TY - BOOK AU - Giddins,Gary TI - Visions of jazz: the first century SN - 9780195132410 AV - ML385 .G53 1999eb U1 - 784.4165 22 PY - 1999///, ©1998 CY - New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Jazz musicians KW - Biography KW - Composers KW - Jazz KW - History and criticism KW - United States KW - Musiciens de jazz KW - États-Unis KW - Biographies KW - Histoire et critique KW - Compositeurs KW - MUSIC KW - Musical Instruments KW - General KW - bisacsh KW - BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY KW - Composers & Musicians KW - fast KW - Jazzmusiker KW - gnd KW - Biografie KW - Geschichte KW - gtt KW - Electronic books KW - collective biographies KW - aat KW - Criticism, interpretation, etc KW - lcgft KW - rvmgf N1 - pt. 1: Precursors. Bert Williams/Al Jolson (Native wits). Hank Jones/Charlie Haden (Come Sunday). Louis Armstrong/Mills Brothers (Signifying). W.C. Handy (Birth of the Blues). Irving Berlin (Ragging the Alley). Spencer Williams (The Bard of Basin Street). Ethel Waters (The mother of us all). Bunk Johnson/George Lewis (Pithcanthropus jazzmen) -- pt. 2: A new music. Jelly Roll Morton (Red hot dandy). King Oliver (Working man blues). Louis Armstrong (The once and future king). Duke Ellingtion (Part 1: The poker game). Coleman Hawkins (Patriach). Pee Wee Russell (Seer). Chick Webb (King of the Savoy). Fats Waller (Comedy tonight) -- pt. 3: A popular music. Benny Goodman (The mirror of swing). Jimmie Lunceford (For listeners, too). Count Basie/Lester Young (Westward Ho! and back). Jimmy Rushing (Swinging the Blues). Roy Eldridge (Jazz). Ella Fitzgerald (Joy). Artie Shaw (Cinderella's last stand). Budd Johnson (Chameleon). Bobby Hackett (Muzak man). Frank Sinatra (The ultimate in theater) -- pt. 4: A modern music. Duke Ellingtion (Part 2: The enlightment). Billy Strayhorn (Passion flower). Spike Jones (Chasin' the birdaphone). Charlie Parker (Flying home). Dizzy Gillispie (The coup and after). Sarah Vaughan (Divine). Thelonious Monk (Rhythm-a-ning). Bud Powell (Strictly confidential). Chico O'Farrill (North of the border). Stan Kenton (Big). Dexter Gordon (Resurgence). -- pt. 5: A mainstream music. Miles Davis (Kinds of Blues). Gerry Mulligan (Beyond cool). Art Blakey (Jazz messenger). Billie Holiday (Lady of pain). Modern Jazz Quartet (The first forty years). Nat King Cole (The comeback king). Stan Getz (Seasons). Sonny Rollins (The muse is heard). Dinah Washington (The Queen). Rahsaan Roland Kirk (One-man band). -- pt. 6: An alternative music. Art Tatum (Sui Generis). Charles Mingus (Bigger than death). Cecil Taylor (Outer curve). Ornette Coleman (This is our music). John Coltrane (Metamorphosis). Duke Ellington (Part 3: At the pulpit). Muhal Richard Abrams (Meet this composer). Roscoe Mitchell/ Marty Ehrlich (The audience). Henry Threadgill (The big top). Charles Gayle/David S. Ware/Matthew Shipp (Sweet agony) -- pt. 7: A struggling music. Hannibal Peterson (Out of Africa). Jimmy Rowles (The late hurrah). John Carter (American echoes). Dee Dee Bridgewater (Back home again). Julius Hemphill (Gotham's minstrel). Don Pullen (Last connections). Gary Bartz (The middle passage). David Murray (Profuse). Dave Burrell (Brotherly love). Abbey Lincoln (Strong wind blowing) -- pt. 8: A traditional music. Randy Weston (Afrobeats). Rosemary Clooney (Going her way). Joe Henderson (Tributes). Tommy Flanagan (Standards and practices). Joe Lovano (The long apprenticeship). Geri Allen/Jacky Terrasson (The parameters of hip). Joshua Redman (Tenor of the times). Stephen Scott (Taking time). James Carter (All of the above). Louis Armstrong/Nicholas Payton (Interpreted). Cassandra Wilson (A different songbook). Don Byron (Musically correct) N2 - Poised to become a classic of jazz literature, Visions of Jazz: The First Century offers seventy-nine chapters illuminating the lives of virtually all the major figures in jazz history. From Louis Armstrong's renegade-style trumpet playing to Sarah Vaughan's operatic crooning, and from the swinging elegance of Duke Ellington to the pioneering experiments of Ornette Coleman, jazz critic Gary Giddins continually astonishes the reader with his unparalleled insight. Writing with the grace and wit that have endeared his prose to Village Voice readers for decades, Giddins also widens the scope of ja UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=364444 ER -