Uptown Conversation: The New Jazz Studies
by Robert G. O’Meally
Publication Date: Jun 30, 2004
List Price: $42.99
Format: Paperback, 544 pages
Classification: Nonfiction
ISBN13: 9780231123518
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Parent Company: Columbia University
Description of Uptown Conversation: The New Jazz Studies by Robert G. O’Meally
Jackson Pollock dancing to the music as he painted; Romare Bearden’s stage and costume designs for Alvin Ailey and Dianne McIntyre; Stanley Crouch stirring his high-powered essays in a room where a drumkit stands at the center: from the perspective of the new jazz studies, jazz is not only a music to define—it is a culture. In the book Uptown Conversation, the intellectual improvisations of musicians, filmmakers, painters, and poets reevaluate, reimagine, and riff on the music that has for more than a century initiated a call and response across art forms, geographies, and cultures.
Building on Robert G. O’Meally’s acclaimed Jazz Cadence of American Culture, these original essays offer new insights in jazz historiography, highlighting the political stakes in telling the story of the music and evaluating its cultural import in the United States and worldwide. Articles contemplating the music’s experimental wing—such as Salim Washington’s meditation on Charles Mingus and the avant-garde or George Lipsitz’s polemical juxtaposition of Ken Burns’s documentary Jazz and Horace Tapscott’s autobiography Songs of the Unsung—share the stage with revisionary takes on familiar figures in the canon: Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, and Louis Armstrong.
Books similiar to Uptown Conversation: The New Jazz Studies may be found in the categories below:
- History / African American & Black
- Literary Criticism / American / African American & Black
- Music / Genres & Styles / Jazz