Home » Jazz Articles » Book Review » The Rhythm of Unity: A Jazz Musician's Lifelong Journey ...
The Rhythm of Unity: A Jazz Musician's Lifelong Journey Beyond Black and White
ByMike Longo
piano1937 - 2020

Tony Bennett
vocals1926 - 2023

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

James Moody
woodwinds1925 - 2010
Dizzy was black. And Longo was white. It made no difference to either one of them. Both saw their existence as a means of expressing what Longo simply called "the music." Their shared religious convictions in the Baha'i faith, advocated harmony with the world, and with their fellow human beings. They came from different backgrounds, but ended up in much the same place. If only their story were more representative of America.
Longo had classical training, and worked with a variety of outstanding teachers, including

Hall Overton
piano1920 - 1972

Oscar Peterson
piano1925 - 2007

Gene Krupa
drums1909 - 1973

John Bunch
piano1921 - 2010
Longo, although he may have denied it, was a cosmopolitan intellectual who lived for nothing other than music. Dizzy, whom Longo came to call John, was complex, but deeply spiritual as well. Whatever their personal foibles or characteristics of personalityDizzy always up and Longo just as often downfailed to separate them in the end. Oddly enough, it may have been just the realization that all of us are flawed one way or another, their essential humanity, that brought them together. Here Baha'i emphasized unity and openness in a world and a business that was often anything but. All of us should be so fortunate.
Dorothy Longo's extensive narrative and explications add greatly to an already fascinating story. She was with Mike when Covid finally struck him down, although he had what clinicians had "underlying conditions" as a risk factor. Longo's self-deprecating comment to her at the endthat he must have really been dying if the doctors let her see himwas perhaps more significant than anyone realized. Longo probably understood the music as well as anyone, and his sometimes-earthy affect was, like Dizzy's "clownish" persona, just another way of holding the uninitiated at bay. It may have confused a few shallow critics as well.
Withal, a remarkable story. You may well end up listening to Longo's music and his extensive pedagogical materials with different ears. He said of Dizzy, "He could hear paint dry." In Longo, Dizzy had an extraordinarily accomplished painter.
Tags
Book Review
Richard J Salvucci
Redwood
Mike Longo
Dizzy Gillespie
James Moody
oscar peterson
Gene Krupa
John Bunch
The Rhythm of Unity
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
