White Jazz

Bronk

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I began really listening to jazz in my early 20s. I have never seen it mentioned on these boards although discussions of other forms of music are often bandied. if you think of Jazz as purely black music, think again.

Richard M. Sudhalter was a critic and biographer who sadly died in 2008. He was also a first-rate trumpet and cornet player who specialized in early jazz styles. He led groups in the United States and Europe and recorded widely. As a writer he made a great contrabution to the history of the art with his 1974 biography of white jazz star Bix Beiderbecke,Bix: Man & Legend. The book, co-written with Philip R. Evans and William Dean-Myatt, was hailed as a "landmark of jazz scholarship" and the "first jazz biography written to the standards" of a serious study of a classical composer or other major historical figures. The book also helped revive interest in Beiderbecke. In 2002, Sudhalter published a biography of Hoagy Carmichael, which critics called "meticulous, admiring, perceptive and informative."

But in 1999 Sudhalter shook things up with his with the 890-page book, Lost Chords: White Musicians and Their Contribution to Jazz, 1915-1945, an exhaustively researched history, which challenged the prevailing notion that jazz was exclusively a black art form. Needless to say it provoked heaps of scorn from the jazz world and beyond who labeled him "the Pat Buchanan of jazz" (which I would regard as a compliment). Critic Gerald Early wrote in the Chicago Tribune, "I fear that the length of the book may be a sign of the author's desperation(!)" At public forums, where he gamely tried to defend his work, Mr. Sudhalter was sometimes mocked and jeered.

Moral of the story: only the primitive blame the seismograph for an earthquake.
 

Rebajlo

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Bronk - The White contribution to jazz music has generally been either conveniently overlooked or comprehensively played down. The work You mentioned quite naturally met with the usual derision levelled at anything which punctures black supremacy myths. How many jazz bands were there in early 20th century Africa?
smiley36.gif
 

Bronk

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Right, Rebajlo. Blacks would need whites to develop musical instruments so they could "invent" jazz anyway.

It's interesting to see how effusive the praise was for Sudhalter before he tackled the subject of whites in jazz and how harsh the invective after he did.

Jazz was more the product of place than race.
 

Bart

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Bronk said:
Right, Rebajlo. Blacks would need whites to develop musical instruments so they could "invent" jazz anyway.

It's interesting to see how effusive the praise was for Sudhalter before he tackled the subject of whites in jazz and how harsh the invective after he did.

Jazz was more the product of place than race.

I'm glad you mentioned this man and his work. We had a few posts about the White influence on Jazz many years. I had read many chapters and passages fron his book that someone once placed on the internet, but couldn't remember his name.

He destroys the myth of blacks INVENTING jazz. The book was/is a treasure trove for historians.

Of course, his contributions had to be played down, criticised and slotted for the memory hole.
 

Solomon Kane

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Yes, this needs to be brought out. Also, the early white contribution to the blues as well--Jimmie Rodgers comes to mind. ("Gimme a T for Texas, a T for Tennessee")
 

DixieDestroyer

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SK, Jimmie Rodgers was also a big influence on country music as well.
 
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