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University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press

Cover Image for Ellington Uptown
6 x 9. 360 pgs. 5 figures, 48 musical examples, 31 tables, 11 B&W photos in an 8-page photo section. (2009)

Cloth
978-0-472-11605-8
$75.00S  Available
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Paper
978-0-472-03316-4
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Series
Jazz Perspectives

Subjects
African-American and African Studies / American Studies / Music--Jazz

Ellington Uptown
Duke Ellington, James P. Johnson, and the Birth of Concert Jazz

John Howland



Explores a little-discussed yet truly hybrid American musical tradition lost between the canons of authentic jazz and classical music




About the Book

The story of the African American contributions to the symphonic jazz vogue of the 1920s through the 1940s.

During the early decades of the twentieth century symphonic jazz involved an expansive family of music that emulated, paralleled, and intersected the jazz tradition. Though now largely forgotten, symphonic jazz was both a popular music—arranging tradition and a repertory of hybrid concert works, both of which reveled in the mildly irreverent interbreeding of white and black and high and low music. While the roots of symphonic jazz can be traced to certain black ragtime orchestras of the teens, the idiom came to maturation in the music of 1920s white dance bands.

Through a close examination of the music of Duke Ellington and James P. Johnson, Ellington Uptown uncovers compositions that have usually fallen in the cracks between concert music, jazz, and popular music. It also places the concert works of these two iconic figures in context through an investigation both of related compositions by black and white peers and of symphonic jazz—style arrangements from a diverse number of early sound films, Broadway musicals, Harlem nightclub floor shows, and select interwar radio programs.

Both Ellington and Johnson were part of a close-knit community of several generations of Harlem musicians. Older figures like Will Marion Cook, Will Vodery, W. C. Handy, and James Reese Europe were the generation of black musicians that initially broke New York entertainment's racial barriers in the first two decades of the century. By the 1920s, Cook, Vodery, and Handy had become mentors to Harlem's younger musicians. This generational connection is a key for understanding Johnson’s and Ellington's ambitions to use the success of Harlem's white-oriented entertainment trade as a springboard for establishing a black concert music tradition based on Harlem jazz and popular music.

John Howland is Assistant Professor of Music at Rutgers University and the cofounder and current editor-in-chief of the journal Jazz Perspectives. This work has been supported through several prestigious awards, including the Lloyd Hibberd Publication Endowment Fund of the American Musicological Society.

 

On the Web

John Howland's web page

Media Kit

Sample Audio Tracks

Listen: Sample Audio Tracks

Sample Audio Tracks

Listen: UMP Author Podcast Series: John Howland | mp3 | 4/1/2009

WMOT interview

Listen: Interview on WMOT | 6/24/2009

Read: Review on Jazz Times | 10/15/2009

Read: Review VJM | 10/08/2009

Read: Review on All About Jazz | 8/10/2009

Read: Review on Impose | 7/7/2009

Read: Q&A with John Howland (PDF)

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