Home » Jazz Articles » Book Review » The Great Jazz and Pop Vocal Albums
The Great Jazz and Pop Vocal Albums
ByDo I have bones to pick? Yes, but comparing author Will Friedwald's responses to one's own is interesting and what really makes this book valuable is the extensive context he provides for each album.

Will Friedwald
432 pages
ISBN: 0307379078
Pantheon
2017
Will Friedwald has written a nice fat, fact-laden book, closely analyzing each song on the fifty-one albums he's chosen. Comparing his responses to one's own is interesting, but what really makes this book valuable is the extensive context he provides for each album.
Friedwald has been operating in the world of jazz and pop vocals for a long time and gives the reader insider history. He looks at where the album fits in the career path of the artist, how the arrangers-and often the musicians-ended up working on the project, background on the composers of the tunes, the dope on the record label people who decided to back the project, and comparisons with other recordings of the song. Friedwald thus provides an extensive historical framework for the albums.
There's a lot of dish-you'll learn how

Peggy Lee
vocals1920 - 2002
If you already know the music, it's interesting to compare his responses to your own, but if you don't, his prose reads well enough that it can be enjoyed on its own. In any case, all this analysis is an excellent goad to check out the music you don't know-for personal discovery purposes and to reality-check Friedwald's take. For example:
I was not familiar with

Carmen McRae
vocals1920 - 1994
And yes, I do have a laundry list of bones to pick: p.14 Was Astaire a "high baritone"? Can it be said that the Armstrong and Astaire Verve records "couldn't have been made without [

Oscar Peterson
piano1925 - 2007

Harry "Sweets" Edison
trumpet1915 - 1999

Ruby Braff
cornet1927 - 2003
But really, these are minor quibbles. If you're into vocals, check this book out.
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
