JazzA History of America's Music

Geoffrey C. Ward, Ken Burns

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Summary

Jazz

By: Geoffrey C. Ward, Ken Burns

Narrarated by: Levar Burton

The companion volume to the ten-part PBS TV series by the team responsible for The Civil War and Baseball.

Continuing in the tradition of their critically acclaimed works, Geoffrey C. Ward and Ken Burns vividly bring to life the story of the quintessential American music—jazz. Born in the black community of turn-of-the-century New Orleans but played from the beginning by musicians of every color, jazz celebrates all Americans at their best.

Here are the stories of the extraordinary men and women who made the music: Louis Armstrong, the fatherless waif whose unrivaled genius helped turn jazz into a soloist's art and influenced every singer, every instrumentalist who came after him; Duke Ellington, the pampered son of middle-class parents who turned a whole orchestra into his personal instrument, wrote nearly two thousand pieces for it, and captured more of American life than any other composer. Bix Beiderbecke, the doomed cornet prodigy who showed white musicians that they too could make an important contribution to the music; Benny Goodman, the immigrants' son who learned the clarinet to help feed his family, but who grew up to teach a whole country how to dance; Billie Holiday, whose distinctive style routinely transformed mediocre music into great art; Charlie Parker, who helped lead a musical revolution, only to destroy himself at thirty-four; and Miles Davis, whose search for fresh ways to sound made him the most influential jazz musician of his generation, and then led him to abandon jazz altogether. Buddy Bolden, Jelly Roll Morton, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Tatum, Count Basie, Dave Brubeck, Artie Shaw, and Ella Fitzgerald are all here; so are Sidney Bechet, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, and a host of others.

But Jazz is more than mere biography. The history of the music echoes the history of twentieth-century America. Jazz provided the background for the giddy era that F. Scott Fitzgerald called the Jazz Age. The irresistible pulse of big-band swing lifted the spirits and boosted American morale during the Great Depression and World War II. The virtuosic, demanding style called bebop mirrored the stepped-up pace and dislocation that came with peace. During the Cold War era, jazz served as a propaganda weapon—and forged links with the burgeoning counterculture. The story of jazz encompasses the story of American courtship and show business; the epic growth of great cities—New Orleans and Chicago, Kansas City and New York—and the struggle for civil rights and simple justice that continues into the new millennium.

Visually stunning, with more than five hundred photographs, some never before published, this book, like the music it chronicles, is an exploration—and a celebration—of the American experiment.

Sample Audiobook
Audiobook Information
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  • Edition: Abridged
  • Author: Geoffrey C. Ward (See All Books), Ken Burns (See All Books)
  • Date Released: Mar 12, 2008
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Genre: History, Music, Music & Entertainment, United States History

Total File Size: 246 MB (12 files) Total Length: 8 Hours, 59 Minutes

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Sam Adams

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Sam Adams writes for the Los Angeles Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Onion A.V. Club, Time Out New York, Time Out Chicago, Cowbell and the Philadelphia Ci...more »

03.12.08
Ken Burns, Jazz
2008 | Label: Random House Audio

The visuals in Ken Burns' talking-head documentaries are almost redundant, so the audio reduction of his 19-hour PBS series feels surprisingly complete. The lack of song excerpts is unfortunate (no doubt you'll want to add the soundtrack to your iPod as well), but LeVar Burton's energetic reading brings characters from Buddy Bolden to Wynton Marsalis alive and conveys a giddy, wide-eyed enthusiasm for the birth of an American art form. Although there's plenty of space devoted to the music, Burns and Ward are equally attentive to the social and historical conditions that produced it, particularly the prodigious mixture of races, cultures and classes that gathered in New Orleans around the turn of the 20th century. Deftly interweaving the stories of seminal figures like Louis Armstrong, Jelly Roll Morton and Bix Beiderbecke, Jazz is a wonderful introduction for the uninitiated, and helps even aficionados fill in valuable missing pieces.

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Abridgment of an abridgement

telutci

This book is a stunning example of why I hate abridged audiobooks. Which should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with the documentary upon which it is based, a notoriously spotty affair that pretty much had something for everyone to complain about. Just to give a quick example of how the audiobook is a failure, there is hardly a mention of Lester Young after his classic small-group sessions with Billie Holiday. No disastrous stint in the army, no creative decline, no humiliating JATP performances, no slow death from alcoholism. Then suddenly, he pops up again for the famous CBS "Sound Of Jazz" special, plays what is only referred to in a quote as a great performance, and that's it. Overall, this audiobook made me angry.

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Songs & Songwriters

By Sam Adams, eMusic Contributor

Someone (no one can quite agree who) once said that talking about music is like dancing about architecture, but there's a whole shelf of books ready to prove them wrong. It may require some serious linguistic contortions to describe the sense of release that accompanies the resolution of a chord progression, or that strange change from major to minor, but the way it transforms our lives and our world is well within the grasp of… more »