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Living With Music Ralph Ellison's Jazz Writings
open our order pageRalph Ellison
Modern Library, 2001
Hardback. 330pp
£14.99

Before Ralph Ellison became one of America's greatest writers, he was a musician and a student of jazz. The author of Invisible Man wrote widely and brilliantly on his favourite music for more than fifty years, immersing himself in the lives and works of America's musicians, some of whom were his close friends. Ellison is, in fact, perhaps one of the most important jazz analyst we have. In Living with Music, celebrated jazz authority Robert G. O'Meally has collected the very best of Ellison's writings on this subject, - each selection vibrant, insightful, and bursting with Ellison's love of the music - in this unique and original anthology.

For readers who think they know Ellison's work, this book will be a revelation. For music fans, it is an essential addition to the jazz bookshelf. Selections include the famous Homage to Duke Ellington on his Birthday, The Golden Age, Time Past, On Bird, Birdwatching, and Jazz, letters to Albert Murray about Louis Armstrong, and O'Meally's 1976 interview with Ellison. In these pages, Ellison reflects on the greats, from Charlie Parker to Duke Ellington, and meditates on jazz classics in a style that will make even casual fans of the genre hear the music in a whole new way. In Living with Music, we see firsthand the resounding and profound influence that jazz and Ralph Ellison - two American originals, riffing, improvising, and conversing on a truly profound level - have had on our culture.

RALPH ELLISON was born in Oklahoma City in 1914. He was educated at the Frederick Douglass School and at Tuskegee Institute, where he studied the trumpet and music composition. Ellison moved to New York City in 1936 and lived in Harlem until his death in 1994. His novel Invisible Man (1952) was the winner of the National Book Award and one of the most important and influential American novels of the twentieth century. Ellison was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1975 and was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1985.

ROGER G. O'MEALLY (editor) is the Zora Neale Hurston Professor of Comparative Literature at Columbia University, and the founder and director of the Center for Jazz Studies.

CONTENTS:
INTRODUCTION
Jazz Shapes by Robert G. O'Meally.
NON-FICTION
Living With Music;
Ralph Ellison's Territorial Vantage;
The Charlie Christian Story;
Remembering Jimmy;
The Golden Age, Time Past;
On Bird, Bird-Watching, and Jazz;
Homage to Duke Ellington On His Birthday;
As the Spirit Moves Mahalia;
Flamenco;
Richard Wright's Blues;
Blues People;
Homage to William L. Dawson.
FICTION
This Music Demanded Action;
Trueblood's Song;
Peter Wheatstraw, The Devil's Son-In-Law;
A Coupla Scalped Indians;
Keep To the Rhythm;
Cadillac Flambé.
LETTERS
To Albert Murray, October 22, 1955;
To Albert Murray, June 2, 1957;
To Albert Murray, September 28, 1958;
To Charlie Davidson, July 10, 1971.
INTERVIEWS

Interview With WKY-TV, Oklahoma, 1976;
"My Strength Comes From Louis Armstrong": Interview With Robert G. O'Meally, 1976.

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