Advertisement
Advertisement
212 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 audio reviews, book reviews and other articles to Jazz Journal.

Mal Waldron with Eric Dolphy and Booker Ervin: The Quest

The pianist's 1961 album used irregular time sigs and structures, testing the skills of Eric Dolphy, Booker Ervin, Ron Carter and others

Dakota Staton: The Late, Late Show

The singer had huge success with The Late, Late Show but moved to the UK to avoid having to regurgitate its hits for US audiences

Anita O’Day: An Evening With Anita O’Day

Vinyl reissue of 1955 album shows O'Day's ability to dismember and reconstruct familiar melodies and adds bonus tracks

Bill Evans: Dig It!

In a 180g vinyl compilation, familiar early recordings by the pianist are given new interest by the juxtaposition of solo and trio pieces
- Advertisement -

The Harry Allen Orchestra: With Roses

The mainstream tenor player solos briefly on two tracks but otherwise gives way to arrangements and rather over-exposed vocals

Toshiko Akiyoshi: Toshiko’s Blues – Quartet & Trios 1953-1958

Thorough collection of mid-50s work by the Teddy Wilson and Bud Powell inspired Japanese pianist is illuminating but the best was to come

Obituary: Tony Bennett

While often classed a pop singer, Bennett recorded jazz repertoire with jazz musicians and shared their sense of phrasing and spontaneity

The Composers Collective Big Band: The Toronto Project

Tight Toronto big band plays eight original charts touching on funk, Latin, swing and ballad styles and embellished with effective solos
- Advertisement -

Grant Green: Born To Be Blue

The guitarist's 1962 set with Ike Quebec possibly reached perfection on Someday My Prince. Here it comes again, on vinyl with extra tracks

Michel Petrucciani: The Montreux Years

The pianist's uncompromising musicality was on display at Montreux in the 90s among such as Miroslav Vitous, Steve Gadd and Eddy Louiss

Duke Ellington: All The Hits And More, 1927-54

The bandleader's chart hits feature in a compilation of familiar material lent some novelty by the addition on an informative liner note

Sonny Stitt Quartet: Personal Appearance

Often regarded as a Parker copyist, the saxophonist is nonetheless inventive in this 1957 set composed mainly of well-known standards
- Advertisement -