Jump to content

Larry Kart's jazz book


Recommended Posts

  • Replies 475
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Yes.

It's the real deal.

It looks great and has so much stuff that I haven't seen before (the Chicago Tribune material). I'm really liking the organizational aspect - it's not just a bunch of essays, there's the grouping that helps create some meaning. I also like the fact that subjects are revisited.

I think this will be a book that will really have some influence (at least I hope it will). It's not just parrotting back the liner note conventional wisdom - there's thought here, individual thought - which is not all that common in these kinds of pieces. In paging through I find so many things that are interesting - for example, talking about Donny McCaslin in 1986!

I look forward to digging in this weekend.

Thanks Larry!

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, those threats -- in response to two different pieces from the mid-'80s, one called "The Death of Jazz" (essentially about the burgeoning jazz neo-con movement, but the title [my editor's, not mine] really freaked people out), the other a mostly negative piece about Bill Evans -- were kind of funny. At least as I recall things, it was the Evans piece that inspired much more ire. Somebody told me that pianist John Campbell (a good player) wanted a piece of me, and I was in a record store when I overheard bassist Mike Arnapol (I think he's now with Patricia Barber or was at one time) say to someone that what I'd written about Evans made him so mad that he wanted to kill me. I went up to him, introduced myself (we'd never met, but I knew who he was), and after a while we agreed to disagree. (Arnapol, while very angry, didn't strike me as a Mingus-type personality; otherwise I probably wouldn't have done that.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It was truly ridiculous. In a review that appeared in Stereo Review, I noted that I had not previously heard of the bass player on a John Handy trio (may have been a quartet) release.

Kofsky wrote a letter to my editor demanding that I be fired because not knowing that bassist proved how ignorant I was when it came to jazz. I was not fired (I left after 28 years as contributing editor), so Kofsky started bombarding the magazine with outrageous post cards in which he referred to me as "vermin." Mind you, the bassist was a local SF player who had not previously recorded, so I think my "ignorance" was understandable.

ANyway, it finally got so bad that I wrote a letter to the dean of the school where Kofsky taught, and I included copies of his hate mail. In the letter, I suggested that someone of Kofsky's mentality might not be the kind of person one would want to see teaching young people.

They must have spoken to Kofsky, perhaps even fired him, for I now began receiving death threats in the mail from him. He also wrote to various other publications that my Bessie Smith biography was pure fiction. Later, he would use that same book to substantiate a vicious attack on John Hammond!

When I discovered that, on the internet, I dropped him a letter, but he was already dead.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I looked for the review on my archive hard disk, but only found one Handy piece (the wrong one). This means having to go through a couple of decades of the magazine! As I am already doing this, little by very little, it will eventually pop up. The easier way would be to find the correspondence with Kofsky--it's around, somewhere in an un-filed pile!

Anyway, sorry that I can't recall his name.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Alankin: Sorry, no index. As I recall, I was looking forward to doing (or trying to do) that

myself (because that was the only way I could be sure it would be done right, and also because I thought it might be fun) but Yale strongly "suggested" that they didn't think the book needed an index -- I think, but I'm not sure, because it would have added too many pages to a book that was at the upper edge of the number of pages it could be and still stand a chance of being profitable from the publisher's perspective. Economies of scale are a big deal for them. For instance, the manuscript had the dedication (to my son) on a separate page, but they moved it to the top of the copyright and credits page to save a page. Perhaps in all this the need to avoid another signature was what was at stake. Looking at the finished book, the lack of an index doesn't bother me now, but then I know what's in the book.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Here's a thought - how about an online index?"

Let me think about that. Time and/or timing might be a problem for two reasons. First, I'm concentrating right now on figuring out what I need to do to support the book from a promotion/sales perspective (if in fact it turns out I can do any of those things and still be me); second, I've got an illness in the family situation (my 92-year-old father) that takes up a lot of time and can explode into urgent action status at any moment. On the other hand, putting together a comprehensive index might be just the right sort of relief from all that. I'll go to the library today and find something on how to do an index (of course I know how a good one works or should, but there must be handy tricks and short cuts).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...