers have suggested that medication prescribed for what was then diagnosed as bipolar disorder contributed to his decline. Others have pointed to strokes, underlying illness or a combination of factors. Because Monk himself never spoke publicly about this period, no single explanation has been universally accepted. The man who had written "'Round Midnight" in his early twenties, helped shape bebop and transformed the language of jazz harmony spent the final nine years of his life almost entirely out of public view. He died in 1982, leaving behind one of the most influential bodies of work in jazz history—and one of its enduring mysteries. [ Gotfryd, Bernard, photographer, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons] #TheloniousMonk #JazzLegend #Bebop #SilenceInMusic #MusicHistory #JazzPiano #BaronessPannonica #JazzLife #MusicalLegacy #MentalHealthAwareness See less