Jazz in the 1970s
Diverging Streams
-
- $52.99
-
- $52.99
Publisher Description
Breaking through pervasive misconceptions, Jazz in the 1970s explores a pivotal decade in jazz history. Many consider the 1970s to be the fusion decade, but Bill Shoemaker pushes back against this stereotype with a bold perspective that examines both the diverse musical innovations and cultural developments that elevated jazz internationally. He traces events that redefined jazz’s role in the broadband arts movement as well as the changing social and political landscape.
Shoemaker immerses readers in the cultural transformation of jazz through:
• official recognition with events like Jimmy Carter’s White House Jazz Picnic and the release of The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz;
• the market validation of avant-garde musicians by major record labels and the concurrent spike in artist-operated record labels and performance spaces;
• the artistic influence and economic impact of jazz festivals internationally;
• the emergence of government and foundation grant support for jazz in the United States and Europe;
• and the role of media in articulating a fast-changing scene.
Shoemaker details the lives and work of well-known innovators (such as Art Ensemble of Chicago, Anthony Braxton and Sam Rivers) as well as barrier-breaking artists based in Europe (such as Derek Bailey, Peter Brötzmann and Chris McGregor) giving both longtime fans and newcomers insights into the moments and personae that shaped a vibrant decade in jazz.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this informative, opinionated history, Shoemaker, a longtime jazz writer and critic, breaks down the 1970s by devoting each chapter of the book to a specific year. After the 1960s a decade Shoemaker hails as the genre's most pivotal jazz was at a crossroads and seeking a new identity. Although jazz in the 1970s is often associated with the word "fusion," it headed in multiple directions. Shoemaker focuses on what he believes are the decade's important albums, including saxophonist Julius Hemphill's Dogon A.D. and Art Ensemble of Chicago's Nice Guys, plus the establishment of major events such as the Montreux Jazz Festival and Jimmy Carter's one-off White House Jazz Picnic. At times, this selective history reads like a series of lengthy record reviews interspersed with DownBeat and Melody Maker reviews from the era, accompanied by overwritten prose ("Increasingly, Marsalis's subsequent recordings combine aspects of reverse engineering and discredited recapitulation theories in biology, which posits that an organism's development resembles the series of ancestral types"). That said, Shoemaker does provide insight into major and independent record labels and the impact that sampler releases such as The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz had on avant-garde and mainstream listeners. Shoemaker writes for the jazz connoisseur, and his work will disappoint mainstream readers in search of a more complete overview of this era of jazz.