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Kosher Jammers: Jewish Connections In Jazz
By
Mike Gerber
406 pages
ISBN: 979-8-224-74480-0
Vinyl Vanguard
2024
Jews have been so intimately, influentially and copiously involved in the story of jazz that every person's list of ten favourite musicians is almost certain to include one Jewish player, and probably more than one. Yet until 2010, when London-based writer Mike Gerber's Jazz Jews (Five Leaves Publications) was published, there was no book devoted to identifying Jewish connections in the music. Jazz Jews, which had been ten years in the making, ran to 654 pages and there were over 7,000 names in the index, which gives an indication of its scope and depth of detail. Nat Hentoff said of the book that it was "more comprehensive than I ever imagined possible," adding "The writing is not academic; rather, it grooves."
Gerber has since expanded Jazz Jews, adding newly researched material, and retitling it Kosher Jammers. To make the new edition's physical bulk more manageable, he has divided it into two volumes. Volume 1: The USA, the subject of this review, and an upcoming Volume 2, which will cover the rest of the world.
Volume 1: The USA chronicles Jewish involvement in the development of jazz from its beginnings through to the new millennium, its fifteen chapters taking in the cornerstone styles, the musicians involved, the composers of the Great American Songbook, the enablers and facilitators, producers and club owners, the role of women, and more. Along the way there is a feast of off-piste takeaways. It is not widely known, for instance, that throughout his life

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971

Willie "The Lion" Smith
piano1897 - 1973
The book also addresses weighty questions. Perhaps the most important of these asks to what extent, if any, does a musician's, or a composer's, Jewishness impact on the way they play jazz, or write songs. Gerber's interviewees come down on the subject variously. Some, like the saxophonist and label owner

John Zorn
saxophone, altob.1953

Artie Shaw
clarinet1910 - 2004
The book's many interviewsconducted in person in the USA, on the phone and by emailadd considerably to the success of the book, which also draws on a wealth of published sources.
It would take more than a book even as chunky as Kosher Jammers to cover every person who has contributed to the totality of Jewish connections in jazz. Inevitably, there are some omissions. These include the late Bernie Brightman, who was a dope smoking regular at New York's Savoy Ballroom in the 1940s and who later founded Stash Records, launching its extensive catalogue with Reefer Songs in 1975. Brightman's accessible interviews throw valuable light on the personal and societal relationships between Jewish and African American jazz enthusiasts in the 1940s and early 1950s. Another omission is the new millennial proliferation of US-based Israeli musicians, such as the great tenor saxophonist

Oded Tzur
saxophone, tenorBottom line: a scholarly, valuable and accessible addition to our bookshelves.
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