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220 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.

Obituary: Ahmad Jamal

Some saw Jamal as a genius of musical drama, others of melodrama, a supper-club pianist purveying nearly definitive musical bombast

Basie All Stars: Live At Fabrik Vol.1 Hamburg 1981

No Basie or Freddie Green but Nat Pierce, Harry Edison, Joe Newman, Buddy Tate and others do a fine and roistering job of filling the bill

Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers: With Thelonious Monk

Different in approach as they might seem, Blakey and Monk show remarkable rapport on their 1957 album, here augmented with bonus tracks

Nancy Wilson: With Cannonball Adderley & George Shearing

Reissue of two Wilson albums from 1960-61 omits the instrumentals but good jazz by Shearing, the Adderley brothers and Eddie Costa remains
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Hal Schaefer – Just Too Much: The Progressive Piano Of Hal Schaefer / The RCA Victor Jazz Workshop

Schaefer is best known for his relationship with Marilyn Monroe and for his film scores, but here his novel approach to jazz is to the fore

Martial Solal: Live In Ottobrunn

The pianist's last solo concert is joined by a penultimate show that equally demonstrates his abundant creativity in interpreting standards

Obituary: Jerry Dodgion

Prolifically recorded saxophonist and Jones-Lewis sideman who stood out among often strident lead altoists for his light, sotto voce approach

Oscar Peterson: Black + White

Film tribute to the pianist has valuable footage of OP and testimony from other musicians but doesn't convey his real significance
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Oscar Peterson: On A Clear Day

The efforts of the pianist's widow and Mack Avenue have produced another set of previously unreleased OP, this time from Zurich in 1971

Ahmad Jamal’s Three Strings: The Complete Okeh, Parrot & Epic Sessions 1951-1955

Dismissed by some as a night-club band, the Pittsburgh pianist's trio wrought imaginative, organic variations on the standard lexicon

Benny Carter: Jazz Giant

Carter's rather unimpeachable 1958 small-group session is immaculately repackaged on high-quality vinyl with Nat Hentoff's original notes

Bobby Watson: Back Home In Kansas City

The former Blakey altoist plays with Jeremy Pelt, Cyrus Chestnut and others to mark his two-decade hometown gig as director of jazz studies
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