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Books > Music > Contemporary popular music > Jazz
"Given South Africa's venerable jazz tradition, it's perhaps
surprising it's taken so long for more fundis to be tapped for
their responses to our kind of jazz. But it takes a special brew of
ingredients for this kind of book to come together. You need an
inspired guiding spirit, such as editor and jazzwoman-in-words
Myesha Jenkins, and you need a vat in which the ingredients can mix
and bubble. You'll find everything here in To breathe into another
voice: faithful and fantastical accounts of the jazz life and jazz
people as well as reflections on the music as a metaphor for how we
live - or, maybe more importantly, how we'd like to live. All you
need to do now is open the covers, start reading, and dance
joyously about the architecture." --Gwen Ansel
Jazz Italian Style explores a complex era in music history, when
politics and popular culture collided with national identity and
technology. When jazz arrived in Italy at the conclusion of World
War I, it quickly became part of the local music culture. In Italy,
thanks to the gramophone and radio, many Italian listeners paid
little attention to a performer's national and ethnic identity.
Nick LaRocca (Italian-American), Gorni Kramer (Italian), the Trio
Lescano (Jewish-Dutch), and Louis Armstrong (African-American), to
name a few, all found equal footing in the Italian soundscape. The
book reveals how Italians made jazz their own, and how, by the
mid-1930s, a genre of jazz distinguishable from American varieties
and supported by Mussolini began to flourish in northern Italy and
in its turn influenced Italian-American musicians. Most
importantly, the book recovers a lost repertoire and an array of
musicians whose stories and performances are compelling and well
worth remembering.
In 1912 James Reese Europe made history by conducting his
125-member Clef Club Orchestra at Carnegie Hall. The first concert
by an African American ensemble at the esteemed venue was more than
just a concert--it was a political act of desegregation, a defiant
challenge to the status quo in American music. In this book, David
Gilbert explores how Europe and other African American performers,
at the height of Jim Crow, transformed their racial difference into
the mass-market commodity known as ""black music."" Gilbert shows
how Europe and others used the rhythmic sounds of ragtime, blues,
and jazz to construct new representations of black identity,
challenging many of the nation's preconceived ideas about race,
culture, and modernity and setting off a musical craze in the
process. Gilbert sheds new light on the little-known era of African
American music and culture between the heyday of minstrelsy and the
Harlem Renaissance. He demonstrates how black performers played a
pioneering role in establishing New York City as the center of
American popular music, from Tin Pan Alley to Broadway, and shows
how African Americans shaped American mass culture in their own
image.
Songs of the Unsung is the autobiography of Los Angeles jazz
musician and activist Horace Tapscott (1934-1999). A pianist who
ardently believed in the power of music to connect people, Tapscott
was a beloved and influential character who touched many yet has
remained unknown to the majority of Americans. In addition to being
"his" story, Songs of the Unsung is the story of Los Angeles's
cultural and political evolution over the last half of the
twentieth century, of the origins of many of the most important
avant-garde musicians still on the scene today, and of a rich and
varied body of music. Tapscott's narrative covers his early life in
segregated Houston, his move to California in 1943, life as a
player in the Air Force band in the early fifties, and his travels
with the Lionel Hampton Band. He reflects on how the Pan Afrikan
Peoples Arkestra (the "Ark"), an organization he founded in 1961 to
preserve and spread African and African-American music, eventually
became the Union of God's Musicians and Artists Ascension-a group
that not only performed musically but was active in the civil
rights movement, youth education, and community programs. Songs of
the Unsung also includes Tapscott's vivid descriptions of the Watts
neighborhood insurrection of 1965 and the L.A. upheavals of 1992,
interactions with both the Black Panthers and the L.A.P.D., his
involvement in Motown's West Coast scene, the growth of his musical
reputation abroad, and stories about many of his musician-activist
friends, including Billy Higgins, Don Cherry, Buddy Collette,
Arthur Blythe, Lawrence and Wilber Morris, Linda Hill, Elaine
Brown, Stanley Crouch, and Sun Ra. With a foreword by Steven
Isoardi, a brief introduction by actor William Marshall, a full
discography of Tapscott's recordings, and many fine photographs,
Songs of the Unsung is the inspiring story of one of America's most
unassuming twentieth-century heroes.
Presents a selection of 150 jazz standards arranged for piano,
voice, and guitar. This work includes the songs: Ain't Misbehavin',
Don't Get Around Much Anymore, Fly Me To The Moon, God Bless' The
Child, I'm Beginning To See The Light, My Funny Valentine, Satin
Doll, Stella By Starlight, Witchcraft, Unforgettable, and more.
An examination of the musical, religious, and political landscape
of black New Orleans before and after Hurricane Katrina, this
revised edition looks at how these factors play out in a new
millennium of global apartheid. Richard Brent Turner explores the
history and contemporary significance of second lines-the group of
dancers who follow the first procession of church and club members,
brass bands, and grand marshals in black New Orleans's jazz street
parades. Here music and religion interplay, and Turner's study
reveals how these identities and traditions from Haiti and West and
Central Africa are reinterpreted. He also describes how second line
participants create their own social space and become proficient in
the arts of political disguise, resistance, and performance.
The contributors to Negotiated Moments explore how subjectivity is
formed and expressed through musical improvisation, tracing the
ways the transmission and reception of sound occur within and
between bodies in real and virtual time and across memory, history,
and space. They place the gendered, sexed, raced, classed,
disabled, and technologized body at the center of critical
improvisation studies and move beyond the field's tendency toward
celebrating improvisation's utopian and democratic ideals by
highlighting the improvisation of marginalized subjects. Rejecting
a singular theory of improvisational agency, the contributors show
how improvisation helps people gain hard-won and highly contingent
agency. Essays include analyses of the role of the body and
technology in performance, improvisation's ability to disrupt power
relations, Pauline Oliveros's ideas about listening, flautist
Nicole Mitchell's compositions based on Octavia Butler's science
fiction, and an interview with Judith Butler about the relationship
between her work and improvisation. The contributors' close
attention to improvisation provides a touchstone for examining
subjectivities and offers ways to hear the full spectrum of ideas
that sound out from and resonate within and across bodies.
Contributors. George Blake, David Borgo, Judith Butler, Rebecca
Caines, Louise Campbell, Illa Carrillo Rodriguez, Berenice Corti,
Andrew Raffo Dewar, Nina Eidsheim, Tomie Hahn, Jaclyn Heyen,
Christine Sun Kim, Catherine Lee, Andra McCartney, Tracy McMullen,
Kevin McNeilly, Leaf Miller, Jovana Milovic, Francois Mouillot,
Pauline Oliveros, Jason Robinson, Neil Rolnick, Simon Rose, Gillian
Siddall, Julie Dawn Smith, Jesse Stewart, Clara Tomaz, Sherrie
Tucker, Lindsay Vogt, Zachary Wallmark, Ellen Waterman, David
Whalen, Pete Williams, Deborah Wong, Mandy-Suzanne Wong
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Free Jazz/Black Power
(Paperback)
Philippe Carles, Jean-Louis Comolli; Editing managed by Gregory Pierrot
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R1,031
Discovery Miles 10 310
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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For the first time in English, the classic volume that developed a
radical new understanding of free jazz and African American
culture. 1971, French jazz critics Philippe Carles and Jean-Louis
Comolli cowrote Free Jazz/Black Power, a treatise on the racial and
political implications of jazz and jazz criticism. It remains a
testimony to the long ignored encounter of radical African American
music and French left-wing criticism. Carles and Comolli set out to
defend a genre vilified by jazz critics on both sides of the
Atlantic by exposing the new sound's ties to African American
culture, history, and the political struggle that was raging in the
early 1970s. The two offered a political and cultural history of
black presence in the United States to shed more light on the
dubious role played by jazz criticism in racial oppression. This
analysis critiques the critics, building a work of cultural studies
in a time and place where the practice was virtually unknown. The
authors reached radical conclusions--free jazz was a revolutionary
reaction against white domination, was the musical counterpart to
the Black Power movement, and was a music that demanded a similar
political commitment. The impact of this book is difficult to
overstate, as it made readers reconsider their response to African
American music. In some cases it changed the way musicians thought
about and played jazz. Free Jazz/ Black Power remains indispensable
to the study of the relation of American free jazz to European
audiences, critics, and artists.
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