Barney, Bradley, and Max: Sixteen Portraits in Jazz

$18.95
by Whitney Balliett

Shop Now
Whitney Balliett, jazz critic for The New Yorker for more than 30 years, is one of America's foremost jazz writers. "The most literate and knowledgeable living writer on jazz," Alistair Cooke called him, and Robert Dawidoff has written, "few people write as well about anything as Balliett writes about jazz." Two previous collections, American Musicians and American Singers , which gathered, respectively, Balliett's New Yorker profiles of jazz instrumentalists, and his essays about jazz singers, were widely acclaimed. This new book, intended as a supplement to American Musicians , offers sixteen additional profiles--seven of which have never appeared in book form before. (The article on clarinettist Buddy De Franco has never been printed anywhere. The eight previously published works have been culled from long-out-of-print books.) As Balliett tells us in an introductory note, the book is structured to take us "from the edges of jazz to its heart." Beginning with a profile of the jazz fan Jean Bach, who calls herself "the first jazz groupie," he continues with club owners Max Gordon (The Village Vanguard), Barney Josephson (Cafe Society), and Bradley Cunningham (Bradley's), and finally introduces us to such virtuoso jazz musicians as Benny Goodman and Charlie "Bird" Parker. In between are thoughtful pieces about pianists Claude Thornhill, Mel Powell, and George Shearing; trumpet player Ruby Braff; and more. All the classic Balliett touches are here: his sensitivity to the nuances of both music and personality, his ability to describe the subtleties of tone and rhythm, and, of course, the lyric quality of his own writing. Here is his report of Jimmy Rowles' warm-up routine: "In one motion, he sat down, leaned over, poised his fingers a second over the keyboard, and sank into a very slow 'Mood Indigo.' He moved in a gentle, circular fashion, as if he were leafing through a stamp album, and he punctuated his felicitous phrases by pointing his right toe at the ceiling." Balliett fans and jazz aficionados, as well as lovers of good writing will welcome this new collection by the man the late Philip Larkin said "brings jazz journalism to the verge of poetry." A companion to Balliett's 1986 American Musicians: 56 Portraits in Jazz ( LJ 12/86), this includes exactly what the subtitle says. As did the 56 , these profiles originally appeared in the author's jazz column in The New Yorker . American Musicians made LJ 's best books list of 1986. If you liked that, you'll like this.-- MR Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc. "Few people write as well about anything as Balliett writes about jazz. Balliett tells informative, stirring, poignant, funny, acute and respectful stories of the people who make a magnificent music."--The Los Angeles Times Book Review"Whitney Balliett is, without a rival in sight, the most literate and knowledgeable living writer on jazz."--Alistair Cook"One reads Whitney Balliett's jazz criticism...for the graceful dapple of the sentences. Few writers are better able to communicate the joys of jazz. He is a pleasure to read."--The Philadelphia Inquirer"A good jazz accompanist is hard to find. Whitney Balliett is his critical counterpart."--Time"Balliett's improvisations make their own compelling music."Jazz"Balliett has a good eye for the subjects that are most important and interesting...His essays are a model of music-writing."--The Washington Post About the Author : Whitney Balliett has been jazz critic for The New Yorker since 1957.

Customer Reviews

No ratings. Be the first to rate

 customer ratings


How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.

Review This Product

Share your thoughts with other customers