In a series of fictional portraits, Geoff Dyer captures the beating heart of jazz, its pathos and lyricism, urgency and self-destruction: Charlie Mingus in New York; Art Pepper in prison; Lester Young in the Alvin; Bud Powell in Paris.
'Drawing on how he hears the music of people like Mingus, Monk, bud Powell, Art Pepper and Lester Young, Dyer has constructed eight variations like highly concentrated novels, 80 per cent proof swigs of fiction. The result, I think, is brilliant…His attempts to recreate the drug-fogged, music-drenched, reality-melting, racism-crazed insides of the minds of people like Powell, Mingus, Webster and Chet Baker are unnervingly effective. So too, are his pen-portraits of their music …his long postscript on jazz today shows that he can operate as a lucid and catholic jazz critic as well' Miles Kington, INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY
- 'Swings Geoff Dyer straight into the front line of writers' THE TIMES
- 'Remarkable…there can be few books on jazz written with such tenderness and care.' Adam Lively, TLS
- 'A little gem' Keith Jarrett
- 'Immensely affecting and, for any jazz fan, absolutely essential.' IRISH TIMES
Paperback:
£7.99
Published 07/05/1998
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