Kansas City Jazz
Title | Kansas City Jazz PDF eBook |
Author | Frank Driggs |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, USA |
Total Pages | 324 |
Release | 2006 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780195307122 |
Ranging from ragtime to bebop and from Bennie Moten to Charlie Parker, this work aims to capture the golden age of Kansas City jazz. It showcases the lives of the great musicians who made Kansas City swing, with profiles of jazz figures such as Mary Lou Williams, Big Joe Turner, and others.
Kansas City Jazz
Title | Kansas City Jazz PDF eBook |
Author | Frank Driggs |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, USA |
Total Pages | 321 |
Release | 2006 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0195307127 |
Ranging from ragtime to bebop and from Bennie Moten to Charlie Parker, this work aims to capture the golden age of Kansas City jazz. It showcases the lives of the great musicians who made Kansas City swing, with profiles of jazz figures such as Mary Lou Williams, Big Joe Turner, and others.
Jazz Style in Kansas City and the Southwest
Title | Jazz Style in Kansas City and the Southwest PDF eBook |
Author | Ross Russell |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Total Pages | 348 |
Release | 1971 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 9780520018532 |
From the twenties through the forties, Kansas City was the jazz city. Lester Young, Jack Teagarden, Count Basie, Ben Webster, Charlie Christian, Mary Lou Williams, and Charlie Parker are just a few of the jazz luminaries discussed in Jazz Style in Kansas City and the Southwest, the essential account of the evolution of the Kansas City style from its ragtime roots to the birth of bebop. Book jacket.
Beneath Missouri Skies
Title | Beneath Missouri Skies PDF eBook |
Author | Carolyn Glenn Brewer |
Publisher | University of North Texas Press |
Total Pages | 305 |
Release | 2021-05-15 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 1574418319 |
The New Yorker recently referred to Pat Metheny as “possibly the most influential jazz guitarist of the past five decades.” A native of Lee’s Summit, Missouri, just southeast of Kansas City, Metheny started playing in pizza parlors at age fourteen. By the time he graduated from high school he was the first-call guitarist for Kansas City jazz clubs, private clubs, and jazz festivals. Now 66, he attributes his early success to the local musical environment he was brought up in and the players and teachers who nurtured his talent and welcomed him into the jazz community. Metheny's twenty Grammys in ten categories speak to his versatility and popularity. Despite five decades of interviews, none have conveyed in detail his stories about his teenage years. Beneath Missouri Skies also reveals important details about jazz in Kansas City during the sixties and early seventies, often overlooked in histories of Kansas City jazz. Yet this time of cultural change was characterized by an outstanding level of musicianship. Author Carolyn Glenn Brewer shows how his keen sense of ensemble had its genesis in his school band under the guidance of a beloved band director. Drawn from news accounts, archival material, interviews, and remembrances, to which the author had unique access, Beneath Missouri Skies portrays a place and time from which Metheny still draws inspiration and strength.
Kansas City-- and All That's Jazz
Title | Kansas City-- and All That's Jazz PDF eBook |
Author | Kansas City Jazz Museum |
Publisher | Andrews McMeel Publishing |
Total Pages | 136 |
Release | 1999 |
Genre | History |
ISBN |
The Kansas City Jazz Museum traces the evolution of jazz music in America, from the early 1920s to the present day, focusing on the contributions of such Kansas City-based musicians as Count Basie, Charlie Parker, Lester Young, and other jazz greats.
Queering Kansas City Jazz
Title | Queering Kansas City Jazz PDF eBook |
Author | Amber R. Clifford-Napoleone |
Publisher | University of Nebraska Press |
Total Pages | 233 |
Release | 2018-11-01 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0803262914 |
The Jazz Age, a phenomenon that shaped American leisure culture in the early twentieth century, coincided with the growth of Kansas City, Missouri, from frontier town to metropolitan city. Though Kansas City’s music, culture, and stars are well covered, Queering Kansas City Jazz supplements the grand narrative of jazz history by including queer identities in the city’s history while framing the jazz-scene experience in terms of identity and space. Cabarets, gender impressionism clubs, and sites of sex tourism in Kansas City served as world-making spaces for those whose performance of identity transgressed hegemonic notions of gender, sexuality, race, and class. Amber R. Clifford-Napoleone takes an interdisciplinary approach to provide a critical deconstruction of how the jazz scene offered a space for nonnormative gender practice and performance and acted as a site of contested identity and spatial territory. Few books examine the changing ideas about gender in the turn-of-the-century Great Plains, under the false assumption that people in middle-American places experienced cultural shifts only as an aftershock of events on the coasts. This approach overlooks the region’s contested territories, identities, and memories and fails to adequately explain the social and cultural disruptions experienced on the plains. Clifford-Napoleone rectifies this oversight and shows how Kansas City represents the complexity of the jazz scene in America as a microcosm of all the other people who made the culture, clubs, music, and cabarets of the age possible.
Goin' to Kansas City
Title | Goin' to Kansas City PDF eBook |
Author | Nathan W. Pearson |
Publisher | University of Illinois Press |
Total Pages | 322 |
Release | 1987 |
Genre | Jazz |
ISBN | 9780252064388 |
"A big juicy wedge of jazz history. . . . Lots of wonderful stories." -- Los Angeles Daily News "Kansas City was a hub for Jazz bands that crisscrossed the country in the 1930s. . . . The interviews go beyond jazz into the infamous political machinery that made Kansas City a wide-open and corrupt town where jazz could flourish." -- Choice "A wealth of stories, a good measure of entertainment and a valuable stab at history -- not to mention some great pictures." -- The Kansas City Star