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201 articles

John White

Born in Stoke-on-Trent in 1939, and educated at schools in Staffordshire and North Wales, John White is a graduate of the University of Manchester, the University of Michigan, and the University of Hull – where he received a PhD in 1975. He is now Emeritus Reader in American History at Hull University. His academic interests and publications were in the areas of African-American and Southern History, and he was a Visiting Professor at several American universities. His publications included Black Leadership in America, now in its third edition, Reconstruction after the American Civil War, and Martin Luther King Jr., and the Civil Rights Movement in America. His conversion to jazz (age 10) came after (repeatedly) playing a 78rpm record of Harry James’ version of "Trumpet Blues and Cantabile" on a wind-up gramophone. At the University of Hull he had a 20-year jazz-based friendship with its poet/librarian Philip Larkin. With the late Richard Palmer, he co-edited Reference Back: Philip Larkin’s Uncollected Jazz Writings 1940-1984 (now revised as Larkin: Jazz Writings: Essays & Reviews 1940-84), and with Trevor Tolley produced the 4CD set Larkin’s Jazz (Proper Records, 2010). His other jazz writings include biographies of Billie Holiday (1987) and Artie Shaw (1998, 2004). His essay “Kansas City, Pendergast and All That Jazz” won the Arthur Miller American Studies Prize in 1992. He is currently Jazz Consultant to The Philip Larkin Society, and has published several articles on Larkin’s jazz tastes in About Larkin: Journal of The Philip Larkin Society, and also in Jazz Journal. His own tastes in jazz are (fairly) eclectic and include: Armstrong, Basie, Ellington, Peterson, Garner, Tatum, Terry Gibbs, Sonny Criss, Paul Desmond, Lester Young, Zoot Sims, Ben Webster, Paul Gonsalves, Clark Terry, Booker Ervin, Bill (and Gil) Evans, Shorty Rogers, Gerry Mulligan, Joe Pass, Tal Farlow, Jan Lundgren, Ahmad Jamal. In January 2015 he began contributing CD and book reviews, and articles to Jazz Journal.

Wes Montgomery & Wynton Kelly Trio: Maximum Swing – The Unissued 1965 Half Note Recordings

Previously unreleased airshots add further insight into the kind of music first heard on the aptly named Smokin' At The Half Note

Lee Konitz: Tenorlee

On this set with Jimmy Rowles and Michael Moore, Konitz aimed to 'just play some tunes' and with similar spontaneity decided to play tenor

Magic City: How The Birmingham Jazz Tradition Shaped The Sound Of America

Avery Parrish, Erskine Hawkins, Sun Ra and Jo Jones are among the well-known jazz personages who hailed from the 'Magic City'

Cal Tjader: Catch The Groove – Live At The Penthouse 1963-1967

Two CDs collect hitherto unreleased music from the fleet-fingered vibes player who said of himself 'I’m not a pathfinder, I’m a participant'
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Ahmad Jamal: Emerald City Nights – Live At The Penthouse 1966-1968

Jazz archivist Zed Feldman releases the last in his series of previously unreleased recordings of pianist Jamal at the Penthouse in Seattle

Bill Evans: Tales – Live In Copenhagen (1964)

Previously unissued 1960s Evans trio performances in Denmark feature Chuck Israels, Larry Bunker, Eddie Gomez and Marty Morell

Hiromi: Sonicwonderland

In a typically mixed bag from the pianist (who doesn't solo much) trumpeter Adam O'Farrill and a cod Dixieland piece are the standouts

The Curtis Counce Group: You Get More Bounce With Curtis Counce! Vol.2

Bassist Counce's mid-50s mixture of bebop and swing, including its saucy original cover, is reissued on heavy-duty vinyl
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Helen Merrill with the Clifford Brown Sextet: What’s New?

Quincy Jones thought the treatment of What's New on Merrill's 1954 LP produced perhaps the most stimulating version ever

Wynton Kelly Plus Don Sleet: Four Classic Albums

The pianist who lit up Wes Montgomery's Smokin' At The Half Note is here heard with Adderley, Getz and the largely forgotten Don Sleet

Shirley Horn: Embers And Ashes

The singer who made a point of singing slowly evinces the habit on this 1959-60 set, here reissued on vinyl with bonus tracks

Duke Ellington: Anatomy Of A Murder

Ellington's score for the courtroom drama with a jazz-loving lawyer is exciting in parts but mostly lightweight and detached from the action
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