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Soundtrack to a Movement - African American Islam, Jazz, and Black Internationalism (Hardcover)
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Soundtrack to a Movement - African American Islam, Jazz, and Black Internationalism (Hardcover)
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**FINALIST for the 2022 PROSE Award in Music & the Performing
Arts** **Certificate of Merit, Best Historical Research on Recorded
Jazz, given by the 2022 Association for Recorded Sounds Collection
Awards for Excellence in Historical Sound Research** Explores how
jazz helped propel the rise of African American Islam during the
era of global Black liberation Amid the social change and
liberation of the civil rights and Black Power movements, the tenor
saxophonist Archie Shepp recorded a tribute to Malcolm X’s
emancipatory political consciousness. Shepp saw similarities
between his revolutionary hero and John Coltrane, one of the most
influential jazz musicians of the era. Later, the esteemed
trumpeter Miles Davis echoed Shepp’s sentiment, recognizing that
Coltrane’s music represented the very passion, rage, rebellion,
and love that Malcolm X preached. Soundtrack to a Movement examines
the link between the revolutionary Black Islam of the post-WWII
generation and jazz music. It argues that from the late 1940s and
’50s though the 1970s, Islam rose in prominence among African
Americans in part because of the embrace of the religion among jazz
musicians. The book demonstrates that the values that Islam and
jazz shared—Black affirmation, freedom, and
self-determination—were key to the growth of African American
Islamic communities, and that it was jazz musicians who led the way
in shaping encounters with Islam as they developed a Black Atlantic
“cool” that shaped both Black religion and jazz styles.
Soundtrack to a Movement demonstrates how by expressing their
values through the rejection of systemic racism, the construction
of Black notions of masculinity and femininity, and the development
of an African American religious internationalism, both jazz
musicians and Black Muslims engaged with a global Black
consciousness and interconnected resistance movements in the
African diaspora and Africa.
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