Jazz, Race, and Writing, 1945-1970

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1940s
1950s
1960s
A01=Willis Salomon
Amiri Baraka
Author_Willis Salomon
Black aesthetics
Category=AVC
Category=AVLP
Charles Mingus
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jazz aesthetics
Miles Davis
modern American jazz
Moten Swing
music commentary
political aesthetics
racial identity
Stanley Crouch

Product details

  • ISBN 9781666909463
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 158 x 232mm
  • Publication Date: 14 May 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book widens the context of our understanding of the “modern” American jazz of the 1940s, 50s, and 60s by looking at writing about it by both musicians and commentators.

Jazz, Race, and Writing, 1945-1970 addresses jazz at its modernist apotheosis, from the 1940s to the 1970s, both the music and its cultural resonances. The author begins by examining autobiographical texts by two highly influential musicians: Miles Davis’s Miles: The Autobiography (1990) and Charles Mingus’s Beneath the Underdog (1971). The book then moves to discussions of the music by the late poet and cultural critic Amiri Baraka, the contemporary cultural critic and poet Fred Moten, and the late critic and public intellectual Stanley Crouch.

The Davis and Mingus texts, in their highly distinctive autobiographical voices, highlight the volatile creative energy of jazz improvisation during this period and the correspondingly impeding cultural conditions that surrounded these musical advances. In talking about their lives, their music, and the cultural conditions surrounding both, Davis and Mingus, in very different ways, reveal how the very texture of jazz, as well as its efficient mode of production, ensemble improvisation, reflects and refracts these very American social conditions, producing the arresting achievements of mid-century modern jazz despite social odds and financial impediments.

Baraka, Moten, and Crouch, also in very different ways, reinforce the character of these musicians’ voices and fill in some of the theoretical and social aspects of the music’s conditions of production, as these writers critically engage some of the intersections of musical, political, and ethical life enacted in the autobiographies, including issues of improvisational practice, race, economic exploitation, gendered performance, and political agency.

Willis Anthony Salomon is Associate Professor of English at Trinity University in San Antonio, USA. He has published essays on Renaissance Rhetorical Theory, Early Modern British poets John Donne and George Herbert, literature and psychoanalysis, and the novelist Saul Bellow’s post-1960s literary politics. He also plays some drums.

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