Description
Five of the interviewees-Dick Hyman, Jimmy Owens, Sonny Rollins, Clark Terry, and Yusef Lateef-have received the National Endowment for the Arts' prestigious Jazz Masters Fellowship, attesting to their importance and ability. While not official masters, the rest are veteran performers willing to share their experiences and knowledge. Artists such as David Amram, Charles Davis, Clifford Jordan, Valery Ponomarev, and Sandy Stewart, to name a few, open their hearts and memories and reveal who they are as people.
The musicians interviewed for the book range in age from their early seventies to mid-nineties. Older musicians started their careers during the segregation of the Jim Crow era, while the youngest came up during the struggle for civil rights. All grapple with issues of race, performance, and jazz's rich legacies. In addition to performing, touring, and recording, many have composed and arranged, and others have contributed as teachers, historians, studio musicians, session players, producers, musicians' advocates, authors, columnists, poets, and artists. The interviews in The Jazz Masters are invaluable primary material for scholars and will appeal to musicians inspired by these veterans' stories and their different approaches to music.
About the Author
Peter C. Zimmerman has been a music writer for more than three decades, interviewing everyone from Waylon Jennings to "Bootsy" Collins, and is author of Tennessee Music: Its People and Places and Podunk: Ramblin' to America's Small Places in a Dilapidated Delta 88. He is the longtime editor of Odyssey Guides of Hong Kong and lives in the foothills of New York's Catskill Mountains.
Book Information
ISBN 9781496837431
Author Peter C. Zimmerman
Format Paperback
Page Count 300
Imprint University Press of Mississippi
Publisher University Press of Mississippi
Weight(grams) 483g