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Jazz Visions: Lennie Tristano And His Legacy (Popular Music History) (Popular Music History)

Jazz Visions: Lennie Tristano And His Legacy (Popular Music History) (Popular Music History)
Author: Peter Ind
Publisher: Equinox Publishing (UK)
Category: Book

List Price: $29.95
Buy New: $27.90
You Save: $2.05 (7%)



New (12) Used (6) from $27.90

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 1213484

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 192
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6 x 0.8

ISBN: 1845530454
Dewey Decimal Number: 786.2165092
EAN: 9781845530457
ASIN: 1845530454

Publication Date: September 30, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Jazz Visions: Lennie Tristano and His Legacy (Popular Music History)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Lennie Tristano was one of jazzs most extraordinary innovators, possessing a superb piano technique and an awesome musical imagination. Unheralded by the general public, the blind pianists work was revered by many jazz greats including the legendary Charlie Parker. Tristanos persuasive personality made him an ideal teacher, and he proved that (against the accepted theory of the time) jazz improvisation could be taught. His guidance played a big part in the development of many instrumentalists including saxophonists Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh and double-bassist Peter Ind. It is Inds long, direct involvement with his subject that makes this such a revealing book: the story of an English musician going to New York to study with a neglected Jazz giant. In the process, Tristano's genius is examined and his reputation revalued, with Ind making a persuasive case for the pianist to be placed at the centre of jazz developments in the mid-20th century.

Contents
Preface

Part I
Lennie: The Man and His Music

1. My Early Contact with Jazz the Sounds of Lennie Tristano and of Charlie Parker (Bird)
2. My Early Experiences of New York Jazz
3. Living in New York Working with Lennie in the Early Days
4. Other Influences on Jazz Musicians and Artists During the Fifties
5. Lennie and the Changes in Jazz from the Fifties
6. Lennies Influence and What Happened to His Associates from Those Fifties Days
7. A Reflection on Lennie as I Knew Him the Man and Musician

Part II
Lennie: A More Technical Consideration of Jazz Improvisation and His Legacy

8. What Do We Mean by Jazz?
9. Appreciating Jazz Improvisation
10. The Technical Base of Jazz and Lennies Approach

Part III
A Reconsideration of Lennies Legacy

11. Mythmaking About Lennie
12. Lennie Tristano and the Enigma of Non-recognition
13. Mythmaking and Prejudices in Jazz
14. Reappraisal

! Bibliography
Select Discography
Index



Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Interesting Read   July 6, 2006
 5 out of 6 found this review helpful


I believe this book gets 4 out of 5 stars simply due to the dearth of material on Tristano. Ind begins well, providing a general idea of the atmosphere in New York in the immediate post-war era, and his descriptions of himself as a wide-eyed youngster amidst all the great jazzmen who worked in New York in the late 40s and 50s makes for especially good reading. If you enjoy hearing an older person reminisce, you'll love the first few chapters. However, Ind devotes most of chapter 4 to the bizarre ideas on psychiatry of Wilhelm Reich, making Ind appear more as an annoying know-it-all bright college kid instead of an seasoned jazz man whose subtitle to Jazz Visions is "Lennie Tristano and his Legacy." I am unable to discern how Reich's ideas affected Tristano, or what they even mean, but I take him at his word that they did.

Ind does an excellent job of providing the reader a glimpse into the playful and nurturing sides of Tristano, something that I never knew, and it is clear that he holds Tristano in the highest esteem. Ind continually drives home the point that Tristano's main legacy remains his relentless promotion of the skill of improvisation. Chapter 6 may well be the best chapter, as Ind provides mini-biographies of Tristano's disciples. One can sense a bit of sadness, as Ind relates that many of those men are now dying off.

Other chapters discuss some of the more technical aspects of Tristano's skills and of jazz in general. Ind veers off course quite a bit when he spends way too much time lamenting the struggles that artists endure. He especially bemoans Tristano's lack of popularity. Such complaining gets old. Artists have always struggled for respectability, and we all know that it is rarely the most talented (in any profession) who enjoy fame and fortune. The worst aspect of Ind's writing is when he--ironically enough, it seems--improvises on social and political issues. He has lived in and made music in two of the most liberal countries in the world, yet cannot seem to understand that the demise of jazz as a form of popular music goes hand-in-hand with increasingly liberal societies. He drops a whopper on page 177 when, in a rather disjointed discussion about race relations, he makes it known that Pennsylvania is "well north of the Mason-Dixon Line." The Mason-Dixon Line makes up Pennsylvania's southeastern border. Moreover, having lived and worked in New York City for many years, he ought to admit that it is the most racially divided city in the US--and maybe the world--before he knocks other regions of the country.

Ind's writing style is fluid and he tells a good story. However, he cannot resist bowing to the gods of political correctness as he routinely subjects the reader to various forms of feminist gender-speak: "he or she," "his or her," and even "s/he"(!) frankly make me glad the book is only 214 pages.

I was disappointed with his "Select Discography." Given the relatively meager output of Tristano, it would not confuse the reader to have all of Tristano's works listed. He even missed the reissue of "Plectrist" from Billy Bauer, a serious oversight.

The last chapter of the book is devoted to summarizing the previous chapters, and it is an admirable effort. If you like Tristano or want to get to know him, this is an important book.



5 out of 5 stars A Jazz visionary   March 21, 2006
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Wonderful book, well researched and much from a personal perspective. People either love Lennie Tristano or hate him; very little in between. Perhaps this book will help people understand. Should be in any Jazz lovers collection.

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