This is why when the opportunity came about to review Traditional
New Orleans Jazz: Conversations With the Men Who Make the Music by
Thomas W. Jacobson, I gratefully accepted and began reading.
After retiring from a career spent in higher education, including 26
years on the faculty of Indiana University (Bloomington), Jacobson moved to New
Orleans where he has lived for over 20 years during which time he has become
deeply interested and involved in the local music scene.
Traditional New Orleans Jazz is a book
that came about due to conversations and interviews he was able to have with
local jazz musicians while he served as a columnist and corespondent for
publications such as The Mississippi Rag, The Clarinet and
a variety of other jazz periodicals.
Traditional New Orleans Jazz at first
seemed like an oddity to me. Usually the books I read on the subject of jazz
tend to be histories on the subject that present it as something that had once
had its heyday, passed on, and now is a subject of memory more so than an art
form that not only remains in play but remains viable and important.
Within the pages of this book Jacobsen elicits honest, witty and often
comedic discussions with players such as Irvin Mayfield, Evan Christopher, Tim
Laughlin, Trevor Richards, Clive Wilson, Brian Ogilvie, Lionel Ferbos, Eddie
Bayard and Jack Maheu as they talk about their lives in New Orleans music.
These are not some dusty pages of history — though there is a great deal
history reveals and retells. Instead, these are stories that feel almost as if
they are being shared directly with you as the musician sits across a table at
a bar and simply talks.
Read more: http://blogcritics.org/books/article/book-review-traditional-new-orleans-jazz/#ixzz1SU29JmBm
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