The Velvet Lounge – On Late Chicago Jazz

The Velvet Lounge – On Late Chicago Jazz book cover

The Velvet Lounge – On Late Chicago Jazz

Author(s): Gerald Majer (Author)

  • Publisher: Columbia University Press
  • Publication Date: 27 Sept. 2005
  • Edition: Illustrated
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 224 pages
  • ISBN-10: 023113682X
  • ISBN-13: 9780231136822

Book Description

Troubled urban neighborhoods and jazz-club havens were the backdrop of Gerald Majer’s life growing up in sixties and seventies Chicago. The Velvet Lounge, an original hybrid of memoir, biography, and musical description, reflects this history and pursues a sustained meditation on jazz along with a probing exploration of race and class and how they defined the material and psychic divides of a city. With the instrument of a supple, lyrical prose style, Majer elaborates the book’s themes through literary and intellectual forays as carefully constructed and as passionately articulated as a jazz master’s solo. Throughout the work, issues of identity and culture, art and politics achieve a rare immediacy, as does the music itself. In portraits of Jimmy Smith, Gene Ammons, Sonny Stitt, Sun Ra, and others, Gerald Majer conveys the drama and artistry of their music as well as the personal hardships many of them endured. Vivid descriptions and telling historical anecdotes explore the music’s richness through a variety of political, social, and philosophical contexts. The Velvet Lounge, named after the famous Chicago club, is also one of the few works to consider the music of such avant-garde jazz musicians as Fred Anderson, Andrew Hill, and Roscoe Mitchell. In doing so, Majer builds a bridge from the traditionalist view of jazz to the world of contemporary innovators, casts a new light on the music and its makers, and traces connections between jazz art and postmodernist thought. Present throughout Majer’s spirited encounters with the worlds of jazz is Majer himself. We hear and appreciate the music through his individual sensibilities and experiences. Majer recounts growing up in racially divided Chicago-his trips to the famed Maxwell Street market, his wanderings among its legendary jazz clubs, his riding the El, and his working in a jukebox factory. We witness his awakening to the music at a crossroads of the intimately personal and the intellectually provocative.

Editorial Reviews

Review

Select Guide Rating

From the Inside Flap

“The Velvet Lounge is a book like none other. Part memoir, part homage, Gerald Majer’s remarkable odyssey through the world of late Chicago jazz is a haunted, vertiginous account of both the music and the lives it was made from. This is finally a book about soul no, about the soul rapt by essence and experiment. Majer writes with an exhilarating passion and a rare elegance, and his book is sure to be a classic.”

J. D. McClatchy, Editor, The Yale Review; author of Hazmat: Poems and Twenty Questions

“Gerald Majer’s propulsive, rhythmic essays celebrate the history and spirit of jazz. Like a seasoned improviser, he varies and syncopates his delivery, casting rim-shot fragments against long, slalomlike sentences pushing, probing, and staying on the run through fast-track narrative and lyric measure. The prose fluidly shifts between earthy vernacular and reflective mood swing. And yet Majer’s technical gifts as an essayist never betray or eclipse the emotional heart of these engaging, memorable meditations.”
Sascha Feinstein, author, Misterioso; editor, Brilliant Corners: A Journal of Jazz and Literature

About the Author

Gerald Majer is professor of English at Villa Julie College. His poetry and essays have appeared in a variety of journals including, Callaloo, The Georgia Review, and The Yale Review.

View on Amazon

电子书代发PDF格式价格30我要求助
未经允许不得转载:Wow! eBook » The Velvet Lounge – On Late Chicago Jazz