Growing
Up with Jazz:
Twenty-Four Musicians Talk about Their Lives and Careers
W. Royal Stokes
(Oxford University Press, New York, hardback, 272 pages; 29
halftones; Mar 2005, $30.00)A jazz writer for three decades, W. Royal Stokes has a special talent for
capturing the initial spark that launches a musician's career. In Growing
Up With Jazz , he has interviewed twenty-four instrumentalists and singers
who talk candidly about the early influences that started them on the road
to jazz and where that road has taken them.
Stokes offers a kaleidoscopic look at the jazz scene, featuring musicians
from a dazzling array of backgrounds. Ray Gelato recalls the life of a
working class youth in London, Patrizia Scascitelli recounts being a child
prodigy in Rome who became the first woman of Italian jazz, and Billy
Taylor tells about his childhood in Washington, DC, where his grandfather
was a Baptist minister and his father a dentist--and everyone in the
family seemed well trained in music. Perhaps most exotic is Luluk Purwanto,
an Indonesian violinist who as a child listened to gamelan music in the
morning and took violin lessons in the afternoon (on an instrument so
expensive she didn't dare quit). For some, the flame burned bright at an
early age. Jane Monheit sang before she could speak and was set on a
musical career by age eight. Lisa Sokolov played classical piano, sang
opera and choral music, and was in a jazz band--all by high school. But
Carol Sudhalter, though born into a very musical family ("a Bix
Beiderbecke family"), was a botany major at Smith, and only became a
serious musician after college, quitting a government job to study the
flute and saxophone in Italy.
From Art Blakey to Claire Daly to Don Byron, here are the compelling
stories of two dozen top musicians finding their way in the world of jazz.
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About the Author
W. Royal Stokes has written about jazz and blues
for such publications as Down Beat, JazzTimes, and The Washington Post
and hosted the public radio shows "I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say" and
Since Minton's . He is the former editor of Jazz Notes , the quarterly
journal of the Jazz Journalists Association, and author of The Jazz Scene,
Swing Era New York , and Living the Jazz Life . He lives in Elkins, West
Virginia. |
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"Feminists around the globe should burn their bras in
support of jazz writer W. Royal Stokes. No one has been more outspoken
about the under representation of women in jazz and jazz journalism."
From a review of Royal's Growing Up With Jazz: Twenty-Four Musicians
Talk About Their Lives and Careers (Oxford University Press, 2005) by
Bridget Arnwine in Jazz Notes (Vol. 16, No. 2, June 2005), the
quarterly journal of the Jazz Journalists Association (JJA).
Click Here
for the full review. |
Click here to enter the official website of W.
Royal Stokes. |