A Biographical Guide to the Great Jazz and Pop Singers

A Biographical Guide to the Great Jazz and Pop Singers
ISBN-10
0307379892
ISBN-13
9780307379894
Category
Music
Pages
832
Language
English
Published
2010-11-02
Publisher
Pantheon
Author
Will Friedwald

Description

Will Friedwald’s illuminating, opinionated essays—provocative, funny, and personal—on the lives and careers of more than three hundred singers anatomize the work of the most important jazz and popular performers of the twentieth century. From giants like Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra, and Judy Garland to lesser-known artists like Jeri Southern and Joe Mooney, they have created a body of work that continues to please and inspire. Here is the most extensive biographical and critical survey of these singers ever written, as well as an essential guide to the Great American Songbook and those who shaped the way it has been sung. The music crosses from jazz to pop and back again, from the songs of Irving Berlin and W. C. Handy through Stephen Sondheim and beyond, bringing together straightforward jazz and pop singers (Billie Holiday, Perry Como); hybrid artists who moved among genres and combined them (Peggy Lee, Mel Tormé); the leading men and women of Broadway and Hollywood (Ethel Merman, Al Jolson); yesterday’s vaudeville and radio stars (Sophie Tucker, Eddie Cantor); and today’s cabaret artists and hit-makers (Diana Krall, Michael Bublé). Friedwald has also written extended pieces on the most representative artists of five significant genres that lie outside the songbook: Bessie Smith (blues), Mahalia Jackson (gospel), Hank Williams (country and western), Elvis Presley (rock ’n’ roll), and Bob Dylan (folk-rock). Friedwald reconsiders the personal stories and professional successes and failures of all these artists, their songs, and their performances, appraising both the singers and their music by balancing his opinions with those of fellow musicians, listeners, and critics. This magisterial reference book—ten years in the making—will delight and inform anyone with a passion for the iconic music of America, which continues to resonate throughout our popular culture.

Other editions

Similar books

  • The Great Jazz and Pop Vocal Albums
    By Will Friedwald

    In the MGM version, it's almost anticlimactic—it's perfect for a leading lady like Merman or Martin who can be funny with a funny song, but for a comedienne like Hutton, it's almost overkill. (After hearing Hutton ...

  • Jazz Singing: America's Great Voices From Bessie Smith To Bebop And Beyond
    By Will Friedwald

    The story of how jazz and blues gave birth to popular singing, examining the style of creative singers and why their music was influential.

  • Sinatra! the Song is You: A Singer's Art
    By Will Friedwald

    Drawing upon interviews with hundreds of his collaborators as well as with "The Voice" himself, this book chronicles, critiques, and celebrates his five-decade career.

  • Stardust Melodies: The Biography of Twelve of America's Most Popular Songs
    By Will Friedwald

    ... Carl Perkins and Gerald Wiggins, the remakes without Cole are surprisingly lifeless. There was just no substituting for the King. In the same vein, guitarist Mary Osborne recorded “B&S” very much in the Oscar Moore manner.

  • The Great Jazz and Pop Vocal Albums
    By Will Friedwald

    A monumental achievement, The Great Jazz and Pop Vocal Albums is an essential book for lovers of American jazz and popular music.

  • Billie Holiday: The Musician and the Myth
    By John Szwed

    But now, Billie Holiday stays close to the music, to her performance style, and to the self she created and put into print, on record and on stage.

  • Becoming Ella Fitzgerald: The Jazz Singer Who Transformed American Song
    By Judith Tick

    Interpreting long-lost setlists, reviews from both white and Black newspapers, and newly released footage and recordings, the book explores how Ella’s transcendence as an improvisor produced onstage performances every bit as significant ...

  • Straighten Up and Fly Right: The Life and Music of Nat King Cole
    By Will Friedwald

    Though “Too Young to Go Steady” was the hit (peaking at #21 in the US and #8 UK), the real winner in the long run was ... (It's credited to Dennis Farnon, part of the Canadian-English-American musical dynasty of Farnons, including also ...

  • Songbooks: The Literature of American Popular Music
    By Eric Weisbard

    Joel Dinerstein's retitling, Swinging the Machine, saw an “aesthetics of acceleration” in a line from the architect Le Corbusier: “The Negroes of the USA have breathed into jazz the song, the rhythm and the sound of machines.

  • A Touch of the Poet
    By Eugene O'Neill

    THE STORY: As told by Chapman, (NY News): The time of the play is 1828, and the setting is a tavern in a village near Boston.