Skip to content

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram

Independent Bookshop, Hastings, UK

  • Home
  • Contact
  • Visit
  • Online shop via Hive.co.uk

Tag: Charles Mingus

Bass player extraordinaire Charles Mingus, who died in 1979, is one of the essential composers in the history of jazz, and Beneath the Underdog, his celebrated, wild, funny, demonic, anguished, shocking and profoundly moving memoir, is the greatest autobiography ever written by a jazz musician. It tells of his God-haunted childhood in Watts during the 1920s and 1930s; his outcast adolescent years; his apprenticeship, not only with jazzmen but also with pimps, hookers, junkies, and hoodlums; and his golden years in New York City with such legendary figures as Duke Ellington, Lionel Hampton, Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, and Dizzy Gillespie.

  Here is Mingus in his own words, from shabby roadhouses to fabulous estates, from the psychiatric wards of Bellevue … More

Black culture, Black history, Charles Mingus, Jazz, memoir, Richard Williams

Lester Young fading away in a hotel room; Charles Mingus storming down the streets of New York on a too-small bicycle; Thelonius Monk creating his own private language on the piano… In eight poetically charged vignettes, Geoff Dyer skilfully evokes the embattled lives of the players who shaped modern jazz. He draws on photos and anecdotes, but music is the driving force of But Beautiful and Dyer brings it to life in luminescent and wildly metaphoric prose that mirrors the quirks, eccentricity, and brilliance of each musician’s style.

Available in store and online.

Charles Mingus, Geoff Dyer, Jazz, modern jazz, Music, short stories

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,971 other followers

Blog at WordPress.com.
Cancel

 
Loading Comments...
Comment
    ×