Home » Jazz Articles » Book Review » Solid. Life and Death of a Jazz Genius: Scott LaFaro
Solid. Life and Death of a Jazz Genius: Scott LaFaro
By
Vincenzo Staiano
180 Pages
ISBN: 9781470
LuLu
2023
It may be an exaggeration to claim there was double bass before

Scott LaFaro
bass1936 - 1961

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014

Gary Peacock
bass, acoustic1935 - 2020

Chuck Israels
bass, acousticb.1936
For Staiano, a key to La Faro was his Italo-American pedigree. Normally, this kind of writing can be quite disturbing. It easily leads down very dangerous roads, especially in times of ethnic and sectarian division. Of that, there is more than enough, although in jazz, truth to tell, there is unfortunately nothing new about it. Staiano, perhaps, touches inadvertently on a third rail, when he is doing nothing more than saying what native Italians say about Italy: the fine arts, high culture, music, cuisine, even history flourish there. And thus, embedded in the culture, they tend to characterize the country's most distinctive products. LaFaro was not an immigrant, but his father, Rocco, was a distinguished musician, and the family was of Calabrian origins. How much emphasis one places on such factors ultimately tends to express both politics and filiopietism, much as they do in Italy today. It is mostly innocent, in this version, if not exactly harmless. Take it with as much salt as you please.
For the rest, this is a provocative, if somewhat meandering account of LaFaro's interactions with an extraordinary group of musicians. The English version appears to be faithful to the original Italian, (which can be purchased on Amazon's Italian site), from which Staiano claims it is somewhat different. Inevitably, some errors creep into a translation, but they are minor and do not really detract from the narrative.
While LaFaro has been profiled by his sister, Helene LaFaro-Fernandez,' book, Jade Visions (University of North Texas Press, 2014), Staiano's approach is somewhat different. For one thing, he speculates at considerable length on the relation between LaFaro's style and literary modernism, or in the case of

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
For many, the principal interest may be an ample discussion of LaFaro's work before his historic recording with

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Herb Geller
saxophone1928 - 2013

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
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