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Serge Chaloff (1923-1957) is most widely remembered as the
flamboyant baritone saxophone star with Woody Herman's 2nd Herd
whose problems with drugs extended to erratic personal behavior.
Nevertheless, there were many brilliant sessions featuring his work
before and after his stint with Herman. This work attempts to bring
them the recognition they deserve. Simosko details the life and
music of Serge Chaloff in an engaging style, from his childhood in
Boston, Massachusetts, through his untimely death in 1957. He also
provides a discography of Chaloff's recorded output, much of which
has been made available by the 1993 Mosaic Records release of The
Complete Serge Chaloff Sessions.
Artie Shaw, the world famous clarinet-playing bandleader who became
popular during the Swing Era, was immersed in the music business as
a performer for 30 years, from the summer of 1924, when he began to
study saxophone, until the summer of 1954, when he stopped
performing. This period of activity is the focus of this musical
biography and discography, a detailed account of Shaw's musical
career and recorded output. The book begins with a summary of
Shaw's career in the contexts of jazz history and social setting,
then moves into more detail. The chronologically arranged sections,
mirroring each phase of his career, incorporate contemporary
reviews and interview quotes to create an insightful narrative. The
discography lists all known recordings and is separate from the
text to facilitate easy reference. Includes appendixes and index.
In his tragically short life (1928-1964), Eric Dolphy was a titanic
force in the development of the sixties avant-garde (or "new
thing") from the hard bop of the late fifties. The searing
intensity and sonic exploration of his work on alto sax, clarinets,
and flute derived in part from the concurrent innovations of
Coltrane, Mingus, Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, and Andrew Hill,
among others; previous jazz styles such as New Orleans and bop;
various non-Western musics; and modern classical music (e.g.,
Varese). Dolphy pioneered extended solo jazz compositions, was
prominent in the "third stream" movement (led by John Lewis and
Gunther Schuller), and remains a major influence on musicians today
for the personal, speech-like inflections of his playing. Jazz
scholars Simosko and Tepperman examine every aspect of this
stunning musical achievement from Dolphy's early big band work and
association with Chico Hamilton to his own last groups in Europe,
emphasizing the rich legacy of his recordings. Now completely
updated to include the most recent discoveries concerning his life
and recordings, this book will long stand as the definitive
treatment of Eric Dolphy's music.
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