Neue Bücher / New Books 2006
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Hier stellen wir Neuerscheinungen vor, die im laufenden Jahr im Jazzinstitut eingetroffen sind. Wir erhalten regelmäßig Buchveröffentlichungen von Autoren und Verlagen und werden in Zukunft alle bei uns eingehenden Veröffentlichungen hier kurz vorstellen. Wenn Sie Ihr Buch auf dieser Seite vorgestellt sehen möchten, senden Sie bitte ein Exemplar an die untenstehende Adresse. This page lists new books received by the Jazzinstitut. We regularly receive new books and publications from authors and publishers which we will introduce on this page.If you want your book listed here, please send one copy to the address below. Jazzinstitut Darmstadt, Bessunger Strasse 88d, D-64285 Darmstadt, Germany, e-mail: jazz@jazzinstitut.de
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Una vita in quattro quarti. Incontri, vicende, testimonianze e aneddoti di un'esistenza tendenzialmente jazzistica
In der Buchreihe der Stiftung sind nun die Lebenserinnerungen des in Mailand geborenen Journalisten und Jazzsammlers Giuseppe Barazzetta erschienen. Er berichtet von seinem eigenen Weg zum Jazz, von den Begegnungen mit vor allem amerikanischen Jazzgrößen, etwa Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington oder Benny Goodman, aber auch mit Charles Mingus, Tony Scott, Lee Konitz und Bill Dixon. Anekdoten und persönliche Erlebnisse mit seinen Helden nehmen den größten Teil des Buchs ein, das mit vielen meist unveröffentlichten Fotos bebildert ist. Mittendrin findet sich außerdem ein ganz besonderer Fund, der mittlerweile auch im Web nachlesbar ist: Ein Brief von Charles Mingus an Barazzetta, in dem dieser von Mingus gebeten wird, doch als sein Agent tätig zu werden, weil er amerikanischen Agenten nicht mehr traue. In dem dreiseitigen Brief wettert Mingus gegen das amerikanische Musikgeschäft, das aus augenscheinlichen Gründen jeden Respekt vor den Künstlern vermissen lasse. Für italienischkundige Leser eine interessante Lektüre, die zugleich einen Einblick in die italienische Jazzrezeption der Nachkriegszeit erlaubt. Wolfram Knauer (April 2012) |
Sibylle
Zerr: Blues für einen Schmetterling. Begegnungen in New Orleans
In spring 2005 Sibylle Zerr made a trip to New Orleans as cultural ambassador of the Weinheim, Germany, based Muddy's Club. Her main objective was to attend the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, but she came back with a bag full of stories. One of them is how she nearly had to return home because the immigration officers don't take it lightly if you check the wrong box on your immigration form. In her book, Zerr tells of blues and jazz and of Mardi Gras Indians, of people like the trombonist Troy Andrews or the guitarist Larry Garner. She talks to Irvin Mayfield about what jazz means to New Orleans today (in 2004); and Michael Rae tells her about the manifold traditions of New Orleans – music, food and voodoo. After an extensive talk with Allen Toussaint there is the epilogue of her book, a reflection upon August 29th, 2005 when Hurricane Katrina hit the Mississippi metropolis with all its force, killing more than a thousand people and making hundreds of thousands homeless. The aftermath of Katrina can still be felt, even one year after the catastrophy, the future for the birthplace of jazz seems uncertain. Many color photographs show the city far from the glamour for day tourists. Sibylle Zerr has fallen in love with the city during her visit, and her book shares a very personal feeling, lets us in with eyes looking at bizarre details, the daily life of people who have to live with the history of their city. (Wolfram Knauer) Zu beziehen über den Buchhandel oder über www.sibylle-zerr.de |
Where
are we landed here ...?
Ten years Traumzeit festival – an anniversary which can be celebrated in different ways. With music, of course, or with memories. Many of such memories can be found in this small-sized, finely designed hardcover book in CD format containing photographs of Volker Beuxhausen catching the atmosphere of the Dusiburg festival. We see the audience as well as the artists – on stage or, posing as themselves, off-stage. It's a colorful collection mirroring the stylistic openness of the festival: jazz musicians and folk artists and everone else between jazz, blues, world or advanced pop music. The book's title is a quote from the French chansonette Juliette Gréco who stepped out of the bus, saw the industrial architecture of Duisburg and was kind of irritated by the whole atmosphere of the festival. Soon she noticed how professional everybody involved was, and she also noticed that "Traumzeit" meant just that (a "dream time") for her audience. People keep talking about industrial culture ("Industriekultur"), perhaps because for a long time nobody knew what to do with the buildings no longer needed in our present world. One tends to be fascinated by the strange beauty of the architecture but could not open another museum for industrial culture in each of these buildings. Duisburg created a festival out of it which compares to none, in its atmosphere just as well as in its quality. This anniversary book tells of the excitement during the concerts, the unusual location, it also lets you see how touched the artists seem to have been by the unusual setting. It's worth leafing through even for those who did not attend the concerts. You can discover a lot: Ruben Gonzalez, Bojan Z, Jan Garbarek, Dr. John, Chick Corea, Al Jarreau, the Mard Gras BB, Archie Shepp, Cassandra Wilson, Louis Sclavis, Herbie Hancock, Toots Thielemans, Wayne Shorter, Omar Sosa, Miriam Makeba, Rabih Abou-Khalil, Joachim Kühn, McCoy Tyner and so many others – in beautiful photographs that make you feel sad you were not present. Or they make you feel happy because you were present. Happy birthday, Traumzeit... (Wolfram Knauer) [Link: Traumzeit-Festival] |
That Jazz
of Praha
[Link zum Verlag: Vitalis Verlag] Among the countries of the former Eastern block two can be singled out as special jazz enclaves: Poland and former Czechoslovakia. In the 1960s, Prague developed a lively, even political jazz scene; members of its "jazz section" in 1968 even became aim of open state repression. At the same time Prague (just like Warsaw) became a Mecca for jazz fans for instance from East Germany as the way the jazz tradition and the country's own national jazz voice experienced noticeably more freedom than in the German Democratic Republic. The book of the four authors does not just present Prague's jazz history, though, but also the presence of jazz in the Czech Republic today, especially in its capital. It introduces fourteen jazz musicians in photographical portraits, essays and interviews. They tell about their own life and their musical aesthetics, their influences and current projects, about the life in Prague and the possibilities of working and playing there. The photographs of Christian Gerber show the artists in portrait studies or working, on stage or in the rehearsal room. Some of them are reflective scenes, others concentrated pictures, black and white, some of them spread over two pages. A book inviting its readers to browse, a nice source of information about jazz in our neighboring country, about a scene which became famous for being special. (Wolfram Knauer) |
Rainer Thieme:
Klaus Doldinger certainly is one of the important figures of German jazz. His way leads from dixieland clarinetist to fusion avantgardist, party musician (under his pseudonym Paul Nero) and successful film and TV composer. A biography documenting his multifaceted and successful career is still missing, this discography by Rainer Thieme has now been issued in its second edition. It is sorted chronologically and contains scans of the record covers (which might have been better in print quality). Solid discographical information: record titles, track titles, place and date of recording, personnel, reissues, notes. If known Thieme gives the names of the producer, studio or live location. No preface, in his short final notes Thieme refers to many so far unreleased recordings, for instance from the NDR Jazzworkshop series. If you think of all the available "complete" jazz discographies (Walter Bruyninckx, Tom Lord) one suggestion to the compilers of "small" discographies such as this might be to include data not included in their big brothers: composers credits, the length of the single tracks, matrix numbers, for instance. And, as sympathetic as the sober presentation of facts may seem, a preface introducing the subject of the discography would have been most welcome. Thieme's discography definitely is a standard reference work for Klaus Doldinger fans and collectors. (Wolfram Knauer) |
The Sound
of Squirrel Meals. The Work of Lol Coxhill
Coxhill, born in 1932, started semi-professional playing tenor saxophone in mainstream and modern bands. The "New Musical Express" called him the "Thelonious Rollins of British jazz" in 1954. In the 1960s he toured with blues and rhythm 'n' blues artists, and even Jimi Hendrix turned up to jam with him on one of his gigs. In the late 1960s he turned to soprano saxophone as his main instrument. In 1969 Coxhill partook in the free Jazz Music Workshop in Berlin, organised by the FMP record label, performed with the avantgarde rock/jazz/improvised music band Henry Cow occasionally and recorded with Pierre Courbois and Jasper van't Hof. He also worked with John Stevens' Spontaneuous Music Ensemble and Mike Westbrook's Brass Band and joined Chris McGregor's Brotherhood of Brass for various concerts. Since then, his activities always were on the axperimental side, but hard to classify between the realms of jazz, avant-rock, contemporary improvisation or whatever you might call it. Barbara Schwarz has compilated several essays on and interviews with Coxhill, some of them from hard to obtain out-of-print magazines. A biography from the beginnings until the present starts the book. A chronology lists his recordings from 1964 to 2005. The discography itself, then, gives all relevant information: personnel, track titles, track length, original release as well as re-issues over the years. Each entry is followed by descriptive text, annotations by Schwarz, excerpts from the original sleeve notes, comments by Coxhill himself. This may be the most fun part of the book, being able to get a glimpse of Coxhill's present-day reflections on his own music. The discography is sorted not chronologically but alphabetically by the band names or the band leaders' names. A special chapter is dedicated to film, TV and video performances from the early 1960s until today. A bibliography and a name index rounds up this book which will provide every fan of Coxhill's music with myriads of information and can make anybody else curious for his music. The book can be ordered directly from the editor herself: blackpress, Osterstrasse 52, D-20259 Hamburg, e-mail: schwarz.blackpress@gmail.com |
Der Österreicher Günther Wehinger hat mit James Newton und Anthony Brown studiert und ist Flötist und Dozent an den Musikhochschulen in Basel, Bern und Zürich. Mit seinem ansprechend gestalteten kleinen Büchlein legt er eine kurze Geschichte des Jazz vor, in dem die Entwicklung der Musik von Afrika über die erste Akkulturation in Spirituals, Worksongs und Balladen, den Blues, die Musikkultur in New Orleans, Chicago, New York und Kansas City, den Swing, Bebop, Cool Jazz, Hardbop bis zum Free Jazz verfolgt wird, mit noch kürzeren Ausblicken auf die Fusion und den JazzRock der 1970er Jahre. Nichts, was man nicht auch anderswo lesen könnte, und in der Kürze, die Wehinger sich selbst auferlegt hat, liegt vielleicht auch die Oberflächlichkeit begründet, mit der er die einzelnen Teilkapitel abhandeln muss. Auf die Musik geht er dabei kaum ein, gibt höchstens biographische Stichworte und nur selten zusammenfassende Stilbeschreibungen. Europäische Musiker werden gerade mal als größte Anhänger des Free Jazz genannt; ansonsten kommen sie nicht vor -- nicht einmal Django Reinhardt, den ansonsten keine Jazzgeschichte versäumt zu erwähnen. Das Buch mag vor allem als Einführung für gänzlich Unbewanderte in Jazzsachen dienen, für jeden, der sich bereits intensiver mit der Musik auseinandergesetzt hat, wäre eine weniger klischeebeladene Darstellung wohl sinnvoller. Und neben der Auswahl an Literatur, die dem Autor beim Verfassen gedient hat, wäre ein, wenn auch subjektiver Hinweis auf wichtige Aufnahmen wünschenswert. (Wolfram Knauer) |
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