From Birdland to Broadway: Scenes from a Jazz Life

Sprednja platnica
Oxford University Press, 1992 - 273 strani
In the 1950s, New York City's Birdland was the center of the world of modern jazz--and a revelation to Bill Crow, a wet-behind-the-ears twenty-two-year-old from Washington State. Located on Broadway between 52nd and 53rd streets, the club named for the incomparable Charlie "Bird" Parker boasted lifesize photo murals of modern jazzmen like Dizzy Gillespie, Lennie Tristano, and, of course, Bird himself, looming large against jet black walls. Exotic live birds perched in cages behind the bar. The midget master of ceremonies, 3'9" Pee Wee Marquette, dressed in a zoot suit and loud tie, smoked huge cigars and screeched mispronounced introductions into the microphone. And the jazz-struck young Crow would park in the bleachers till 4 am, blissfully enveloped by the heady music of Bird, Bud Powell, Max Roach, and a host of other jazz giants.
From Birdland to Broadway is an enthralling insider's account of four decades of a life in jazz. Bill Crow, journeyman bass player, superb storyteller, and author of the successful Jazz Anecdotes, here narrates many moving and delightful tales of the pioneers of modern jazz he played with and was befriended by. We find Dizzy Gillespie, with whom Crow, because of prior commitments, regretfully declined steady work, dancing at the Royal Roost, Stan Getz sadly teetering on the brink of losing himself to drugs, and Harry Belafonte (known then as "the Cinderella Gentleman") running a lunch counter in New York's Sheridan Square between music dates. And we also witness many of the highlights of Crow's career, such as in 1955 when the Marian McPartland Trio (with Crow on bass) was named "Small Group of the Year" by Metronome; Crow playing with the Gerry Mulligan Quartet at venues like Storyville in Boston and Harlem's Apollo Theater (where they appeared with Dinah Washington); and the tour of the Soviet Union with Benny Goodman, a journey that might have been a high point of Crow's travels abroad but was marred by Goodman's legendary mistreatment of his band.
Moving beyond jazz clubs to the Broadway concert pit and a variety of studio gigs in the '60s, Crow encounters actors such as Yul Brynner and pop-rock acts like Simon and Garfunkel. From the great to the near-great, from Billie Holiday to Judy Holliday, Bill Crow's wealth of personal anecdotes takes the reader from Birdland, to the Half Note, to the Playboy Club, to the footlights of Broadway. This revealing book is a marvelous portrait of the jazz world, told by someone who's been there.
 

Vsebina

1 Birdland
3
2 The Big Town
6
3 Home School and the Army
10
4 Tacoma Baltimore and Washington
15
5 Seattle
20
6 Coast to Coast
26
7 Charlies
31
8 Jam Sessions
36
28 Bird
129
29 Gerry Mulligan
133
30 Duke Ellington
138
31 Garner Monk
144
32 Pee Wee Russell
149
33 All Around Town
153
34 Dave Lambert Last Chorus
159
35 The Gerry Mulligan Quartet
164

9 Scuffling
40
10 Dave Lambert
44
11 Tupper Lake
49
12 More Scuffling
55
13 The Music Goes Round and Around
61
14 West Tenth Street
67
15 SS Uruguay
71
16 Gigging Around
76
17 Slim Gaillard Stan Getz
80
18 Pee Wee Marquette
87
19 Papa Jo
91
20 Stan the Man
95
21 Claude Thornhill
99
22 Gene Quill
104
23 Terry Gibbs
109
24 The Marian McPartland Trio
113
25 Jazz Records
119
26 Popsie Randolph
122
27 Vic Dickenson
125
36 Europe
170
37 Good Gigs
175
38 The Concert Jazz Band
180
39 Judy Holliday
184
40 The Sherwood Inn
190
41 Benny Goodman
195
42 The Half Note
204
43 Japan
210
44 Al the Waiter
214
45 Condons the Playboy Club
220
46 Comedians
227
47 The Studios
234
48 Lainie Kazan
238
49 Peter Duchin
243
50 Doubling in Brass
246
51 42nd Street
250
52 Jazz Anecdotes
255
Index
263
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O avtorju (1992)

Bill Crow is an accomplished jazz musician and writer. He is the author of Jazz Anecdotes, which was voted Best Jazz Book of 1991 in a Jazz Times readers' poll.

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