W. Royal Stokes Living the Jazz Life Reviews

Watch this item
3.5 stars
Average rating for this product is: 3.5 out of 5

From 0 ratings and 1 review

Thumb up 100% of users recommend this product

Rate it Now:

Click on the stars above to rate this product:

Tweet This Item

Average Ratings for W. Royal Stokes Living the Jazz Life

  • Value for Money4 stars
  • Overall rating3.5 stars

 

1 Review For W. Royal Stokes Living the Jazz Life

  • jfderry Rank: Major-General 30th Aug 2006

    Reviewer rating: 3.5 stars


    jfderry's review has yet to be rated - Be the first!

    Report this review



    Living the Jazz Life - Conversations with Forty Musicians About Their Careers in Jazz
    W. Royal Stokes


    No music is as individual as jazz. And no writer is as deft at bringing out what is individual in each jazz artist as W. Royal Stokes. As a reviewer, feature writer, public radio host, and author, Stokes has spent three decades covering the jazz scene. Now he draws on that rich store of knowledge and friendship to introduce us to the jazz life.


    Living The Jazz Life is less informative than some. This is surprising given the book's title and opening claim to reveal details from the lives of jazz musicians. Its two main problems are the comparitive anonymity of the modern-day musicians (e.g., Diana Krall and John Stubblefield) engaged in pillow talk with W. Royal Stokes between the covers, but also the lack of prudent editing that should have made the musicians' stories more tractable to the mortal reader. Instead, lengthy directionless personal histories fill page after page in a literal memory dump before the next entrant steps up to the bar to bend the bartender's ear. What could have been an insightful cross-referencing of shared origins, influences and experiences is left to the reader to pick themes from separate tales. The only concession to order is the bulking of players of the same instrument under the same chapter headings.
    BUT, all is not lost, because armed with the Biographical Encyclopedia and humored by Jazz Anecdotes, this third book does provide a useful if not readily accessible portal to contemporary jazz musicians thereby filling a niche not fully plugged by the other tomes.