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This Is Our Music - Free Jazz, the Sixties, and American Culture (Paperback)
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This Is Our Music - Free Jazz, the Sixties, and American Culture (Paperback)
Series: The Arts and Intellectual Life in Modern America
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This Is Our Music Free Jazz, the Sixties, and American Culture Iain
Anderson "An excellent study of the heyday of one of the most
problematic bodies of work in the history of jazz music. . . .
Essential."--"Choice" ""This Is Our Music" takes us back to that
moment between the fifties and the sixties when a new music called
free jazz took root in the coffeehouses and nightclubs of New York
City, Chicago, and Los Angeles. In this rich and evocative book,
Iain Anderson meets the challenge posed by the music and follows
its lead into the complex political realignments, shifting racial
dynamics, and redefinition of art and entertainment that
characterized the subsequent decade."--John Szwed, author of "So
What: The Life of Miles Davis" "Historian Iain Anderson tracks the
political and social meanings of jazz as the music changed hands
around the world. . . . The crooked line Anderson draws from the
maverick Cecil] Taylor (a Guggenheim Fellowship recipient) to the
conservative Wynton] Marsalis (arbiter of "What Is--and
Isn't--Jazz") is the real contribution of "This Is Our
Music.""--"Bookforum" "Anderson's evenhanded, archive-driven book
is consistently instructive--a fine guide to the debates that raged
around free jazz and to the music's unexpected current place in the
American arts canon."--"Journal of American History" "This Is Our
Music," declared saxophonist Ornette Coleman's 1960 album title.
But whose music was it? At various times during the 1950s and
1960s, musicians, critics, fans, politicians, and entrepreneurs
claimed jazz as a national art form, an Afrocentric race music, an
extension of modernist innovation in other genres, a music of mass
consciousness, and the preserve of a cultural elite. This original
and provocative book explores who makes decisions about the value
of a cultural form and on what basis, taking as its example the
impact of 1960s free improvisation on the changing status of jazz.
By examining the production, presentation, and reception of
experimental music by Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, John Coltrane,
and others, Iain Anderson traces the strange, unexpected, and at
times deeply ironic intersections between free jazz, avant-garde
artistic movements, Sixties politics, and patronage networks.
Anderson emphasizes free improvisation's enormous impact on jazz
music's institutional standing, despite ongoing resistance from
some of its biggest beneficiaries. He concludes that attempts by
African American artists and intellectuals to define a place for
themselves in American life, structural changes in the music
industry, and the rise of nonprofit sponsorship portended a
significant transformation of established cultural standards. At
the same time, free improvisation's growing prestige depended in
part upon traditional highbrow criteria: increasingly esoteric
styles, changing venues and audience behavior, European sanction,
withdrawal from the marketplace, and the professionalization of
criticism. Thus jazz music's performers and supporters--and
potentially those in other arts--have both challenged and
accommodated themselves to an ongoing process of cultural
stratification. Iain Anderson teaches History at Nebraska Wesleyan
University. The Arts and Intellectual Life in Modern America 2006
264 pages 6 x 9 23 illus. ISBN 978-0-8122-2003-2 Paper $24.95s
16.50 World Rights American History, Music Short copy: "Takes us
back to that moment between the fifties and the sixties when a new
music called free jazz took root in the coffeehouses and nightclubs
of New York City, Chicago, and Los Angeles."--John Szwed, author of
"So What: The Life of Miles Davis"
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