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Vince Guaraldi at the Piano
By
Derrick Bang
354 pages
ISBN: # 978-078645902-5
McFarland & Company, Inc,
2012 Soon after autumn leaves fall, promos hit the airwaves for the various Charlie Brown Holiday specials. Those timeless animations are lathered up with marvelously hip jazzthat of pianist

Vince Guaraldi
piano1928 - 1976
In this fascinating effort, Bang, newspaperman, author, film critic, blogger, noted Peanuts authority and ardent fan tells of Guaraldi's musical life in meticulously researched terms. Beginning with Vince's youth and his dabbling at a family piano and encouraged by uncles (who themselves later made musical names for themselves), Bang describes Guaraldi's early musical development. He then drops us into the halcyon days of San Francisco jazz and its many clubs, habitants, and dizzying goings ontimes later "flowering," and rocking. Guaraldi's interaction in that environment with musicians, club owners, music biz types, and others is covered with great specificity. Bang's writing is empirically comprehensive and researched without being sterile. It reads with great rhythmic pulse. Jazz artists such as

Cal Tjader
vibraphone1925 - 1982

Dave Brubeck
piano1920 - 2012

Woody Herman
band / ensemble / orchestra1913 - 1987
Not a hagiography and not ponderous in things personal or gossip-flavored, this facts-driven effort is focused on the music, the music game, and Guaraldi's riding the cresting waves and troughs as a player and composer within it. The author's crisp writing elucidates the randomness, chance encounters, and odd synchronicities of the music world. With more focus on facts than anecdotal commentary, Guaraldi is painted as an artist with a fierce drive for excellence, a ferocious energy to perform (yes, he played strip clubs and lounge gigs), a man who overcome physical limitations, (hands and physique smaller than average, ergo, "The Italian Leprechaun") and Guaraldi's lack of formal classical piano training and early sight-reading shortfalls (he was rejected initially for Woody Herman's band). Musician readersand perhaps the general public -will likely listen more attentivelyand enjoyably -to Guaraldi and the Peanuts shows after reading this bio. It resonates that much.
Pre-Peanuts performances and recordings with long-time associate Cal Tjader before and during the Bossa Nova craze, with talented Brazilian guitarist,

Bola Sete
guitar1923 - 1987
Since Charles Schulz's Peanuts and all things Charlie Brown are what are most familiar to current audiences, the author takes us through Guaraldi's initial work with his "Jazz Impressions of Charlie Brown" album (which had roots of sorts in a documentary about San Francisco ballplayer Willie Mays). Activities and recordings emanating from the subsequent "Peanuts" TV specials are covered as they developed. We see how a chance hearing of "Cast Your Fate to the Wind" and a major soft drink advertiser's desired competitive strategy led to Guaraldi landing the first Charlie Brown TV gig. Vince's later foray in to the San Francisco Rock scene and experiments with the Fender Rhodes piano and electronics are also covered. Bang details Guaraldi's influence on later keyboard stars such as

David Benoit
pianob.1953

George Winston
piano1949 - 2023

Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961
Derrick Bang has done a mitzvah to the jazz community with Vince Guaraldi at the Piano. It is a terrific, informative, and exceptionally enjoyable read. Whether one is a Peanuts fan or not (can that possibly be?), this is a fascinating book and a must read for those with a jazz history bent. It equates in quality to any celebrated jazz bio out therepast or present.
Tags
Book Review
Nicholas F. Mondello
McFarland & Company, Inc,
Vince Guaraldi
Cal Tjader
Dave Brubeck
Woody Herman
David Benoit
George Winston
wynton marsalis
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