4 424 résultats
197172399Michael Joseph 1971 In-4 broché. Bon état d’occasion.
20002502170122xbvkLondon, late 1990s/early 2000s. Ca. 18,3 x 21,5 cm.
1949List3677New York City: Edwards Music Co. and others 1949. Ten pieces of sheet music see full inventory below. Overall Near Fine. A representative group of sheet music publications by Willie “The Lion†Smith one of the defining architects of Harlem stride piano and a central transitional figure between ragtime-era keyboard traditions and modern jazz performance. Active in New York during the formative decades of twentieth-century jazz Smith developed a powerful pianistic approach combining rhythmic authority harmonic sophistication and improvisational independence becoming widely regarded as a “musician’s musician†and an influential mentor to figures including Duke Ellington.1<br /> <br /> Emerging from the uptown New York scene shaped by pianists such as James P. Johnson and Luckey Roberts Smith helped define the stride style that grew from ragtime into a more expansive jazz idiom frequently performing at Harlem rent parties and participating in competitive “cutting contests†that tested virtuosity and improvisational skill. Smith also published sheet music producing piano solos novelty songs and popular compositions. Offered here are ten pieces reflecting the breadth of his printed output including collaborative songs and published folios issued by firms such as Leo Feist Edwards Music Co. Mills Music and Joe Davis. In his 1964 memoir Smith recalled hearing in everyday life “another weird but musical sound… that I can still hear in my head.â€2<br /> <br /> Uncommon on the market we find only four first edition copies of Smith sheets available at the time of writing with most of these not available. <br /> <br /> Titles include:<br /> <br /> “Between Sharps and Flats An Unusual Piano Soloâ€. Willie Lion Smith. New York: Edwards Music Co New York 1949. 5 pp. Fine condition. <br /> <br /> “Curfew Time in Harlem Novelty Songâ€. Willie The Lion Smith and Neil Laurence. New York: Joe Davis Inc New York 1938. 3 pp. Near fine with minimal wear. <br /> <br /> “Echo of Springâ€. Willie The Lion Smith. New York: Leo Feist Inc New York 1946. 6 pp. Fine condition. <br /> <br /> “How Could You Put Me Down†Willie The Lion Smith with James P. Johnson and Mitchell Parish. New York: Mills Music Inc 1945. 5 pp. Fine condition. <br /> <br /> “Karnival on the Keys A Modern Piano Fantasyâ€. Willie Lion Smith. New York: Edwards Music Co New York 1945. 5 pp. Fine condition. <br /> <br /> “Let’s Go Joeâ€. Cab Calloway Willie Lion Smith and Jack Palmer. New York: Rytvoc Inc 1942. 3 pp. Fine condition. <br /> <br /> “Let’s Mop It Mop! Mop!â€. Jack Edwards Fred Norman and Willie Lion Smith. New York: Edwards Music Co 1942. 3 pp. Fine condition. <br /> <br /> “Modern Piano Solos†folio. Willie The Lion Smith. New York: Leo Feist Inc 1939. 26 pp. Very good plus with a small chip to front wrap. <br /> <br /> “Rippling Watersâ€. Willie The Lion Smith. New York: Leo Feist Inc New York 1939. 5 pp. Fine condition. <br /> <br /> “Sneak Away Piano Soloâ€. Willie The Lion Smith. New York: Mills Music Inc 1937. 5 pp. Fine condition.<br /> <br /> 1 “Willie ‘The Lion’ Smith: Stride Piano Master†NPR’s ‘Jazz Profiles’ June 11 2008 https://www.npr.org/2008/06/11/91365108/willie-the-lion-smith-stride-piano-master.<br /> 2 Willie Smith Music on My Mind: The Memoirs of an American Pianist Doubleday: 1964. Edwards Music Co. and others unknown
1950137205Late 1950s - early 70s. Excellent group of UK tour programmes for a constellation of jazz greats: Armstrong 2 Basie 8 Bechet Brubeck 2 Nat King Cole Eddie Condon Sammy Davis Jr. 2 Tommy Dorsey Ellington 4 Errol Garner 3 Lionel Hampton Ella Fitzgerald and Oscar Peterson Woody Herman Harry James JATP 4 Newport Jazz Festival Glen Miller Earl Hines and Jack Teagarden Bal du Moulin Rouge. 36 programmes quarto. Illustrated throughout. Original pictorial wrappers wire-stitched as issued. Overall in excellent condition. unknown
1950190253London: 1950s. Vivid images of jazz greats by one of the "obscure guys" of British jazz photography - from the collection of Charlie Watts From the collection of Rolling Stones drummer and jazz aficionado Charlie Watts: a delightful and absorbing archive of largely unpublished photographs by Jamie Hodgson an unsung hero of British jazz photography capturing both the exuberance and inwardness of the music. Among the jazz greats pictured are Dizzy Gillespie Ella Fitzgerald Duke Ellington Billy Strayhorn and Louis Armstrong. Perhaps the stand out photographs here are two superb studio images of Strayhorn one a memorable image showing him observing a goldfish in its bowl used on the cover of David Hajdu's 1996 biography Lush Life but unattributed another a delightful and unforgettable portrait of "Strays" lying on the studio floor cigarette in hand legs crossed wine glass within reach working on a score marked in 12/8 time with a quill pen and ink stand. A sequence of eight images focus on Louis Armstrong and date from 1956 through to 1970: one a particularly exuberant portrait of Pops sharing the limelight with Trummy Young Barrett Deems at the kit. These were nearly all taken in concert the exception being one marked "solo visit. Rehearsing with Norman del Mar conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall for a concert in aid of the Hungarian Releif sic Fund. December 10th 1956". There are two fine shots of Dizzy Gillespie both in tux in his dressing room looking thoughtful and another of his up-tilted horn in its case the tag from his recent visit to France still attached to the handle. There is a witty bleached-out studio shot of Jimmy Rushing leaning into the horn of a gramophone and further images of the great singer one a boisterous backstage portrait of Rushing with Harry Carney and Jimmy Hamilton sitting in Rushing's capacious lap! smiling and laughing gathered on the stairs leading up to the gents' toilets and holding a gamut of reed instruments; plus a terrific image of "Mr. Five by Five" raising a pint behind the bar of a pub recalling Basie's reminiscence that "Me and old Rush. We were some pair. We just wanted to have a good time" Basie p. 37. Other portraits include a petulant Ella Fitzgerald Duke Ellington and individual images of Ellington alumni Paul Gonsalves Johnny Hodges Ray Nance Harry Carney Barrett Deems and Sam Woodyard; a chuckling Oscar Peterson; Lionel Hampton with Humphrey Lyttelton; Bud Freeman; a humorous shot of Eddie Condon sitting at a bar and scowling playfully; a tight close-up of a beaming Lionel Hampton; drummer Gus Johnson accompanying bassist Bob Haggart; and Ray Charles performing at the Capital Radio Jazz Festival in 1982. A full listing is available on request. For Hodgson 1930-2006 jazz was a private passion and these remarkable photographs did not see the light of day until a 2006 exhibition Masters of Jazz: Unseen Portraits held in the foyer of the National Theatre. In 2007 Jazz Improv magazine described him as one of the "obscure guys" of British jazz photography. His Guardian obituary noted that he "became known for his hobby rather than his profession. The man who owned the Kinnerton Street studio in London's Knightsbridge for many years earned his living in fashion and family photography. But it was the recent exhibition of 50 of his pictures in the National Theatre foyer that attracted more attention than anything previously shown by the largely anonymous Hodgson. Few knew of his work within the music world and fewer still knew of these unguarded often intimate images which were Hodgson's personal homage to the stars he observed and worshipped. All were taken during British tours many in the privacy of dressing rooms across London or in Hodgson's studio The Guardian jazz critic John Fordham regards these images as 'wonderful pictures'. 'They catch the mood on the night of jazz on and offstage' he said 'and they are very expressive of the big personalities of a lot of those old guys who started touring here in the 1950s and 60s after there had been a dearth of live US jazz in Britain'. Hodgson was a Londoner who took up photography after completing his national service in 1950. Starting out as a freelance he began by taking whatever commissions came his way - news and features aerial and architectural photography or commercial and children's pictures. A stint with the Mayflower Studios brought him into contact with advertising and various television personalities including Frankie Howerd Harry Secombe the Crazy Gang and the Ted Heath Band. In 1956 he set up his own studio where he did fashion shoots with Tania Mallet Jean Shrimpton and Sandra Paul He caught the change in mood from the snooty static haute couture fashion shoots of the 1950s to the more playful popular looks of swinging London in the 1960s. And at night he sneaked out to shoot his favourite jazz and blues bands playing across the capital". An important and captivating collection of jazz images imbued with the photographer's deep affection for the musicians the spontaneity of the portraits matching that of the music itself. Together 95 black and white photographs 46 measuring 223 x 170 mm; 49 measuring 402 x 305 mm each with identifying caption on verso by the photographer some with studio wet stamps or labels a number signed by Hodgson. Preserved in the photographer's own commercial boxes. Three prints Duke Ellington Billy Sytrayhorn Louis Armstrong framed and glazed by auction house overall measuring 445 x 620 mm. In excellent condition. Count Basie Good Morning Blues: The Autobiography of Count Basie 1987. unknown
1940169491United States: c.1940-60. A visual record of a rarely seen and poorly documented world - an accidental history An unusually extensive group of these evocative "table photographs" striking records of largely African-American audiences in the glamorous sociable and intentionally inclusive world of mid-century nightclubs. Shot by in-house photographers developed on site and sold for a dollar at the end of the evening these quick souvenirs now amount to a rare visual history of a poorly documented milieu. As Gold notes they "turn the camera round": instead of performers we see the audiences - a critical part of what Jason Moran calls the jazz "ecosystem." The collection offers a nationwide survey of venues from the extravagant to the resolutely down-home. At New York's Café Zanzibar with its spectacular floor shows and "Zanzibeauts" the audience was integrated but largely white prompting Langston Hughes's caustic observation about the seating hierarchy - an impression borne out by the image here. Detroit's Gay Bar Lounge another "black and tan" joint catered to a mostly Black clientele and offered a rougher edge: in 1947 the barkeep famously shot two stick-up artists with the.38s kept beneath the cash register. Equally compelling are the histories of Black enterprise that surface. Oakland's Athens Elks Cocktail Lounge home to Lodge 70 of the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World stood at the centre of West Oakland's vibrant musical scene hosting countless jam sessions and serving as the informal checkpoint for touring African-American musicians. In Los Angeles Dootsie Williams's Dooto Music Center founded by the trumpeter-turned-entrepreneur provided one of the city's foremost Black cultural venues praised by the Los Angeles Sentinel as "the most-needed cultural and recreation center in Southern California." The photographers themselves remain surprisingly elusive though a few can be traced. In Columbus George Pierce ran a record shop and studio in Bronzeville and supplied images to the Ohio Sentinel and other regional papers; in Detroit Earl Fowler's Top Hat Photo developed into a significant presence in the Black Press with Fowler later serving as chief of the Los Angeles bureau of Now! magazine. Beyond these contexts the photographs' enduring appeal lies in the human dramas unfolding across their tabletops: the conviviality style and fleeting alliances captured in a moment of collective ease. A scene from Gamby's in Baltimore is emblematic - six convivial hat-tipping men and two young women smiling through a forest of shot glasses presided over by a portrait of Fats Waller. It is warmly enigmatic yet inviting an offhand welcome extended across time. A more detailed description and full listing is available on request. Together 66 black and white gelatin silver print photographs 62 c.127 x 178 mm; 3 approximately 178 x 254 mm around 50 are in their original plain or printed souvenir folders the balance loose. Loose photos and folders with occasional wear and mild damp-staining some annotations verso of prints and to folders prints occasionally stapled into folders overall the group remains about very good. Ronald Auther "The Oakland Larks" The Shadow Ball Express: African American Baseball Renderings and other Facts of Life online; Clora Bryant et al Central Avenue Sounds; Jazz in Los Angeles 1930s-1950s 1998; Jeff Gold Sittin' In: Jazz Clubs of the 1940s and 1950s 2020; Robert Petersen "Before Motown: L.A.'s Black-owned Music Empire" PBS SoCal online. unknown
12689Used; Like New/Used; Like New. An extraordinary collection of five Japanese pressed LPs each signed by the primary artist while on tour in Japan 1973-78 and including an especially rare signed copy of Miles Davis' "Kind of Blue." <br style="">The support for jazz in Japan has long been immense and also remarkably consistent. Even during a slump in the United States in the 70's that threatened to put many American jazz labels and musicians out of business American jazz artists flocked to Japan to perform with many releasing "Live in Japan" albums including Miles Davis Bill Evans and Sarah Vaughan. ''Japan almost singlehandedly kept the jazz record business going during the late 1970's'' said a producer with Blue Note Records Michael Cuscuna. ''Without the Japanese market a lot of independent jazz labels probably would have folded or at least stopped releasing new material.'' NY Times "In Japan Jazz Resurges As a National Passion" 1/7/88  <br>Each album includes the original obi strip spine card the piece of paper wrapped around the spine of Japanese LPs the term obi designating the sash around a kimono Kimono no obi. Japanese pressings generally feature very high quality vinyl and the present examples are all in fine condition rated individually below. Four of them are dated by the obtainer of the signature or by the artist Simone. <br style="">BILL EVANS - NEW CONVERSATIONS.  Label: WARNER P-10516<br style="">Cover : EW/ Record : E<br style="">Obi stripe: E<br style="">Obtained 13 September 1978 signed dated and inscribed in black ink on the front cover. <br style=""><br style="">SARAH VAUGHAN WITH CLIFFORD BROWN<br style="">Label: MERCURY BT-1324<br style="">Cover : EW/ Record : EDJ<br style="">Obi stripe: E<br style="">Obtained 26 April 1975 signed in black ink on the front cover.  <br style="">NINA SIMONE - SPELL ON YOU<br style="">Label: PHILIPS SFX-7167<br style="">Cover : EW/ Record : E-W<br style="">Obi stripe: E<br style="">Obtained 1973 signed and dated in black ink on the record label and to an interior page of the album booklet<br style=""><br style="">DEXTER GORDON - APARTMENT<br style="">Label: STEEPLECHASE RJ-7101<br style="">Cover : EW/ Record : E<br style="">Obi stripe: E<br style="">Obtained 25 September 1975 signed in black ink on the front cover by Dexter Gordon Kenny Drew Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen and Albert "Tootsie" Heath<br style=""><br style="">MILES DAVIS - KIND OF BLUE<br style="">Label: CBS/SONY SOPL-155Cover : EW/ Record : EObi stripe: EObtained 1975 signed in silver ink "Miles Davis" on the front cover. <br style=""><br style=""><br style="">The present collection includes several remarkable rarities but the highlight is surely the exceedingly rare signed copy of what is widely regarded to be the greatest jazz album of all time Miles Davis' "Kind of Blue." Davis was notoriously prickly and a generally reluctant autograph signer. Though authentic autograph signatures are certainly obtainable we are aware of only one other extant authentically signed copy also sold by Schubertiade of Davis's greatest masterpiece. Of the previous example sold by Schubertiade noted jazz collector and dealer Larry Rafferty noted that in his 40 years of collecting jazz autographs this is "absolutely the only copy I have ever seen -- or heard of" and our research further confirms that no signed copies have appeared at auction or in trade catalogues.  <br style="">The best-selling jazz record of all time is universally acknowledged as a masterpiece revered as much by rock and classical music fans as by jazz lovers. Kind of Blue brought together seven now-legendary musicians in the prime of their careers: tenor saxophonist John Coltrane alto saxophonist Julian "Cannonball" Adderley pianists Bill Evans and Wynton Kelly bassist Paul Chambers drummer Jimmy Cobb and of course trumpeter Miles Davis. To the musicians who recorded it Kind of Blue was just another session when it was released in August 1959. But the disc was quickly recognized by the jazz community as a classic. Jazz musicians were startled by the truly different sound on an album that laid out a clear roadmap for further modal explorations. "So What" became the tune the one that every musician -- not just the practitioners of jazz -- simply had to know. The other tracks also quickly became standards and the individual solos throughout the record continue to inspire musicians to this day. Drummer Jimmy Cobb puts it all down to simplicity -- the reason Kind of Blue has remained so successful for so long. And because of its inherent balance historian Dan Morgenstern adds the album never wears out its welcome.<br style=""> unknown books
ill., br. Terza uscita per Collezione Crumb, la collana che propone in Italia l'opera di Robert Crumb, il più famoso autore underground di tutti i tempi. Dopo gli adattamenti dalla letteratura del primo volume e le storie del mitico Fritz il gatto nel secondo, ora tocca alla più grande passione di questo viscerale autore, ovvero tutte le storie, le illustrazioni e le copertine di dischi legate alla musica jazz e blues. Nel corso della sua lunga carriera Robert Crumb è stato definito in vari modi, genio, visionario, artista, ma anche pervertito, pazzo e razzista. Possiamo tranquillamente dire che non se ne è mai curato più di tanto. Ma se c'è un titolo che lo lusinga davvero quello è "storico della musica". Infatti nella sua incessante ricerca di dischi a 78 giri degli anni Venti e Trenta, Crumb ha praticamente maturato sul campo una preparazione sull'argomento che lo fa ormai rivaleggiare con accademici riconosciuti. Una passione coltivata da Crumb, a sua volta un suonatore di banjo dilettante, fin dall'adolescenza e che lo porterà ad essere un compulsivo collezionista di dischi e a unirsi con alcuni amici per fondare il quartetto R. Crumb and his Cheap Suit Serenaders coi quali registrerà tre album.
82 pages. Features: Nice RKO photo ad advertises 'I Remember Mama', 'Tycoon', 'If You Knew Susie' and 'Magic Town'; 1-page ad for Philco entertainment products; Brother Jazz - The Story of Eddie Condon - with color photos; Affair's End (fiction); How to Have Ancestors; They're Still Expendable - article and photos explain how unemployment, small-business failures and layoffs are hitting veterans harder than the rest of the nation; Fever (fiction); He Clicked for 30 Years - Highlights of the career of photographer George William Harris - article with photos; The Five Dresden Angels (fiction); Man Running (fiction); Demon from the Doldrums - Nature's most destructive force is the West Indian hurricane; Nice 1-page color-photo ad for International Harvester Industrial Power features photo of a large diesel crawler in a Florida limestone quarry; Nice 1-page color ad for Ford cars; Nice vintage 1-page color ad for Kraft Cheeses; Western Electric 1-page color ad shows telephone repairman talking housewife and children at front door; Ballantine Ale 1-page color ad; Half-page 2-color ad for Fruehauf Trailers; Pennsylvania Railroad nice 1-page color ad shows comforable scene on-board; Fall Guise - article with six color photos of men's fall college fashions; Nice 1-page DeSoto car ad; A Good Whipping (fiction); Fantastic 1-page 2-color ad for the movie 'Body and Soul' starring John Garfield, Lilli Palmer and Hazel Brooks; Nice 1-page color Budweiser ad displays several illustrated plates; Goldwyn ad features colour photo of Danny Kaye; Rislone and Karbout ad features cute color photo of cigarette girl; 1-page ad for Gillette one-piece razors; Smiling Girl (fiction); Nice color 1-page ad for Hamm's Beer; One-page ad for American Overseas Airlines; Luckky Strike ad on back cover includes nice color illustration entitled 'Bright Tobacco' by Fletcher Martin. Couple of chips from top of front cover. Average wear. A worthy vintage copy. Book
ill., br. "In principio era il suono. Il suono nasce, cresce, si propaga nella natura del mondo, nella natura delle cose...". Il genio puro di John Coltrane, uno dei jazzisti che hanno lasciato un'impronta più profonda nella musica contemporanea, narrato e rivissuto in un'emozionante biografia a fumetti. Dalla dura infanzia nel North Carolina ai primi ingaggi come session man a Philadelphia, fino all'incontro con Miles Davis, alle mitiche registrazioni per l'etichetta Impulse! e all'esperienza mistico-spirituale di "Ascension". In quattro capitoli, seguendo le tracce e la struttura del suo disco-capolavoro "A Love Supreme", questo libro ci restituisce l'avventura interiore di un musicista straordinario, la sua ricerca, i suoi rapporti con compagni di strada come Dizzy GiIlespie, Thelonious Monk, Duke Ellington, Eric Dolphy, Elvin Jones, McCoy Tyner, Archie Shepp. E insieme a tutto questo, affiora il racconto del mondo che la musica di Coltrane attraversò: l'America degli anni '50 e '60, del Ku Klux Klan e di Malcolm X, delle lotte dei neri per i diritti civili. Una serie di eventi che è impossibile slegare dalla nascita e dall'affermazione del jazz, e che anzi si intrecciano con la sua evoluzione, delineando anche un preciso arco nella storia degli Stati Uniti d'America. Con un montaggio ritmato di parole e immagini Paolo Parisi compone con Coltrane il suo atto d'amore per questo genere musicale, tra i più importanti contributi che la cultura afroamericana ci abbia lasciato. Una storia attraversata da un sound. Un sound libero.
200874816Höfen, Hannibal Verlag, 2008. Siegeszug eines Sounds 262 S. Pappband mit Umschlag / gebundene Ausgabe
2004gu4083Definitive Records CD 2004 "2 CD ""Complete 1954 Miles Davis Master Takes"", CD1 : durée 79:31 - 1. The leap 2. Lazy Susan 3. Take off. 4. Well, You Needn't 5. Weirdo 6. It Never Entered My Mind 7. Four 8. Old Devil Moon 9. Blue Haze 10. Solar 11. You Don't Know What Love Is 12. Love me or leave me 13. I'll Remember April 14. Oleo 15. But Not For me 16. But Not For me* ; CD2 : durée 79:12 - 1. Walkin' 2. Blue 'n' Boogie 3. Airegin 4. Doxy 5. Bags' Groove 6. Bemsha Swing 7. Swing Spring 8. The Man I Love 9. The Man I Love* ; très bon état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande."
056951Paris Pierre Bordas et Fils 1993 in 4 (29x24) 1 volume broché, couverture à rabats illustrée, 157 pages, avec de nombreuses photographies en noir et blanc. Bon exemplaire ( Photographies sur demande / We can send pictures of this book on simple request )
73447S.l., éd. Art Média - Les amis de Guy Lafitte, juillet 2003, EDITION ORIGINALE, in-8, cartonnage souple, couv. photo en noir sur fond noir éd., 120 pp., papier galcé, très nb. photos en noir, discographie, Très bonne et RARE biographie du saxophoniste français Guy Lafitte. Très belle iconographie. Très bonne discographie Très bon état
200248256Blue Note, 2002. 5320882 CD CD
200822774IMPORT FROM ORIGINAL LABEL, 2008. 4 CDs Audio CD
br. Non è solo musica, il jazz. È anche un modo di stare nel mondo, e un modo di stare con gli altri. Al cuore della sua "filosofia" ci sono l'unicità e il potenziale di ciascun individuo, uniti però alla sua capacità di ascoltare gli altri e improvvisare insieme a loro. È stato creato dai discendenti degli schiavi, ma sa parlare di libertà. È figlio della malinconia del blues, ma sa lasciarsi andare alla felicità più pura. Le sue radici sono nella tradizione, ma la sua sfida è la continua innovazione. E anche se vive di tensioni armoniche e ritmiche, ha saputo e sa essere ancora messaggero di pace. Wynton Marsalis fa leva sulla sua eccezionale storia artistica e sull'eredità dei grandi maestri per introdurci in questo universo fatto di opposti che si riconciliano. Con la passione del protagonista racconta storie del presente e del passato. Con la competenza dello studioso spiega cosa e come ascoltare. E soprattutto mostra come le idee centrali del jazz possano aiutare le persone e le comunità a cambiare il loro modo di pensare e di agire, con se stesse e le une con le altre.
192447496Dayton OH: The Comer Manufacturing Co. 1924. Tall 8vo. 5.5 x 10.5 in. 36 pp. Numerous illustrations 4 colour plates 4 sepia-tinted plates 64 wool wool blend canvas linen leather cotton and patterned fabrics some treated w/ coating tipped-in occasional offsetting from samples either surrounding the sample or on facing leaves. Dark red printed softcovers decoration & lettering in orange & blue minor soiling some creasing still a VG- copy. First edition of this scarce salesman sample catalogue for men and women’s Jazz Age raincoats and overcoats in the mid-1920s. The company was founded before World War I by Charles E. Comer b. 1887 who quickly established the company as one of the largest manufacturers in Ohio of raincoats. The colour fashion plates are quite striking for the period and offer invaluable historical reference for the styles and weight of raincoats sold during the Flapper Era. Comer produced rubber-lined coats offered deals if you ordered two coats at once and also offered Mackinaws General Purpose coats Rubber rain slickers reversible coats and even waterproof aprons for housewives. This catalogue notes that they had just completed their new 40000 square foot and even offered waterproof luggage and garment bags. They were well known for advertising in labor magazines trade magazines and professional magazines constantly promoting their product and recruiting new salesmen. Worldcat locates only 1 copy Vol. 166. The Comer Manufacturing Co., paperback
198648043Virgin, 1986. CDV 2397 CD CD
1950223221950. Complete 1950 run of Jazz Journal Vol. 3 Nos. 1-12. London: L. M. Publications 1950. Complete run of the 1950 volume. Twelve issues with each issue around 20 pages. Black-and-white photo illustrations throughout. Printed paper wraps. Founded in 1948 by editor Sinclair Traill Jazz Journal became a critical platform for serious jazz criticism in Britain at a time when the country began appreciating the impact of African American musical innovation. This volume features twelve monthly issues each spotlighting legendary musicians in deeply reverent portraits: Louis Armstrong Baby Dodds Coleman Hawkins Fats Waller Earl Hines and others. The December cover has a Christmas theme.<br /> <br /> This archive is a window into Britain's postwar jazz awakening. The articles range from retrospectives to musicology and artist discographies. Floyd Levin's "The American Jazz Scene" captures the transatlantic tone of the journal mourning the death of Buster Wilson and lauding figures like Sidney Anderson and Kid Ory as vanguards of "authentic" jazz-framed as endangered in a postwar America increasingly seduced by commercialism. Meanwhile Derrick Stewart-Baxter's "Preachin' the Blues" traces rural-to-urban migration patterns in blues development analyzing Sleepy John Estes' discography and folk influences. The December issue features a full-page bibliophilic essay "A Case for Books" reviewing A Treasury of the Blues by W. C. Handy whom it names "the composer of the classic Memphis Blues and Joe Turner Blues" emphasizing the book's role in preserving "the true and historical survey of the blues." Taken together the essays discographies and image curation construct a coherent theory of jazz not only as music but as cultural heritage. Moderate and consistent soiling and creasing to wrappers; binding intact but some covers remain delicate. Occasional chipping at spine. Covers remain vivid with strong photographic contrasts. Overall good condition. A complete year's run of one of the earliest and most influential British jazz journals with signatures from leading musicians of the era such as Armstrong Dodds and Hawkins. unknown
199551974Document, 1995. DOCD-5385 CD CD
199551973Document, 1995. DOCD-5384 CD CD
199551971Document, 1995. DOCD-5382 CD CD
199551972Document, 1995. DOCD-5383 CD CD
199551970Document, 1995. DOCD-5381 CD CD