Title | : | Jellys Blues: The Life, Music, and Redemption of Jelly Roll Morton |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0306813505 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780306813504 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 320 |
Publication | : | First published January 1, 2003 |
Jellys Blues: The Life, Music, and Redemption of Jelly Roll Morton Reviews
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Biography of Morton that utilized a lot of new material from William Russell's Morton archives. In a large sense, Jelly's Blues was conceived as a corrective to the Alan Lomax book on Jelly Roll. I've not read the Lomax book, but he is often criticized for trying to make his african american sources fit his own stereotypes about their lives and for focussing on the non-musical parts of their lives. The Lomax book was drawn from his recorded conversations with morton at the Library of Congress; however, Lomax conducted these interviews with little real knowledge about the origins of jazz or the history of New Orleans at that time. So the interviews are both very valuable primary sources, but also limited by Lomax's own limitations.
Anyways, Lomax's book was published in 1950, since then a lot of material has come to light that wasn't available at that time. Reich and Gaines are able to document things that Morton said in the Lomax interviews that were long dismissed as exagerations.
Jelly's Blues is structured into two sections--the first looks at his rise, the second at his downfall. I am no Morton expert, but I don't know how well I think the first part of the book does at portraying Morton's early years. Whatever weaknesses of the first part, though, the real strength of the book is in its portrayal of Morton's downfall. The book shows how Morton was swindeled by the publisher Walter Melrose and, later ASCAP. In fact, I had no idea how horrible ASCAP had been and how incredibly racist it was until Feds began investigating. So the second part is well-done but very very sad.
It is just incredible--as swing music is on the rise, Morton can turn on the radio and come across some big band version of his song, King Porter's Stomp...and he was not seeing a dime from that. Yes, Morton was a difficult person, but sheesh what a fucking maddening situation--to be in desperate poverty while plenty of people are profiting off of your work.
One weakness of the book is that in attempting to redeem Morton, I think the authors err a bit in the other direction. Obviously, Morton had plenty of reason to be cranky, but I still don't think the authors do a good job of getting at his tendency to be a difficult person who often alienated people.
Overall--a very good chronicle of Jelly Roll's downfall, which makes for a very sad story. -
Excellent, well-researched book about one of the best composers of American music. Reich succeeds in depicting Morton as a human being (in many senses a wronged unfairly treated human being) rather than as a myth or larger than life legend. Knowing the struggles of Morton (many of which were of his own making) provides only more meaning to his compositions
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Read the first half, skimmed the second half. It's repetitive.
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Great biography of a true innovator. I'm assuming his story is not unique. A Creole man from New Orleans creates an American art form, and never, ever got the recognition so duly deserved. Between a racist society, a cut throat industry, and music publishers seeking to get rich of the mans vision and talent. Morton never gained the fame he deserved until long after his death. Morton kept trying when most men would have given up. I really admire the man even more.