[78-L] Another new history of jazz

Bud Black banjobud at cfl.rr.com
Tue Nov 24 07:50:57 PST 2009


And I'm still waiting for the release of the Mel Brooks epic "History Of The
World - part 2."

Bud 
 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: David Lennick
Date: 11/22/2009 9:02:26 PM
To: 78-L Mail List
Subject: Re: [78-L] Another new history of jazz
 
I'm still waiting for Parts 3 & 4 of Stan Freberg's United States of America

 
And another issue of 78 Quarterly.
 
And the Electrician or someone like him.
 
dl
 
fnarf at comcast.net wrote:
> Is Giddins ever going to finish the second volume of his Bing Crosby bio?
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Cary Ginell" <soundthink at live.com>
> To: 78-l at klickitat.78online.com
> Sent: Sunday, November 22, 2009 1:07:34 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
> Subject: [78-L] Another new history of jazz
>
>
> A new take on a standard
>
> This history of jazz is more a primer on how to listen to it
>
> By Steve Greenlee, Globe Staff  |  November 22, 2009
>
> Do we need another gargantuan book that purports to retell the history of
jazz? The aficionado’s bookcase is crammed with such texts, which come and
quickly go. But the latest one, by the highly respected and talented jazz
scribes Gary Giddins and Scott DeVeaux, arrives with a twist.
>
> Simply and audaciously titled “Jazz’’ this 704-page monster is
really more of a beginner’s guide. The well-informed won’t glean much
from these pages. But the listener who has only dipped his toes in and would
like to take a few swimming lessons - well, then, this is his book.
>
> At its heart, “Jazz’’ is a history lesson. Giddins and DeVeaux start
with post-Civil War African-American folk culture and wind up in 2008, when
the Grammy for best album went to Herbie Hancock for “River: The Joni
Letters,’’ his tribute to Joni Mitchell. But this book also serves as a
covert primer on how to hear jazz - what to listen for, and how to
understand what is going on. Such a conceit might seem pretentious - indeed,
it might seem arrogant, suggesting that the listener needs to know something
before she can appreciate the music and determine whether she likes it - but
it is not.
>
> If anything, the authors analyze individual performances to the extreme,
in their attempt to impart wisdom. Here is what distinguishes “Jazz’’
from those that have come before: It contains copious dissections of 78
tracks. A recording of Jelly Roll Morton’s “Dead Man Blues’’ or
Sarah Vaughan’s “Baby, Won’t You Please Come Home?’’ is
scrutinized and annotated, with authors’ notes explaining what happens as
the tune begins, eight seconds into it, and on and on.
>
> In just about every case, it’s an overly academic exercise that becomes
a buzzkill. By nature, a jazz fan wants to be surprised, energized, even
jolted by music. Forget all that. A two-and-half-minute recording of
“Weather Bird’’ by Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines consumes two pages
of examination: “0:00: Armstrong plays the opening melody on trumpet,
discreetly backed by Hines’s piano. 0:04 Armstrong displays his command of
dynamics. Some notes are played at full volume.’’ Et cetera, et cetera.
>
> In many instances the intense analysis comes at the expense of history.
Billie Holiday was perhaps jazz’s most important singer, yet the
authors’ dissection of “A Sailboat in the Moonlight,’’ one of her
lesser known pieces, gets as much ink as does her entire career. More
problematic is that the passages mean nothing to the reader unless the
reader is multitasking: reading and listening to a recording at the same
time. Yet who among us possesses all of the recordings mentioned herein?
>
> Ah, problem solved. And here’s the twist: It’s not just a book; it’s
a CD box set. W.W. Norton & Co. is simultaneously releasing a four-CD
package containing all 78 tracks. This is ingenious marketing: $40 book +
$60 CD set = $100 sale. But, again, this book (and CD collection) is for the
novice, and it would be hard to improve upon “Recordings: For Jazz’’
as an audio introduction. The selections do a fine job of representing the
genre’s many stages, and the audio fidelity is supreme.
>
> Get beyond all that, though, and there’s not much to distinguish the
actual book, which is largely an aggregation of what has come before.
Complex life stories - Django Reinhardt’s, Thelonious Monk’s, Ella
Fitzgerald’s - are condensed in a few paragraphs. Landmark recordings are
dispensed with no sooner than they are introduced. Yes, the authors are
trying to distill 100 years of history but still: We’ve heard all this
before. The lack of footnoting is particularly troubling. The so-called end
notes are insufficient; they fail to attribute even the most basic sourcing.
Then there are the liberties taken by Giddins and DeVeaux. They write that
free-jazz saxophonist Albert Ayler “died, a suicide, at thirty-four.’’
Really? Ayler’s death has been a constant source of speculation and
argument. His body was found floating in New York’s East River in 1970,
and the cause of death was never determined.
>
> Quibbles aside, one could do much worse for an introduction to jazz.
It’s all here (albeit abbreviated), from Bessie Smith to Buddy Bolden to
Louis Armstrong to Coleman Hawkins to Charlie Parker to John Coltrane to
Jason Moran. The basic configurations of the jazz ensemble are examined and
explained for the uninitiated. Frank Sinatra, for once, gets respect in a
jazz history, and fusion - the real thing, as done by Miles Davis and his
compatriots - gets more due than Ken Burns and his ilk would ever afford.
George Russell’s complicated theories about chords’ relation to one
another are explained in a way almost anyone can comprehend, and the
contributions of contemporaries as disparate as Wynton Marsalis and Vijay
Iyer are presented in their proper contexts. Massachusetts finally gets its
props as the center of jazz education, and Boston-bred George Wein, the
impresario behind the Newport Jazz Festival, gets more than the requisite
passing mention.
>
> All of which is well and good. Just be prepared to buy the CDs if you want
to appreciate “Jazz’’ to its fullest.
>
> Steve Greenlee can be reached at greenlee at globe.com.
> _________________________________________________________
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