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Book cover of Reading Jazz

Reading Jazz

19961088 pagesBloomsbury Publishing PLC

Synopsis

Here is the largest, most comprehensive, and most stimulating collection of writings on jazz ever published. The first of Reading Jazz's three parts is autobiographical, and in it such central jazz figures as Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, Billie Holiday, Miles Davis, Charles Mingus, Art Pepper, Count Basie, Anita O'Day, Lionel Hampton, Artie Shaw, and Cab Calloway reveal their lives and ideas in their highly charged and very persuasive first persons. Part two is reportorial, encompassing formal profiles - Whitney Balliett's of Earl Hines and Peewee Russell, and Gene Lees's of Bill Evans and Dizzy Gillespie; Lillian Ross's hilarious account of the first Newport Jazz Festival; Ralph Ellison remembering Minton's Playhouse; and both Hampton Hawes and Miles Davis reminiscing about Charlie Parker. Part three is critical, presenting a wide spectrum of opinion and approach, beginning with the famous 1919 essay by Ernst-Alexandre Ansermet (he conducted the premiere of Stravinsky's Rite of Spring) about jazz in general and Bechet in particular, and proceeding to such eminent writers as Nat Hentoff (on John Coltrane), Gunther Schuller (on Sarah Vaughan), Dan Morgenstern (on Louis Armstrong), Gary Giddins (on "Body and Soul"), Philip Larkin, Albert Murray, Stanley Crouch, LeRoi Jones, and many others.

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About the author

Robert Gottlieb explores environmentalism, urban development, and social change. His books, including Environmentalism Unbound and Reinventing Los Angeles, examine how communities address issues from reducing toxics to dietary transitions. He offers insights into shaping a more sustainable future, particularly in urban settings.

Genres

Characters

Jelly Roll MortonSupporting
Louis ArmstrongSupporting
Sidney BechetSupporting
Billie HolidaySupporting
Miles DavisSupporting

Subjects

Places

Edition

No cover available
5 editions available