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Decades of Worldwide Promotion By the Man in the Room
ByThe book is a guide to the robust market of European performers who, like Müller himself, are little-known in the U.S., but who gain notice in this encyclopedic series of entries.

Wulf Müller
384 Pages
ISBN: # 9798353190752
Amazon Direct Publishing
2022
Working in Europe and facilitating jazz internationally, Wulf Müller reveals himself in his autobiography A Life in Music (Amazon Direct Publishing, 2022) as a man who for 40 years was in the rooms where it happened. That was true even by long distance phone call, as with

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
There is humor within Müller's story, as when totally baffled by

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
Born in Germany in 1955, Müller moved to Austria with his family, attended university in Vienna and started his career there with a jazz club, miles smiles Jazz Café, which remains under different ownership. The club had the good fortune to find

Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951

Zakir Hussain
tablas1951 - 2024
Müller's experience yields important technical information, as at page 196, about how promotional efforts are coordinated and timed with album releases: calculating backward from the anticipated release date to schedule interviews, photography, graphics and tour support, useful to any musician to understand how the process operates. He also describes at pages 352-353 the evolving role of A&R, "artists and repertoire," once important for finding and developing artists but changed because of digital technology by which artists can produce themselves. Labels, even if independent, he says, are still important for their marketing and distribution functions, and act more now like collectors of talent rather than producers. A&R becomes a broker of talent, guiding artists toward receptive labels and making matches.
Müller's early promotion jobs in Europe included the trombonist " data-original-title="" title="">Christian Muthspiel and his guitarist brother

Wolfgang Muthspiel
guitarb.1965

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Diana Krall
piano and vocalsb.1964

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Joe Zawinul
keyboards1932 - 2007

Julian Lage
guitar, electric
Theo Croker
trumpetb.1985
There is an avalanche of people and dates in the book. It is not a blur, as Müller remains clear-eyed throughout, and relationships matter to him. His wife Yolanda and daughter Hannah are constant supports, and family dinners and reunions with friends and business associates who become friends count for much. He shares acts elsewhere that he is unable to sign or promote.
The book is a guide to the robust market of European performers who, like Müller himself, are little-known in the U.S., but who gain notice in this encyclopedic series of entries. Jazz festivals in Europe serve important marketing purposes rather than simply as entertainment venues. New talent is showcased abundantly around the lure of headliners, and headliners themselves are shuffled for greater exposure, like Krall, Müller relates, when anointed for stardom.
Müller relates how artists and projects develop. Müller listened to

Branford Marsalis
saxophoneb.1960

Kurt Elling
vocalsb.1967

James Carter
multi-instrumentalistb.1969

Michael Cuscuna
producer1948 - 2024

Disappointments and confusion accompany the successes, and acceptance takes the edges off of the toll as Müller soldiers on. OKeh is revitalized, but then left unsupported and performers drawn off elsewhere. Catalogs are gutted as companies deal away their assets for bookkeeping or corporate reasons. An option to record Hancock lapses when a back office fails to track its renewal date. Companies reorganize, positions are reassigned, and talent falls through the cracks or sometimes recaptured.

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014
Some artists choose the greater attention they might gain from a smaller company rather the supposed clout of a major label. Other performers don't break out when they fail to excite a higher executive, notwithstanding Müller's appreciation; marketing funds are denied and the artist departs. The reasons may be highly subjective, or unexplained. Others derail their careers with an over-assessment of their place in the business, while others, notably

Dee Dee Bridgewater
vocalsb.1950
An index for all this would have been useful to sort out the various mentions and to track particular individuals as they re-appear throughout Müller's narrative, but the text, organized by years, is friendly enough to invite random browsing. Individual events are often mentioned but not given much more weight other than that they occurred, particularly as noteworthy musicians pass away.
Upon the 2019 death of Italian drummer

Paolo Vinaccia
drums1954 - 2019
Tags
Book Review
Sonny Rollins
Arthur R George
Austria
Vienna
Amazon Direct Publishing
Ornette Coleman
"miles smiles"
Bill Frisell
Zakir Hussain
Christian Muthspiel
Wolfgang Muthspiel
Linda Sharrock
Joe Henderson
Herbie Hancock
Diana Krall
Chick Corea
Joe Zawinul
Julian Lage
Theo Croker
Branford Marsalis
Kurt Elling
New Orleans
James Carter
Dhafer Youssef
Charlie Haden
Dee Dee Bridgewater
north sea jazz festival
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