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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Composers & musicians
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Faces In The Crowd - Musicians, Writers, Actors, And Filmmakers (Paperback, 1st Da Capo Press ed)
Loot Price: R496
Discovery Miles 4 960
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Faces In The Crowd - Musicians, Writers, Actors, And Filmmakers (Paperback, 1st Da Capo Press ed)
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Loot Price R496
Discovery Miles 4 960
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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As an essayist and Village Voice columnist, Gary Giddins is widely
known as a preeminent jazz writer. Walter Clemons, writing in
Newsweek, hailed him as "the best jazz critic now at work",
praising his "elegant prose" and "encyclopedic knowledge". Yet he
has won a devoted audience for his reflections on popular culture,
books, and movies as well--including a marvelous essay on Jack
Benny that Gay Talese selected for Best American Essays of 1987. In
Faces in the Crowd, Giddins once again demonstrates his graceful
style and sharp wit in a brilliant collection of critiques,
assessments, and profiles of major figures in the culture of our
century. Faces in the Crowd is a virtual Gary Giddins reader, a
potent collection of his finest writing from the last fifteen
years. Ranging from fond reflection to interview-and-commentary to
close critical analysis, Giddins explores the achievements of
thirty-seven artists: show people, divas, musicians, and writers,
ranging from Irving Berlin to Spike Lee, Billie Holiday to Kay
Starr, Louis Armstrong to Miles Davis, Elias Canetti to Philip
Roth. Through every essay, his observations are sharp, his
reactions honest, his judgments right on target. In "This Guy
Wouldn't Give You the Parsley Off His Fish", for example, he shows
how Jack Benny revolutionized comedy, creating a memorable
character who was the butt of every joke. He takes a new look at
the great Dinah Washington, remarking that "few performers have
taken a stage or stormed off one with quite the noblesse oblige of
the Queen". Giddins also offers a fresh assessment of James M. Cain
and other masters of hard-boiled fiction, and he delivers an
aggressive critique of the liberties academics havetaken with such
classic texts as Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury. Along the way,
he reveals how he uncovered the true birthdate of Louis Armstrong;
chats with Clint Eastwood about Charlie Parker; and exposes the
curious plagiarism of Katherine Anne Porter by her own biographer.
And of course, he writes with power and authority on the great jazz
musicians, providing an original perspective on Benny Goodman,
tracking the evolving musical adventures of Sonny Rollins, and
offering a musicological study of two Dizzy Gillespie solos
separated by forty years. Pete Hamill has written, "Nobody writes
with greater authority about American music than Gary Giddins", and
Ken Tucker has called him "the John Updike of jazz criticism". In
this provocative and immensely entertaining collection, Giddins
shows why he has become one of the most influential critics of his
generation.
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