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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Contemporary popular music > Jazz
Carter and Ralph Stanley--the Stanley Brothers--are comparable
to Bill Monroe and Flatt & Scruggs as important members of the
earliest generation of bluegrass musicians. In this first biography
of the brothers, author David W. Johnson documents that Carter
(1925-1966) and Ralph (b. 1927) were equally important contributors
to the tradition of old-time country music. Together from 1946 to
1966, the Stanley Brothers began their careers performing in the
schoolhouses of southwestern Virginia and expanded their popularity
to the concert halls of Europe.
In order to re-create this post-World War II journey through the
changing landscape of American music, the author interviewed Ralph
Stanley, the family of Carter Stanley, former members of the Clinch
Mountain Boys, and dozens of musicians and friends who knew the
Stanley Brothers as musicians and men. The late Mike Seeger allowed
Johnson to use his invaluable 1966 interviews with the brothers.
Notable old-time country and bluegrass musicians such as George
Shuffler, Lester Woodie, Larry Sparks, and the late Wade Mainer
shared their recollections of Carter and Ralph.
"Lonesome Melodies" begins and ends in the mountains of
southwestern Virginia. Carter and Ralph were born there and had an
early publicity photograph taken at the Cumberland Gap. In December
1966, pallbearers walked up Smith Ridge to bring Carter to his
final resting place. In the intervening years, the brothers
performed thousands of in-person and radio shows, recorded hundreds
of songs and tunes for half a dozen record labels, and tried to
keep pace with changing times while remaining true to the spirit of
old-time country music. As a result of their accomplishments, they
have become a standard of musical authenticity.
""Is there jazz in China?"" This is the question that sent author
Eugene Marlow on his quest to uncover the history of jazz in China.
Marlow traces China's introduction to jazz in the early 1920s, its
interruption by Chinese leadership under Mao in 1949, and its
rejuvenation in the early 1980s with the start of China's opening
to the world under Premier Deng Xiaoping. Covering a span of almost
one hundred years, Marlow focuses on a variety of subjects--the
musicians who initiated jazz performances in China, the means by
which jazz was incorporated into Chinese culture, and the musicians
and venues that now present jazz performances. Featuring unique,
face-to-face interviews with leading indigenous jazz musicians in
Beijing and Shanghai, plus interviews with club owners, promoters,
expatriates, and even diplomats, Marlow marks the evolution of jazz
in China as it parallels China's social, economic, and political
evolution through the twentieth and into the twenty-first century.
Also featured is an interview with one of the extant members of the
Jimmy King Big Band of the 1940s, one of the first major
all-Chinese jazz big bands in Shanghai. Ultimately, Jazz in China:
From Dance Hall Music to Individual Freedom of Expression is a
cultural history that reveals the inexorable evolution of a
democratic form of music in a Communist state.
When Derek Coller decided to pay tribute to his late friend - the
author, biographer, discographer and researcher, Bert Whyatt - he
looked for a common theme under which to group some of the articles
they had written together over the years. He found it in Chicago
where their research activities had gravitated towards the style of
music created by the young white musicians from that city and its
environs - particularly those who rallied around the figurehead of
Eddie Condon - as they listened to and learned from the pioneer
black stylists, many of them the greatest jazz players to emigrate
from New Orleans, including King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, Johnny
and Baby Dodds and Jimmy Noone. Two trips to the USA, made by the
authors in 1979 and 1992, led to meetings and correspondence with
some of the musicians in this compilation, and to learning about
many others. There are connections between most of these articles,
interviews and notes, with an over-lapping of jobs, leaders and
clubs. Some of the stories are about pioneers: Elmer Schoebel, Jack
Pettis and Frank Snyder, for example, were in the New Orleans
Rhythm Kings in 1923. Trombonist George Brunis, chronicled here,
was also a member of that band, though his long career - during
which he played with Muggsy Spanier, as did Rod Cless and George
Zack, in the Spanier Ragtime Band of `Great Sixteen' fame - has
been more widely documented. Floyd Bean and Tut Soper, here too,
were also Spanier alumni. The articles originally appeared
variously under a dual by-line, or by either Whyatt or Coller, but
always with consultation and discussion prior to publication. Here
they become a lively mix of the voices of the authors as well as
the musicians and their families, building a story through
biography, reviews and discography. The book is illustrated with
evocative black and white photographs and images, and there is an
Index of names and places to help the reader keep track of the
musicians, composers, producers, promoters and writers who created
this part of the history of jazz.
This is the first comprehensive treatment of the remarkable music
and influence of Carla Bley, a highly innovative American jazz
composer, pianist, organist, band leader, and activist. With
fastidious attention to Bley's diverse compositions over the last
fifty years spanning critical moments in jazz and experimental
music history, Amy C. Beal tenders a long-overdue representation of
a major figure in American music. Best known for her jazz opera
"Escalator over the Hill," her role in the Free Jazz movement of
the 1960s, and her collaborations with artists such as Jack Bruce,
Don Cherry, Robert Wyatt, and Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason, Bley
has successfully maneuvered the field of jazz from highly
accessible, tradition-based contexts to commercially unviable,
avant-garde works. Beal details the staggering variety in Bley's
work as well as her use of parody, quotations, and contradictions,
examining the vocabulary Bley has developed throughout her career
and highlighting the compositional and cultural significance of her
experimentalism.
Beal also points to Bley's professional and managerial work as a
pioneer in the development of artist-owned record labels, the
cofounder and manager of WATT Records, and the cofounder of New
Music Distribution Service. Showing her to be not just an artist
but an activist who has maintained musical independence and
professional control amid the profit-driven, corporation-dominated
world of commercial jazz, Beal's straightforward discussion of
Bley's life and career will stimulate deeper examinations of her
work.
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