The Rushing
Manbaby and the Crooked Road to the Big Time
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
"The tough sub-culture of drugs and the 60s and the jazz experience.
And now it flows, the trickle of conscious participation as rivers flow to the cold pristine mix of the sea, and as the earth bleeds openly for brother and son, so goes the madness, so goes the war un-won, so goes the man undone, and so goes the Rushing.
The love of life propelled by music and the mounting struggle with self control and addiction, the inner conflict of the heart and the tempting pangs of oblivion.
Into the catacombs, the dark desperation of the heroin addict, Louis Parker, assailed by a power beyond his control never lost site of his dream, believing that no matter what he would somehow find his way, find the path that would lead him back to the music and playing jazz.
The inspiring story of the tough underground of drugs and jazz music in the 60s and the Crooked Road to the Big Time. Through the depths of heroin addiction and jazz music one man made it back and survived. Find out how he did it.
Book Review
Drug addiction afflicted many creative artists in the 1960s, a decade fraught with violence and unrest. A fertile period for immense talent to grow and a time of intellectual pondering and forceful criticism of established institutions, this difficult point in our history bridged the gap between conservative convention centered on old-fashioned traditions and liberal experimentation to ease the pain of perceived mistakes at home and abroad. The greatest innovators, especially in the fine arts, fell into a pattern of substance abuse, and some lost their lives. No profession was hit harder than the music industry.
From the tiniest nightclubs to the largest entertainment venues, dangerous mind-altering drugs changed the lives of those who lived through their harrowing ordeal. The Rushing is the gritty, down-to-earth story of Louis Parker, a jazz musician battling heroin addiction. Set in northern California, this gripping tale is an account of his personal and professional experiences, the ups and downs of winning and losing his fight, seeking rehabilitation and then succumbing to the temptation of that rush once again. Presented in a confessional style, this well-executed, first-person novel is a confidential, behind-the-scenes look at a gifted mans struggle to overcome his life-threatening fixation.
Don Alberts based this mesmerizing story on the time he played piano at Bop City in San Francisco during the 1960s. While employed by Jimbo Edwards, Alberts stayed up until dawn immersed in the jazz night life. The startling realism found in The Rushing can be attributed tothis period, which also inspired A Diary of the Underdogs: Jazz in the 1960s in San Francisco, a social and historical work with interviews. He studied with concert pianist Thomas Ryan, majoring in music composition and English at San Jose State College. A musician throughout his life, Alberts wrote ten volumes of original jazz compositions, five of which won awards from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers. Hes taught at the Jazz School in Berkeley and continues to play at clubs in San Francisco. Along with six CDs he recorded with his own groups, hes written fiction and poetry.
Straightforward and meticulous, Alberts details the procedures, the sensations, even the tastes and the odors that pervade the world of Louis Parker and his addicted companions, drawing the reader into this frightening realm. He leaves nothing to the imagination in his blow-by-blow description of the brutal episodes of withdrawal, overdose, and fatality, where staying alive is a fight.
Julia Ann Charpentier
ForeWord Clarion Review