It started the way all nightmares do—slowly, almost imperceptibly. One minute, America was humming along, saxophones wailing, trumpets blasting, and the spirit of swing still clinging to the air like cigarette smoke in a Harlem club. The next, Donald J. Trump had installed himself as Chairman of the Board at the Kennedy Center, and the music—real music—was on life support.
At first, it was almost laughable. The Kennedy Center’s programming took a hard right turn, featuring the usual MAGA-approved setlist: Kid Rock growling about fake cowboys, Lee Greenwood belting his star-spangled hymn for the ten-thousandth time, and—bafflingly—the Village People, who were now contractually obligated to salute the flag at the end of every performance. The irony was so thick you could cut it with a rusty trombone.
But then, the shift became more sinister. Certain types of music started disappearing. Not explicitly, of course—Trump wasn’t one for subtlety, but even he knew better than to slap a full-on ban on an art form. No, this was censorship by attrition. Suddenly, funding for jazz education dried up. Jazz clubs mysteriously failed health inspections. NPR’s Jazz Night in America was replaced with Toby Keith’s Beer & Freedom Hour. Jazz festivals were deemed unfit for large audiences.
Then came the executive order. Jazz artists—improvisers, free-thinkers, disrupters—were labeled “Enemies of the People.”
“I don’t like jazz,” Trump slurred at one of his bizarre late-night press conferences, half-choking on a McNugget, half-babbling into the ether. “These guys, these—these jazz guys, okay? They don’t follow the notes. They don’t play the song the way it’s written. I mean, what’s the deal with that? Why can’t they just follow the sheet music? You gotta follow the rules, folks. I like a song with a chorus. These guys don’t even have choruses! Ridiculous.”
And just like that, jazz was a crime.
Musicians went underground. In New Orleans, brass bands played in secret, hidden in the basements of abandoned speakeasies, whispering passwords through the cracks in boarded-up doors. In Chicago, saxophonists blew into towels to muffle the sound, rehearsing only in the dead of night, like revolutionaries plotting the overthrow of a dictatorship.
Meanwhile, the Kennedy Center transformed into a white-and-gold fortress of musical mediocrity, a shrine to uninspired, algorithm-approved “patriot tunes.” Gone were the Coltrane tributes, the avant-garde experimentation, the spirit of Bebop. In their place? The Charlie Daniels Band on loop. A nightly Broadway show called MAGA! The Musical, starring Scott Baio in a red sequined jumpsuit. Lara Trump and Roseanne Barr headlining a Fourth of July tribute to Kanye West.
And yet, the music refused to die.
Somewhere, in some smoky backroom, a drummer was still pushing the tempo, a pianist still finding new chords, a horn player still bending reality with every note. And the real ones, the ones who knew—they were listening.
Because you can kill a budget, you can cut funding, you can even declare a genre a national threat, but you can’t silence swing. You can’t outlaw the blues. Bebop has always be able to seep through the cracks. And no matter how many washed-up rockers and flag-waving country singers you stuff into the Kennedy Center, jazz will always live on the fringes, laughing, blowing, breaking free.
Even under Trump’s America, the music never stopped. But, the situation got much worse as the country drifted further right, especially after the administrations of Donald Trump, Jr. and Eric Trump. By the time the third Trump son, Baron, was installed as President, this was nearly a quarter century after elections were banned, it was impossible to find any jazz recordings on the internet and all jazz performances were long gone memories.
The Executive Order came down like a guillotine: All artists must adhere to government-approved guidelines. Improvisation is outlawed. Offenders will be re-programmed. Repeat offenders will be permanently removed. Signed with a flourish by President Baron Trump, the decree solidified the state’s grip on creativity, choking the last vestiges of free expression from the so-called United States.
There were five songs. Five goddamn government-approved songs, selected by the Minister of Culture, a tone-deaf bureaucrat who had once wept at a military march and declared it the pinnacle of human expression. Every venue, every concert, every club played these same five compositions in a relentless, nauseating loop, their notes drilled into the minds of citizens like propaganda slogans.
For the true musicians—the jazz improvisers—it was a death sentence. The mind rebels when stripped of its freedom, and no art form embodied rebellion like jazz. Improvisation was the sound of defiance, a middle finger to control, and for that, it had to be eradicated.
The camps were the worst of it. Re-programming centers where musicians were strapped into chairs, electrodes fixed to their temples, forced to listen to the five approved songs until their neural pathways were cauterized into compliance. Those who resisted too long never returned. Those who did, came back hollow-eyed, their hands no longer capable of conjuring the magic of spontaneous creation.
And yet, in the dark corners of the city, in basements beneath abandoned record stores, in derelict subway tunnels, the music still lived. The underground jazz movement, a ragged band of outlaws, played in secret, risking everything to keep the sound alive. They called themselves The Ghost Notes, and among them was a man who could have been born in another time, another place, a man whose breath carried the whispers of Coltrane, whose fingers summoned the chaos of Parker.
His name was Sonny White, and he was a dead man walking.
The gig was set for midnight in the ruins of an old speakeasy, a place that had survived Prohibition only to fall to something worse. Sonny arrived early, carrying his battered alto sax in a case wrapped in old newspapers, his heart pounding a syncopated rhythm in his chest. He had played a hundred outlaw gigs before, but this one felt different. The air smelled of fear.
"You're late, motherfucker," hissed Big Leon, the bass player, his voice as deep as the notes he plucked. "Word is they got spies everywhere now. Some poor cat got dragged outta here last week. Never saw him again."
Sonny nodded. "Then let’s make tonight count."
The others arrived in quick succession: Mickey Jones on drums, Hector Ramirez on trumpet, and Lil’ Junie on piano, her fingers always restless, always tapping out unheard melodies on any surface she could find. They tuned up quietly, the weight of the regime pressing against their bones. The audience filtered in, eyes darting nervously, faces half-hidden beneath hats and scarves. This was rebellion. This was war. And their weapon was sound.
They started with the pre-approved tunes. "March of the Glorious Republic"—a stiff, soul-crushing dirge the government forced every child to learn. Then "Ode to the Eternal Leader", a piece so devoid of life it made elevator music seem inspired. They played them straight-faced, robotic, but beneath the surface, the tension crackled. Then, when Sonny felt the moment was right, when he saw the hunger in the eyes of the crowd, he took a deep breath—and broke free.
The note that came out of his sax was not in the song.
It twisted, coiled, exploded in a flurry of color and life, a sound that had not been heard in public for years. The room held its breath. Mickey caught on fast, shifting the beat, pushing the rhythm forward. Big Leon's fingers danced over the bass strings, and Hector let loose a raw, piercing wail that sent shivers down spines. Lil’ Junie, grinning like a lunatic, pounded the keys in a cascade of disobedience.
The crowd erupted, whispering at first, then shouting. It was jazz, raw and wild and impossible to cage.
Then the sirens came.
"MOVE!"
Big Leon's bass shattered as the first shots rang out. The government’s Black Suits stormed the club, faceless enforcers armed with stun batons and rifles. The crowd scattered like rats, pushing toward back exits, some leaping over the bar. Sonny grabbed Junie's hand and ran, Hector close behind. Mickey wasn't fast enough. Sonny turned just in time to see him go down, the stock of a rifle cracking against his skull.
No time. No time to mourn.
They burst into the alley, feet pounding on rain-slick pavement. A drone hovered overhead, its red light scanning, searching. They ducked into a shadowy alcove, pressed against the bricks, breath ragged.
"We’re screwed, man," Hector gasped. "They know our faces. They know who we are."
Sonny gritted his teeth. "Then we play one last gig."
The plan was madness. A suicide note played in B-flat.
They would break into The Conservatory, the heart of the government’s music control program, the very place where artists were re-programmed using technology created by Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg. These musicians would hijack the system, override the broadcasts, and play one final performance, live to every screen, every speaker, every device in the nation and probably the world.
They knew they wouldn't make it out alive. But jazz had never been about survival. It had always been about freedom.
They moved at night, slipping past checkpoints, hacking security feeds, dodging patrols. When they reached The Conservatory, the city was asleep, unaware that history was about to be rewritten.
Inside, the walls hummed with artificial silence. Room after room of empty-eyed musicians, their hands twitching, their mouths muttering the same five songs like prayers to a false god. Sonny swallowed the bile in his throat. He had to hurry.
Lil’ Junie was a genius with tech. She bypassed the controls, hijacked the network. "You're live in sixty seconds," she whispered.
Sonny lifted the saxophone to his lips.
The first note soared into the void, and the world gasped awake.
The music hit the airwaves like a bomb. In homes, in cars, in government buildings, the sound poured forth, unchained and furious. It was Coltrane, it was Parker, it was Miles and Monk and Mingus, the ghosts of the past roaring into the future.
And then the doors burst open.
The Black Suits poured in. Hector went down first, his trumpet still singing even as his body collapsed. Lil’ Junie screamed as she was dragged away. Sonny played, played until the hands tore the sax from his lips, played until the butt of a rifle crushed his ribs, played until his breath left him entirely.
The last thing he heard was his own music, still echoing, still alive.
The next morning, the world changed. The government tried to scrub the broadcast, it was not available on demand, they tried erase the sound, kill all the downloads, but it was too late. Something had shifted.
Somewhere, a child picked up an old saxophone. Somewhere, a pianist played a note that was not written. Somewhere, a voice sang a melody that could never be captured twice. Somewhere, jazz lived.
Sonny White was gone, but his music remained.
And that, after all, was the point.
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For more on the future of creativity in America, take a deep dive:
i can hear them, i can hear them playing, no really i can, and it doesn’t stop, it won’t stop, and it’s runnin and runnin, yeah, i’m runnin and humming..,,,,,,,,..,,,,,
Wow, Bret! Beautifully written. Pure science fiction. You have a gift for it, and like most science fiction, it is an apt depiction of the nihilistic world we are facing!