The common belief that racial conflict characterizes jazz history is false, jazz trumpeter Sandke says. Instead, jazz is demonstrably a product of black-white cooperation, beginning in its prehistory in nineteenth-century blackface minstrel shows, which Sandke represents as a major venue for antislavery sentiment before the Civil War and which turned viciously racist only with the rise of Jim Crow in the 1890s. In the 1920s and ’30s, when jazz became synonymous with popular music, the top black and white bands were comparably well compensated. If jazz composers were often cheated out of royalties and copyrights, the culprits were black as well as white; sometimes they were musicians preying on other musicians. Bad history is to blame for the belief that jazz is sharply racially divided. Sandke scores such 1930s leftist-activist promoters as Vanderbilt scion John Hammond and field musicologist Alan Lomax for starting the racial-strife myths, activist and poet Leroi Jones/Amiri Baraka for exacerbating them, and—ruefully, for they are fellow players—jazz spokesmen such as Wynton Marsalis (whom Sandke recognizes as mellowing with age and wisdom) for perpetuating them. This amateur historian’s book, more lucid and straightforward than most professional jazz critic-chroniclers could dream of producing, deserves every history-minded jazz fan’s attention.
Learn More about this fascinating book by Randy Sandke at Amazon.
Quotes by Topic
A Love Supreme
(5)
Aging
(7)
America
(43)
Art
(12)
Audience
(34)
Autographs
(3)
Bach
(5)
Bands
(18)
Bass
(15)
Beethoven
(3)
Benny Carter
(10)
Benny Goodman
(16)
Billie Holiday
(5)
Billy Strayhorn
(7)
Blues
(17)
Bop
(3)
Cancer
(5)
Change
(5)
Charlie Christian
(4)
Charlie Parker
(17)
Chicago
(6)
Child Prodigy
(3)
Childhood
(22)
Classical Music
(14)
Coleman Hawkins
(4)
Commercialism
(12)
Competition
(5)
Composing
(5)
Concerts
(6)
Cotton Club
(5)
Count Basie
(5)
Creativity
(12)
Critics
(11)
Dancing
(6)
Death
(10)
Dedication
(10)
Difficulty
(4)
Direction
(4)
Dizzy Gillespie
(14)
Dreams
(4)
Drinking
(11)
Drugs
(20)
Drums
(30)
Ego
(6)
Europe
(8)
Fame
(14)
Family
(10)
Fathers
(17)
Feeling
(8)
Freedom
(10)
Fun
(8)
Funny
(72)
Goals
(4)
God
(4)
Gratitude
(5)
Groups
(11)
Growing Up
(23)
Guitar
(26)
Heroin
(4)
High Notes
(4)
History
(6)
Horn
(6)
Imperfection
(4)
Improvement
(5)
Improvisation
(14)
Individuality
(7)
Influences
(31)
Inspirational
(16)
Invention
(4)
Jail
(3)
Jazz
(79)
Jazz Is Dead
(20)
Jazz News
(44)
Jazz Videos
(7)
Jimi Hendrix
(1)
John Coltrane
(21)
Kansas City
(6)
Kids
(4)
Learning
(24)
Lester Young
(6)
Life
(8)
Longevity
(5)
Looking Good
(7)
Los Angeles
(5)
Louis Armstrong
(32)
Love
(13)
Making Records
(13)
Marijuana
(5)
Marriage
(5)
Mathematics
(2)
Melody
(7)
Miles Davis
(16)
Minton's Playhouse
(3)
Mistakes
(11)
Money
(28)
Montreal
(1)
Motivational
(12)
Movies
(6)
Music
(23)
Music School
(14)
New Orleans
(37)
New York City
(27)
Old Age
(9)
Opera
(3)
Orchestra
(7)
Originality
(11)
Ornette Coleman
(4)
Percussion
(3)
Perfection
(5)
Piano
(16)
Poetry
(10)
Pop
(6)
Popularity
(9)
Pornography
(1)
Practice
(27)
Problems
(3)
Progress
(5)
Prostitution
(1)
Pushing Boundaries
(8)
Quartets
(4)
Racism
(30)
Radio
(5)
Rap
(3)
Ray Brown
(4)
Record Labels
(13)
Recording
(15)
Religion
(9)
Retirement
(7)
Rhythm
(8)
Ronnie Scott's
(2)
Roots
(5)
Saxophone
(20)
Segregation
(10)
Selling Records
(12)
Show Business
(7)
Silence
(3)
Simplicity
(4)
Singers
(10)
Singing
(15)
Slavery
(5)
Smooth Jazz
(3)
Songwriting
(5)
Soul
(3)
Soundtracks
(2)
Spirituality
(12)
Struggle
(6)
Studying
(4)
Style
(20)
Success
(12)
Sweets Edison
(10)
Swing
(5)
Symphony
(3)
Talent
(4)
Teachers
(6)
Technique
(7)
Television
(6)
Tenor Sax
(3)
The Beatles
(4)
Thelonious Monk
(9)
Time
(3)
Touring
(9)
Trumpet
(17)
Violence
(4)
Violin
(4)
Vocals
(3)
Wisdom
(4)
Women
(16)
Work
(11)
Wynton Marsalis
(12)
Young Musicians
(13)
0 comments:
Post a Comment