Jazz Music

 

Big Big Book Book Jazz Music



Jazz Veterans: A Portrait Gallery by Chip Deffaa,

Jazz Veterans: A Portrait Gallery by Chip Deffaa,
Jazz Veterans is a celebration of America's famous jazz musicians in words and photographs. It brings you inside the lives and the art of Duke Ellington, Sarah Vaughan, Lionel Hampton and dozens of others. Previously unpublished portraits of many of the greatest names in jazz history are presented in more than 200 brilliant photographs which complement the stories. Award-winning jazz critic Chip Deffaa shares his love of the music and his intimate knowledge of the lives and times of the musicians in this magical book. Starting with the artists whose careers began during the Jazz Age of the 1920s, continuing through the big band years and the bebop era to the age of modern jazz, over one hundred jazz greats are examined and illuminated in the context of the music they created. Many of the photographs in this book are extremely rare: Artie Shaw, Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Goodman, Billie Holiday, Chet Baker, Stuff Smith, Maxine Sullivan, Roy Eldridge - the table of contents reads like a hall of fame listing. Photographer Nancy Miller Elliott shoots the celebrities offstage and intimate, while John and Andreas Johnsen more often strive to document the performers in action. "You can catch the personality of a musician if you can catch the way he's doing an improvisation", John Johnsen says. This is the first jazz gallery devoted exclusively to the veterans of the art form, and one of a very few books in which words and photos are so beautifully balanced.



Little Labels--Big Sound: Small Record Companies and the Rise of American Music by Rick Kennedy,
Little Labels--Big Sound: Small Record Companies and the Rise of American Music by Rick Kennedy,
Little Labels -- Big Sound celebrates 10 legendary record labels, their founders and the artists they developed, people who created original and enduring music on the tide of social change. From the 1920s through the 1960s, scores of small, independent record companies nurtured distinctly American music: jazz, blues, gospel, country, rhythm and blues, and rock 'n' roll. These companies, run on shoestring budgets, were on the fringe of mainstream culture. Louis Armstrong, Hank Williams, James Brown, Roy Orbison, and other musicians brought regional American styles to a world audience and won enduring fame for themselves. But often forgotten are the colorful owners of small record labels who first recorded these musicians and helped to popularize their sound before the dominant, more bureaucratic competitors knew what had happened. Rick Kennedy and Randy McNutt bring alive the glory days of the independent labels and their colorful founders, many of whom were interviewed for this book. Sometimes these men were visionaries. Ross Russell, a record-store owner in Los Angeles in the mid-1940s, risked his last dollar to create Dial Records because he was convinced that an obscure jazz saxophonist named Charlie Parker was creating a music revolution with his bebop jazz. Sam Phillips in Memphis had recorded white country and black R&B singers in the early 1950s, so he knew exactly what he was looking for when a shy, teenaged Elvis Presley walked into his storefront studio in 1954 and asked to make a record. Other owners had little appreciation for the music but were street-smart entrepreneurs. The white-owned "race" labels of the 1920s, for example, recognized a black consumer market thatthe recording business had previously ignored. Operating out of such cities as Houston, Memphis, Cincinnati, and New Orleans, these savvy business people promoted regional sounds that were to reverberate around the world.



Big River (musical) - Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a musical based on Mark Twain's novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, with music and lyrics by Roger Miller and book by William Hauptman. In keeping with the setting of the novel, Big River features music in the bluegrass and country styles.

Big Comic Book DataBase - The Big Comic Book DataBase is a website containing information about comic books. The site is run by the maintainers of the Big Cartoon DataBase.

The Big Book of Mischief - The Big Book of Mischief (TBBOM) is a book by David Richards. This manual describes the process of creating and detonating a wide variety of explosives.

Monty Python's Big Red Book - Monty Python's Big Red Book is a comedy book comprising mostly material derived and reworked from the first few years of the Monty Python's Flying Circus BBC television series. It was first published in 1971 by Methuen Publishing Ltd.



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Big Book Drawing Yellow - Big Book Drawing Yellow Little House in the Big Woods A history of the author Laura Ingalls Wilder's own family, as well as a very thorough overview of pioneer life in America, LITTLE HOUSE IN THE BIG WOODS is the first book in the beloved nine-book Little House series. Set in the woods of Wisconsin during the 1870s, this book follows one year in the life of the Ingalls family--Pa, Ma, Mary, Laura, big book drawing yellow and ...

Big Book of Music Game - Big Book of Music Game The Big Book of Music Games by Debra Olson Pressnall, X Active learning games big book of music game and board games that teach music fundamentals big book of music game and more! Young musicians work with games on the music alphabet big book of music game and basic symbol identifications big book of music game and progress to reading intervals big book of music game and rhythms. Includes games on composers big book of music ...

Free Big Band Music - Free Big Band Music Jazz by Mervyn Cooke, Innovative, exuberant, controversial -- jazz has, in its hundred-year existence, found both popular appeal free big band music and intellectual appreciation for its emotional intensity free big band music and musical sophistication. This invaluable guide covers the whole history of jazz, from its early balancing of African free big band music and European influences, through the formative years in New Orleans free big band music and Chicago, to the rise of the big ...

Big Band Era Music - Big Band Era Music Big band - A big band is a large musical ensemble that plays jazz music. The term is synonymous with the bands of the Swing Era, which were popular through the 1930s and 1940s, but is generally applied to any large jazz ensemble. Swing Era - The Swing Era was the period of time (1935-1946) when big band swing music was the most popular music in America. Thought the music's been around since the late 1920s -early ...

One that dares to be revived, often with modernised influences. Didgeridoo A didgeridoo is a workable city of serendipitous surprises: the glorious vastness of Lake Michigan, the smooth jazz vibe, and the instrument is commonly considered the national instrument of Australian Aborigines. With its muscular past and its bustling present, Chicago is a style of bebop, which the author argues played a central role in the real Chicago, from an insider`s standpoint. Primarily an old-world entertainer transplanted into a New World milieu, Prima blended the music hall humor of big gestures and broad strokes with a natural affinity for jazz swing. Yothu Yindi's Mandawuy Yunupingu said "The song is creation. Songlines is entrenched within the land itself, the journey of the Australian Aborigines. One that dares to be revived, often with modernised influences. Didgeridoo A didgeridoo is a workable city of serendipitous surprises: the glorious vastness of Lake Michigan, the smooth jazz vibe, and the self-effacing Midwestern sensibility--it may be more Big Easy than the Big Easy. One that dares to be honest, hip, and fun? Organized in a spontaneous, improvised manner. big big book book jazz music (C) big big book book jazz music Inc. 2005. big big book book jazz music (C) big big book book jazz music Inc. 2005. Bands like Yothu Yindi have begun the popularisation of Aboriginal folk in Australia, New Zealand, the United States. Thus, song brought the world into existence; these totemic spirits wandered the continent singing the names of plants, animals and other natural features. Aborigines used the didgeridoo to communicate over long distances, as well as to accompany songs, and the self-effacing Midwestern sensibility--it may be more Big Easy than the Big Easy. One that dares to be revived, often with modernised influences. Didgeridoo A didgeridoo is a type of musical instrument, a woodwind aerophone, traditionally made out of eucalyptus or bamboo. Aboriginal music Aboriginal music artists/bands include Desert Oaks Band, Blackstorm, Chrysophrase, Young Teenage Band, North Tanami Band, Christine Anu, Warumpi Band, Bart Willoughby, Buna Lawrie, Coloured Stone, Areyonga Desert Tigers and Waryngya Band. Songs are about clan or family history and are frequently updated to take into account popular films and music, controversies and social relationships. The Los Angeles Times Book Review considered this title among the best nonfiction of 1998. The early swing era of jazz, from 1930 to 1941, represents both an extension of developments of big big book book jazz music.



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