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Library Journal
Famed trumpet player, jazz composer, and artistic director of Jazz at Lincoln Center, Marsalis updates his earlier To a Young Jazz Musician and explains in lay readers' terms how jazz works as a diverse musical genre and, more important, how an understanding and appreciation of jazz can enrich one's life. In engaging prose (with some profanities in a few of the quotations from musician colleagues), Marsalis and Ward (coauthor, Jazz: A History of America's Music) discuss jazz as an expression of both personal identity and American identity as well as the role of race in jazz. The narrative addresses a wide-ranging audience quite well and will appeal to musicians (jazz and otherwise), jazz aficionados, and readers who just want to know what that thing called jazz is. Including a nice mix of autobiography, musical explanations, sociology, and advocacy for jazz in a culture that, according to Marsalis, is far too focused on the least common denominator in music, this work is highly recommended for all public and academic libraries. [See Prepub Alert,LJ5/1/08.]
—James E. Perone
Overview
–Wynton Marsalis
In this beautiful book, the Pulitzer Prize-winning musician and composer Wynton ...