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Philadelphia Jazz
By
Suzanne Cloud and Diane Turner
127 pages
ISBN 978-1-4671-0784-6
Images of America
Arcadia Publishing
2022
Philadelphia longs to be known as a jazz town, a city distinguished by its major contribution to the jazz legacy. There is a good reason for this. A large number of members of the jazz pantheon came up and/or made their home in Philadelphia. They include, just for starters, Billie Holiday, who was raised in Baltimore but born in Philadelphia and returned here often, saxophonists and close friends

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

Jimmy Smith
organ, Hammond B31925 - 2005

Charles Earland
organ, Hammond B31941 - 1999

Shirley Scott
organ, Hammond B31934 - 2002

Trudy Pitts
organ, Hammond B31932 - 2010

Eddie Lang
guitar1902 - 1933

Pat Martino
guitar1944 - 2021

Jimmy Bruno
guitarb.1953

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Bobby Timmons
piano1935 - 1974

Joe Venuti
violin1903 - 1978

John Blake
violin1947 - 2014

Diane Monroe
violin
Lee Morgan
trumpet1938 - 1972

John Swana
electronics
Jymie Merritt
bass1926 - 2020

Christian McBride
bassb.1972

Stan Levey
drums1925 - 2005

Mickey Roker
drums1932 - 2017
From its suburbs came the likes of

Michael Brecker
saxophone, tenor1949 - 2007

Randy Brecker
trumpetb.1945

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996

Nina Simone
piano and vocals1933 - 2003

Clifford Brown
trumpetb.1930

Larry McKenna
saxophone, tenor1937 - 2023

Bootsie Barnes
saxophone, tenor1937 - 2020

Miss Justine
vocals
Denise King
vocals
Joanna Pascale
vocals
Tony Miceli
vibraphoneb.1960

Tom Lawton
piano
Dan Monaghan
drumsHowever, despite its massive musical contribution, Philadelphia has remained in the shadows as a jazz hub. For example, it has yet to have a major jazz festival despite being in an ideal position to do so. It has no historical center or museum with a jazz focus. There are no extensive recording and writing archives, and even the Strawberry Mansion home of the immortal John Coltrane where he composed "Giant Steps" languishes in disrepair and has struggled for decades over its ownership. Perhaps it's through benign neglect and maybe a touch of subtle racism that Philadelphia hasn't become a jazz mecca.
This modest new book, Philadelphia Jazz is a candle in the darkness. Through a collection of iconic photographs annotated by Suzanne Cloud and Diane Turner, it is the first book that unapologetically presents the sweeping panorama of the music in Philadelphia from the marching and dance bands before the Civil War to the ragtime of the turn of the century, through the swing bands of the 1920s-1940s through the emergence of small-group bebop and hard bop beginning with the 1940s, and on into the new millennium. Although the book inevitably misses a lot due to space considerations and archival gaps in photography, it gives a lively and intriguing sense of a city burning to be known for its contribution to the American-born music called jazz.
The book's cover, with a photo of a young Jimmy Smith wielding a big condenser microphone and standing at the organ in a Philadelphia radio station, sets the stage for a multiplicity of photos that bring together musicians, locations, and events in Philadelphia, starting with the marching bands led by Francis "Frank" Johnson after the American Revolution and before the Civil War. Johnson's sound was loved and honored by Queen Victoria among others, edged over into dance music, and may have acquired a syncopation that presaged 20th-century jazz. The inset photo opposite the title pageand taken a century lateris a stunning image of

Billy Eckstine
vocals1914 - 1993

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959

Johnny Hartman
vocals1923 - 1983
Photos of musicians range from household names like

Illinois Jacquet
saxophone, tenor1922 - 2004

Lena Horne
vocals1917 - 2010

Pearl Bailey
vocals1918 - 1990

Dennis Sandole
b.1913
James Moody
woodwinds1925 - 2010

Chuck Anderson
guitarb.1947

Bobby Zankel
saxophone, altob.1949
There are, however, some important stories missing. Legendary trumpeter Clifford Brown came to Philadelphia from Wilmington in the 1950s and participated actively, inspired by

Fats Navarro
trumpet1923 - 1950

Tony Miceli
vibraphoneb.1960
Despite the gaps, which are unavoidable in such a project, this book is a groundbreaking photographic journey through the history of Philadelphia jazz. If you love Philadelphia and jazz or if you are a newcomer to either or both, you should get a copy, look, read, reminisce, and be turned on to the magic. Hopefully, this wonderful compendium will help inspire a renewed awareness of the incredible heritage of Philadelphia jazz and give it the respect and attraction it deserves in the New Millennium.
Tags
Book Review
Victor L. Schermer
United States
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
John Coltrane
benny golson
Jimmy Smith
Charles Earland
Shirley Scott
Trudy Pitts
Eddie Lang
Pat Martino
Jimmy Bruno
McCoy Tyner
Bobby Timmons
Joe Venuti
John Blake Jr.
Diane Monroe
lee morgan
John Swana
Jymie Merritt
Christian McBride
Stan Levey
Mickey Roker
Michael Brecker
randy brecker
Dizzy Gillespie
Gerry Mulligan
Nina Simone
Clifford Brown
Monette Sudler
Larry McKenna
Bootsie Barnes
Miss Justine
denise king
Joanna Pascale
Evelyn Simms
tony miceli
Tom Lawton
Dan Monaghan
Billie Eckstine
Billie Holiday
Johnny Hartman
Illionois Jacquet
Lena Horne
Pearl Bailey
Nina Bunden
Juanita Holiday
Dennis Sandole
James Moody
Chuck Anderson
Bobby Zankel
Fats Navarro
Images of America: Philadelphia Jazz
Philadelphia Jazz
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