Heart Full of Rhythm: The Big Band Years of Louis Armstrong
Autor Ricky Riccardien Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 noi 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190914110
ISBN-10: 0190914114
Pagini: 432
Ilustrații: 34 historical photographs
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190914114
Pagini: 432
Ilustrații: 34 historical photographs
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
A brilliantly researched, vivid portrait of the great trumpeter, which covers a golden era from 1929 to 1947.
Riccardi (director, Research Collections, Louis Armstrong House Museum) laments that the period between 1929 and 1947 is often minimized and sometimes disparaged by historians, critics, and musicians, who characterized Armstrong's influence and popularity, particularly within the African American community, as inconsequential and unproductive. In Heart Full of Rhythm, Riccardi disputes such claims, demonstrating through a review of Armstrong's touring schedule, box office and record sales, radio and film appearances, accounts from his musical collaborators and contemporaries, and critical reviews lauding his musicianship that Armstrong not only held his audiences but transcended the success of other swing era big bands by achieving notoriety beyond jazz circles. ... Enthusiasts and scholars of jazz music will find this a quick and interesting read on an important period in the artist's life.
We get Armstrong in his own words as much as possible, as well as sources that have not been commonly quoted. And Riccardi even explains where the term "Moldy Fig" came from. We all know the obvious question: when is Volume 1 of the Armstrong saga going to be written? Ricky Riccardi has produced two masterpieces relating the story of a legendary musician who changed World Music. I can't be the only one who is waiting for Ricky Riccardi to tell the rest of the Armstrong story his way. It is obvious it is such good hands.
Riccardi's Heart Full of Rhythm is the best account we have of Armstrong's vital work with big bands — the research is impeccable, the ardor contagious.
This book is an exuberant treasury of new information about one of the most significant and influential musicians of all time. Most significant here is that this careful researcher torches the cliché that Armstrong rose in a 1920s flash and then fell onto the swords of commercialism. In soaring prose, Riccardi walks you through vital musical/cultural decades while re-introducing a man we thought we knew but who was even greater.
At last! A thrilling and intimate journey through the most undervalued period of Armstrong's career! Every chapter is a revelation!
This vitally American story has been expertly told in this superlative biography — SWING THAT MUSIC indeed!
Riccardi's meticulous scholarship and his exuberance for all things Armstrong make Heart Full of Rhythm a must-read for all interested in Armstrong, jazz, and our shared cultural heritage.
Dedicated research, access to ideal sources, and fine storytelling combine to shed new light and insight on the most interesting and least well-documented period of Armstrong's fabled life. Riccardi has done it again, but even more so.
Heart Full Of Rhythm elucidates and entertains from start to finish. Each chapter ends with a tantalising hook that anticipates the next, keeping the reader engaged and focused. Like its subject, it swings!
Riccardi (director, Research Collections, Louis Armstrong House Museum) laments that the period between 1929 and 1947 is often minimized and sometimes disparaged by historians, critics, and musicians, who characterized Armstrong's influence and popularity, particularly within the African American community, as inconsequential and unproductive. In Heart Full of Rhythm, Riccardi disputes such claims, demonstrating through a review of Armstrong's touring schedule, box office and record sales, radio and film appearances, accounts from his musical collaborators and contemporaries, and critical reviews lauding his musicianship that Armstrong not only held his audiences but transcended the success of other swing era big bands by achieving notoriety beyond jazz circles. ... Enthusiasts and scholars of jazz music will find this a quick and interesting read on an important period in the artist's life.
We get Armstrong in his own words as much as possible, as well as sources that have not been commonly quoted. And Riccardi even explains where the term "Moldy Fig" came from. We all know the obvious question: when is Volume 1 of the Armstrong saga going to be written? Ricky Riccardi has produced two masterpieces relating the story of a legendary musician who changed World Music. I can't be the only one who is waiting for Ricky Riccardi to tell the rest of the Armstrong story his way. It is obvious it is such good hands.
Riccardi's Heart Full of Rhythm is the best account we have of Armstrong's vital work with big bands — the research is impeccable, the ardor contagious.
This book is an exuberant treasury of new information about one of the most significant and influential musicians of all time. Most significant here is that this careful researcher torches the cliché that Armstrong rose in a 1920s flash and then fell onto the swords of commercialism. In soaring prose, Riccardi walks you through vital musical/cultural decades while re-introducing a man we thought we knew but who was even greater.
At last! A thrilling and intimate journey through the most undervalued period of Armstrong's career! Every chapter is a revelation!
This vitally American story has been expertly told in this superlative biography — SWING THAT MUSIC indeed!
Riccardi's meticulous scholarship and his exuberance for all things Armstrong make Heart Full of Rhythm a must-read for all interested in Armstrong, jazz, and our shared cultural heritage.
Dedicated research, access to ideal sources, and fine storytelling combine to shed new light and insight on the most interesting and least well-documented period of Armstrong's fabled life. Riccardi has done it again, but even more so.
Heart Full Of Rhythm elucidates and entertains from start to finish. Each chapter ends with a tantalising hook that anticipates the next, keeping the reader engaged and focused. Like its subject, it swings!
Notă biografică
Ricky Riccardi is Director of Research Collections for the Louis Armstrong House Museum and author of What a Wonderful World: The Magic of Louis Armstrong's Later Years. He runs the online blog, "The Wonderful World of Louis Armstrong," and has given lectures on Armstrong at venues around the world, including the Institute of Jazz Studies, the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, the Bristol International Jazz and Blues Festival and the Monterey Jazz Festival. He has co-produced numerous Armstrong reissues in recent years, including Satchmo at Symphony Hall 65th Anniversary: The Complete Concert, Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong Cheek to Cheek: The Complete Duets, Pops is Tops: The Verve Studio Albums, and two volumes of Decca Singles for Universal Music, in addition to Columbia and RCA Victor Live Recordings of Louis Armstrong and the All Stars for Mosaic Records.