Al Rose has known virtually every noteworthy jazz musician of
this century. For many of them he has organized concerts, composed
songs that they later played or sang, and promoted their acts. He
has, when called upon, bailed them out of jail, straightened out
their finances, stood up for them at their weddings, and eulogized
them at their funerals. He has caroused with them in bars and clubs
from New Orleans to New York, from Paris to Singapore -- and
survived to tell the story. The result has been a lifetime of
friendship with some of the music world's most engaging and
rambunctious personalities. In I Remember Jazz, Rose draws on this
unparallelled experience to recall, through brief but poignant
vignettes, the greats and the near-greats of jazz. In a style that
is always entertaining, unabashedly idiosyncratic, and frequently
irreverent, he writes about Jelly Roll Morton and Bunny Berigan,
Eubie Blake and Bobby Hackett, Earl Hines and Louis Armstrong, and
more than fifty others.
Rose was only twenty-two when he was first introduced to Jelly
Roll Morton. He quickly discovered that they had more in common
than a love of music. Something of a peacock at that age, Rose was
dressed in a "polychromatic, green-striped suit, pink shirt with a
detachable white collar, dubonnet tie, buttonhole, and
handkerchief" -- and so was Jelly Roll. About Eubie Blake, Rose
notes that he was not only a superb musician but also a notorious
ladies' man. Rose recalls asking the noted pianist when he was
ninety-seven, "How old do you have to be before the sex drive
goes?" Blake's reply: "You'll have to ask someone older than me."
Once in 1947, Rose was asked to assemble a group of musicians to
play at a reception to be hosted by President Truman at Blair House
in Washington, D.C. The musicians included Muggsy Spanier, George
Brunies, Pee Wee Russell, Pops Foster, and Baby DOdds. But the hit
of the evening was President Truman himself, who joined the group
on the piano to play "Kansas City Kitty" and the "Missouri
Waltz."
I Remember Jazz is replete with such amusing and affectionate
anecdotes -- vignettes that will delight all fans of the music. Al
Rose does indeed remember jazz. And for that we can all be
grateful.
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